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A young woman turns her bare shoulder toward us, her light skin softly illuminated against a dark, indistinct background. Her auburn curls are loosely gathered with a dark blue ribbon with stars, framing a face that hovers between innocence and allure. She cradles a white dove tightly against her breast, her fingers gently enclosing its body as its head nestles into the curve of her skin while looking up at the young woman. Her lips are parted, her gaze heavy-lidded and turned slightly away, suggesting an absorbed, private reverie.  The tight framing, lack of narrative setting, and skyward gaze draw us into an intimate encounter with a singular figure who is both posed and palpably alive, inviting contemplation of her interior state as much as her exposed beauty.

French artist Jean-Baptiste Greuze titles this figure not as a named sitter but as an allegory of “Voluptuousness” to make desire itself the subject. The painting belongs to his late career, when changing taste, the rise of Neoclassicism, and the upheavals of the French Revolution had eroded the acclaim he enjoyed in the 1760s for moralizing domestic dramas. 

Once championed by French philosopher and art critic Denis Diderot as a painter of virtue and feeling, Greuze increasingly relied on smaller, sensual heads and bust-length figures for private collectors. Here, the lingering softness of Rococo sentiment fuses with a more pointed erotic charge: the exposed shoulder, moist eyes, and ambiguous half-smile stage the tension between modesty and seduction that had always haunted his work. Painted around 1789–1790, as the old regime collapsed and his own fortunes declined, this image can be read as both a consummation and an endpoint of an artist turning inward to a perfected type he knew well, presenting sensual pleasure as fragile, intimate, and curiously isolated at the threshold of a new political and artistic age.

A young woman turns her bare shoulder toward us, her light skin softly illuminated against a dark, indistinct background. Her auburn curls are loosely gathered with a dark blue ribbon with stars, framing a face that hovers between innocence and allure. She cradles a white dove tightly against her breast, her fingers gently enclosing its body as its head nestles into the curve of her skin while looking up at the young woman. Her lips are parted, her gaze heavy-lidded and turned slightly away, suggesting an absorbed, private reverie. The tight framing, lack of narrative setting, and skyward gaze draw us into an intimate encounter with a singular figure who is both posed and palpably alive, inviting contemplation of her interior state as much as her exposed beauty. French artist Jean-Baptiste Greuze titles this figure not as a named sitter but as an allegory of “Voluptuousness” to make desire itself the subject. The painting belongs to his late career, when changing taste, the rise of Neoclassicism, and the upheavals of the French Revolution had eroded the acclaim he enjoyed in the 1760s for moralizing domestic dramas. Once championed by French philosopher and art critic Denis Diderot as a painter of virtue and feeling, Greuze increasingly relied on smaller, sensual heads and bust-length figures for private collectors. Here, the lingering softness of Rococo sentiment fuses with a more pointed erotic charge: the exposed shoulder, moist eyes, and ambiguous half-smile stage the tension between modesty and seduction that had always haunted his work. Painted around 1789–1790, as the old regime collapsed and his own fortunes declined, this image can be read as both a consummation and an endpoint of an artist turning inward to a perfected type he knew well, presenting sensual pleasure as fragile, intimate, and curiously isolated at the threshold of a new political and artistic age.

“Voluptuousness (Сладострастие)” by Jean-Baptiste Greuze (French) - Oil on canvas / 1789–1790 - Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts (Moscow, Russia) #WomenInArt #Greuze #18thCenturyArt #Rococo #Neoclassicism #PushkinMuseum #Jean-BaptisteGreuze #artText #arte #EuropeanArt #BlueskyArt #PortraitofaWoman

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A woman with light, rosy-beige skin and soft, oval features stands between heavy ocher-brown stage curtains, slightly parted like a proscenium. She wears a voluminous cobalt-blue robe trimmed in creamy ermine over a pale pink, tiered dress with ruffled flounces. A wide lavender bonnet, edged in violets and tied with trailing ribbons, frames her face as blonde ringlets curl along her face. Her left arm bends at the elbow, the hand emerging from a fur cuff, while the right hand gathers her dress. The ground is warm umber while a darker, speckled void glimmers behind her bonnet. The paint is matte and velvety, with broad decorative modeling and rounded canvas corners that soften the scene’s theatrical frame.

