Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Fine Art Tuesday

 

Agony in the Garden I
Carl Bloch was a Danish artist who was born in 1834 and died in 1890.

He was commissioned to produce twenty-three paintings for the King's Chapel at Frederiksborg Castle which he painted between 1865 and 1879.

His wife died in 1886 leaving him with eight children to care for. He died four years later of cancer at the age of 55.

Suffer the Children come Unto Me

Agony in the Garden II

The Transfiguration

Peter's denials

The Crucifiction

The Burial of Jesus

6 comments:

  1. Ya know you hit on a question I've had for some time - cancer back in the day. How did they know? Like, was he covered with tumors, or they did an autopsy and... Oh, there's the tumors.
    Or, as I suspect, is someone fell ill for no other obvious reasons (could have been a virus, we didn't know they existed then)... so they said he died of 'cancer'?

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    Replies
    1. All good questions.

      A quick search on-line suggests that doctors based the diagnosis on physical examinations, both visual and palpation.

      Biopsies and examining the samples with a microscope were cutting-edge technologies. Surgery was extremely risky.

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  2. I had never heard of this artist. His life appears to have been one of lots of joy and heartbreak at the end. I can't imagine having eight children to raise by myself ... shenanigans ! I'm guessing a few of the older children pitched in to help.

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  3. Another great painter of religious scenes in that era was Antonio Ciseri. Swiss, trained in Italy. His masterpiece was Ecce Homo.

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  4. Thanks as always, ERJ, for continuing the tradition, especially during Holy Week.

    It is great to reminded that such great art exists.

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