Another of his latest pictures, the Adam and Eve in Paradise, is in
the Prado (No. 429, formerly 456). This was copied, or one might almost say
travestied, by Rubens when he was at Madrid in 1629, and his work was hung in
the same room with it. As the colouring is of a lower tone than is usual with
Titian, and the attitudes of the figures extremely simple and natural, the
contrast is all the more marked,Single Piece Paintigns, and was well expressed by Cumberland, who said
that "when we contemplate Titian's picture of Adam and Eve we are convinced they
never wore clothes; turn to the copy, and the same persons seem to have laid
theirs aside."
A more generous comparison between these two painters is made by Reynolds in
a note on du Fresnoy's poem on Painting respecting the qualities of regularity
and uniformity. "An instance occurs to me where those two qualities are
separately exhibited by two great painters, Rubens and Titian: the picture of
Rubens is in the Church of S. Augustine at Antwerp,cheap oil paintings, the subject (if that may be
called a subject where no story is represented) is the Virgin and Infant Christ
placed high in the picture on a pedestal with many saints about them and as many
below them, with others on the steps to serve as a link to unite the upper and
lower part of the picture. The composition of this picture is perfect in its
kind; the artist has shown the greatest skill in composing and contrasting more
than twenty figures without confusion and without crowding; the whole appearing
as much animated and in motion as it is possible where nothing is to be
done. abstract oil painting
"The picture of Titian which we would oppose to this is in the Church of the S. Frari at
Venice (the "Pesaro Madonna," where the two donors kneel below the Virgin
enthroned). One peculiar character of this piece is grandeur and simplicity,
which proceed in a great measure from the regularity of the composition, two of
the principal figures being represented kneeling directly opposite to each
other, and nearly in the same attitude. frames for oil paintings This is what few painters would have had
the courage to venture; Rubens would certainly have rejected so unpicturesque a
mode of composition had it occurred to him. Both these pictures are excellent in
their kind, and may be said to characterize their respective authors. There is a
bustle and animation in the work of Rubens, a quiet solemn majesty in that of
Titian. The excellence of Rubens is the picturesque effect he produces; the
superior merit of Titian is in the appearance of being above seeking after any
such "artificial excellence." oil paintings wholesale
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