In this portrait, Sergei Sudeikin (Сергей Юрьевич Судейкин), painter, set and costume designer of Russia’s Silver Age and a Mir Iskusstva (World of Art) affiliate, depicts his wife Olga Glebova-Sudeikina, an actress and dancer central to St. Petersburg’s bohemian circles, in the role of “Putanitsa” (Путаница meaning “Muddle,” “Confusion,” or “Tangle” in Russian) the whimsical, allegorical figure from Russia’s Silver Age cabaret theatre who personifies playful confusion and the artful beauty of disorder. Her extravagant bonnet and ermine-trimmed cloak signal masquerade and whimsy. The parted curtains make viewers complicit as we witness Olga poised at the threshold of performance, neither fully private nor fully public. Sudeikin’s flattened patterning, sumptuous color blocks, and emphasis on costume echo his scenographic practice, where character is read through silhouette and fabric. 

Around 1909–1910, as the couple’s collaborations intensified and the city’s cabarets and salons flourished, Olga embodied the era’s fascination with transformation as muse, performer, and author of her own entrance. Here, the tender tilt of her head softens the role’s title so “confusion” becomes a modern self in flux, staged with wit and affection.

A woman with light, rosy-beige skin and soft, oval features stands between heavy ocher-brown stage curtains, slightly parted like a proscenium. She wears a voluminous cobalt-blue robe trimmed in creamy ermine over a pale pink, tiered dress with ruffled flounces. A wide lavender bonnet, edged in violets and tied with trailing ribbons, frames her face as blonde ringlets curl along her face. Her left arm bends at the elbow, the hand emerging from a fur cuff, while the right hand gathers her dress. The ground is warm umber while a darker, speckled void glimmers behind her bonnet. The paint is matte and velvety, with broad decorative modeling and rounded canvas corners that soften the scene’s theatrical frame. In this portrait, Sergei Sudeikin (Сергей Юрьевич Судейкин), painter, set and costume designer of Russia’s Silver Age and a Mir Iskusstva (World of Art) affiliate, depicts his wife Olga Glebova-Sudeikina, an actress and dancer central to St. Petersburg’s bohemian circles, in the role of “Putanitsa” (Путаница meaning “Muddle,” “Confusion,” or “Tangle” in Russian) the whimsical, allegorical figure from Russia’s Silver Age cabaret theatre who personifies playful confusion and the artful beauty of disorder. Her extravagant bonnet and ermine-trimmed cloak signal masquerade and whimsy. The parted curtains make viewers complicit as we witness Olga poised at the threshold of performance, neither fully private nor fully public. Sudeikin’s flattened patterning, sumptuous color blocks, and emphasis on costume echo his scenographic practice, where character is read through silhouette and fabric. Around 1909–1910, as the couple’s collaborations intensified and the city’s cabarets and salons flourished, Olga embodied the era’s fascination with transformation as muse, performer, and author of her own entrance. Here, the tender tilt of her head softens the role’s title so “confusion” becomes a modern self in flux, staged with wit and affection.

“Portrait of Olga Glebova-Sudeikina as Putanitsa” by Sergei Sudeikin / Сергей Юрьевич Судейкин (Russian) - Gouache and white pigment on cardboard / c. 1909 - Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts (Moscow, Russia) #WomenInArt #art #artText #artwork #SergeiSudeikin #Sudeikin #PushkinMuseum #ГМИИимПушкина

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Sketch detail version of François Boucher´s "Omphale and Hercules", c. 1731-1734

Sketch detail version of François Boucher´s "Omphale and Hercules", c. 1731-1734

Sketch version of François Boucher´s "Omphale and Hercules", c. 1731-1734

Sketch version of François Boucher´s "Omphale and Hercules", c. 1731-1734

“Omphale and Hercules” (Detail)
Boucher (François Boucher), c. 1731-1734
Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts , Moscow, Russia
8.25 x 5 in (21,5 x 12,7 cm)
Ink markers on plain 70 G/M² sketchbook paper
04/17/25
#pandemicmasters #kuretake #boucher #pushkinmuseum #rococo

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Preview
The Battle of the Milvian Bridge – Claude Lorrain, 1655 Claude Lorrain, bless his sun-drenched soul, wasn’t much for blood and guts. In fact, if you blinked, you might miss that this is a  battle ...

Claude Lorrain’s Battle of the Milvian Bridge is the calmest war painting in history. Constantine? Somewhere offscreen. The real winner? The sunset. 🌅⚔️

Read the irreverent breakdown 👉 shorturl.at/CrApc
#ArtHistory #ClaudeLorrain #BaroqueVibes #PushkinMuseum

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