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			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Portugal 
				
				
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			Thank you shayde78, for sharing pictures of such fascinating paintings, that you have uploaded with immense quality. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	I follow Udo's words in that this artist painted with incomparable expertise; yet he was owner of a disturbed mind. It seems as his skills competed between his brush and his sword. He did not die painting but in result of a fight  .
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		#2 | 
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			Wouldn't you know it - I was missing the first page of my notes and didn't include a number of works with the original postings.  Apologies, as now these will be out of order since they represent his earlier works.   
		
		
		
			Here, we have two paintings of the same theme and produced about a year apart. They are both titled 'The Fortune Teller'. The first is from 1595/96, and the second from 1596/97 Lovely swept hilt depicted in both. One interesting detail, I believe the young man is carrying his gloves in the basket of the hilt. Such a convenient place to keep them that I am certain this was common, although I've never considered it before.  | 
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		#3 | 
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			St. Catherine of Alexandria; 1597 
		
		
		
			St. Catherine of Alexandria was the patron saint of teachers, archivists, and all things related to wisdom and learning. She would make a good mascot for this forum! She famously 'sparred' verbally with the court intellectuals of a pre-Christian Roman Emperor as part of her efforts to convert him. I wonder if this is why she is depicted with a rapier in this image.  | 
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		#4 | 
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			Fascinating !
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#5 | 
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			The Calling of St. Mathew; c. 1599/1600 
		
		
		
			I can't believe I forgot this. THIS is the image that my Art History professor used to introduce us to Caravaggio's work, and therefore, forms the basis of my introduction to his style. A simple rapier is seen hanging from the belt of the one figure. As I have often wondered how one sat with a 3+ foot blade suspended from your waist, this scene, at the least, demonstrates the utility of benches, stools, and other seating options without backs.  | 
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			 Quote: 
	
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		#7 | |
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			 Quote: 
	
 This guy was nobody's angel -- tavern brawler, heavy drinker, with a sexual appetite on both sides of the aisle. (For the tender and erotic side of his creative nature, see his "Boy with a Basket of Fruit" which was exhibited at the Getty Center in LA a few years ago - 180 degrees from the works depicted on this thread.) Goes to show that the line between genius and madness is thin indeed. His command of light and shadow took Western art in a new direction and eventually went far beyond painting into the realm of motion pictures in our era.  | 
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