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All over Florence there are people on the street selling prints, mostly of the same half-a-dozen famous paintings. Which is interesting to see, because the first set you pass, you recognise a couple, but if you don't recognise the rest, you don't know if they're famous, you just notice which ones are nice.
However, once you've passed several sets, the duplication of the same paintings makes it clear they're a handy guide to the top five most famous paintings with any connection to Tuscany.
One of two marvellously quizzical cherbus (picture) was very striking, that looked like it would be around in the Florence galleries, but I didn't actually know what it was. When I came back, I looked it up.
Except the question of looking up an image isn't always trivial, and can be an interesting exploration of google skills, if you can find it without asking someone. I knew: what it looked like; it was of cherubs; it was famous; it had some connection to the renaissance or Tuscany.
I started by doing an image search for "cherubs painting", and it was famous enough to be near the top hit. However, that only find a picture from people who didn't know the traditional name and called it "Rachel's Cherubs" or "Raphael's Little Angels". A quick check of the titles of Raphael's most famous works didn't show that. However, searching for "florence raphael (angels OR cherubs)" gave the real title, and that was readily accessible on wikipeda.
What I didn't know was that it was the bottom of a large painting, Sistine Madonna, painted by Raphael in Italy, but now housed in the gallery of old masters in Dresden, but became independently famous.
However, once you've passed several sets, the duplication of the same paintings makes it clear they're a handy guide to the top five most famous paintings with any connection to Tuscany.
One of two marvellously quizzical cherbus (picture) was very striking, that looked like it would be around in the Florence galleries, but I didn't actually know what it was. When I came back, I looked it up.
Except the question of looking up an image isn't always trivial, and can be an interesting exploration of google skills, if you can find it without asking someone. I knew: what it looked like; it was of cherubs; it was famous; it had some connection to the renaissance or Tuscany.
I started by doing an image search for "cherubs painting", and it was famous enough to be near the top hit. However, that only find a picture from people who didn't know the traditional name and called it "Rachel's Cherubs" or "Raphael's Little Angels". A quick check of the titles of Raphael's most famous works didn't show that. However, searching for "florence raphael (angels OR cherubs)" gave the real title, and that was readily accessible on wikipeda.
What I didn't know was that it was the bottom of a large painting, Sistine Madonna, painted by Raphael in Italy, but now housed in the gallery of old masters in Dresden, but became independently famous.
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Date: 2008-09-30 05:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-30 05:31 pm (UTC)Yeah, that's what I thought. I was glad we hadn't missed them.
I really don't understand why all the tacky Florence souvenir stalls were selling them,
Well, wikipedia said "the two winged 'genii', which are visible at the bottom of the picture space and which became an independent theme in contemporary pop culture", so I think it's just that they picked the top five most famous paintings they could think of off the top of their heads, and mass-produced prints of those :)