With another masterpiece—fortunately still preserved in the Prado, though not 
entirely uninjured by fire—we may close the second period. This is the 
magnificent equestrian portrait of The Emperor Charles V.which was 
painted at Augsburg in 1548. A few years later the Emperor abdicated in favour 
of his egregious son, Philip II., of whom Titian painted three portraits in 
succession. The second of these, now in the Prado,oil paintings for sale cheap, has an especial interest for 
us, inasmuch as it was painted for the benefit or the enticement of Queen Mary 
before her marriage to Philip. As might be expected, it is a highly flattering 
likeness,—in white and gold, in half armour. To quote M. Caro-Delvaille, this 
king ofauto da fés and sunken galleys is here nothing more than a gallant 
cavalier—neurasthenic but elegant. For England was also painted theVenus and 
Adonis, in 1554; but unfortunately the original is now in Madrid, and only a 
copy in our National Gallery. However, the remains of Philip are there too, and 
not in Westminster Abbey! art oil paintings online
A copy of another famous picture painted by Titian for the Emperor Charles V. was also in the 
collection of the Duke of Buckingham, who probably brought it with him when he 
returned from his madcap expedition with Prince Charles to Madrid. It is 
described in his catalogue as "One great Piece of the Emperor Charles, a copy 
called Titian's Glory, being the principal in Spain, now in the Escurial." This 
was the greatParadise, or Apotheosis of Charles V. which Charles took 
with him into Spain at the time of his abdication and placed in the monastery of 
St. Juste, in Estramadura, to which he retired. After his death it was removed 
by Philip II. to Madrid. abstract oil paintings
Of the two versions of The Crowning with Thorns, the earlier one at 
the Louvre, painted in 1560, is more familiar to, and probably more popular 
with, the general public than the much later one at Munich painted in 1571. But 
for the real merits of the two we need not hesitate to accept M. 
Caro-Delvaille's judgment, since if he had any bias it would be in favour of his 
own country's treasure. The former he characterises as an incoherent 
composition, in which useless gesticulation diminishes the dramatic effect,original oil paintings wholesale,  while striving to force it; and adds that all the false romanticism of painting 
comes from this sort of theatrical pathos. Of the other he writes "It was the 
picture at the Louvre which shocked me with its violent declamation and its 
forced blows that never hit anything. But here at Munich a mystery so profound 
broods over the drama that the melodramatic element disappears. The scene 
becomes tragic, lamentable, hopelessly sad. The great artist with a brush that 
trembles in his aged hands paints but the sentiment of it, to exhale from his 
work like a plaintive sigh. The veil of death descends and spreads over life.... 
Titian might seem to have painted it as an offering to Rembrandt when he, too, should feel the 
approach of death." oil paintings for sale online
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