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    A sprig of flowering rosemary lying against an ivory-white background and the twelve insects that surround it fills this horizontal painting. Stretching nearly the length of the composition with the cut end to our left, the rosemary has blunted, needle-like, gently curling teal-green leaves and small periwinkle-blue flowers along the ash-brown stem. Several insects perch on the sprig while others are seen as if looking from overhead, resting on the white background. The three largest insects perch along the top of the sprig, with an ivory-white butterfly with moss-green and black markings to the left, a black and golden, fuzzy bumblebee near the center, and a lemon-yellow butterfly with red antennae to our right. A tiny red insect, perhaps a ladybug without spots, sits on a leaf between the bee and yellow butterfly, and a small wasp-like insect rests on a leaf in at the lower left. Another mosquito-like insect alights on the surface nearby, next to a beetle with a honey-orange body with black, almost tiger-like stripes. A large cockroach sitting near the lower right corner has six spindly legs, a mahogany-colored abdomen, a black thorax, and tiny, black head. Spaced somewhat evenly across the top of the panel are a brick-red, winged insect to the left, a mint-green, beetle-like bug near a moth patterned with bone white and black, and a black, fly-like insect to our right. Lit from the upper left, the rosemary and insects cast shadows on the surface. The artist signed and dated the work with gray in the lower left corner: “J v. kessel . . f. Ao 1653.”

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    Open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
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    6th and Constitution Ave NW 
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    Only have an hour to spend?

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  • Exhibitions & Events

    • Exhibitions
    • Calendar
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    A sprig of flowering rosemary lying against an ivory-white background and the twelve insects that surround it fills this horizontal painting. Stretching nearly the length of the composition with the cut end to our left, the rosemary has blunted, needle-like, gently curling teal-green leaves and small periwinkle-blue flowers along the ash-brown stem. Several insects perch on the sprig while others are seen as if looking from overhead, resting on the white background. The three largest insects perch along the top of the sprig, with an ivory-white butterfly with moss-green and black markings to the left, a black and golden, fuzzy bumblebee near the center, and a lemon-yellow butterfly with red antennae to our right. A tiny red insect, perhaps a ladybug without spots, sits on a leaf between the bee and yellow butterfly, and a small wasp-like insect rests on a leaf in at the lower left. Another mosquito-like insect alights on the surface nearby, next to a beetle with a honey-orange body with black, almost tiger-like stripes. A large cockroach sitting near the lower right corner has six spindly legs, a mahogany-colored abdomen, a black thorax, and tiny, black head. Spaced somewhat evenly across the top of the panel are a brick-red, winged insect to the left, a mint-green, beetle-like bug near a moth patterned with bone white and black, and a black, fly-like insect to our right. Lit from the upper left, the rosemary and insects cast shadows on the surface. The artist signed and dated the work with gray in the lower left corner: “J v. kessel . . f. Ao 1653.”

    Featured exhibition:

    Little Beasts: Art, Wonder, and the Natural World

    Now on view
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    Open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
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    6th and Constitution Ave NW 
    Washington, DC 20565

    Only have an hour to spend?

    We've got you covered.
  • Exhibitions & Events

    • Exhibitions
    • Calendar
    • Kid-Friendly Events
    A sprig of flowering rosemary lying against an ivory-white background and the twelve insects that surround it fills this horizontal painting. Stretching nearly the length of the composition with the cut end to our left, the rosemary has blunted, needle-like, gently curling teal-green leaves and small periwinkle-blue flowers along the ash-brown stem. Several insects perch on the sprig while others are seen as if looking from overhead, resting on the white background. The three largest insects perch along the top of the sprig, with an ivory-white butterfly with moss-green and black markings to the left, a black and golden, fuzzy bumblebee near the center, and a lemon-yellow butterfly with red antennae to our right. A tiny red insect, perhaps a ladybug without spots, sits on a leaf between the bee and yellow butterfly, and a small wasp-like insect rests on a leaf in at the lower left. Another mosquito-like insect alights on the surface nearby, next to a beetle with a honey-orange body with black, almost tiger-like stripes. A large cockroach sitting near the lower right corner has six spindly legs, a mahogany-colored abdomen, a black thorax, and tiny, black head. Spaced somewhat evenly across the top of the panel are a brick-red, winged insect to the left, a mint-green, beetle-like bug near a moth patterned with bone white and black, and a black, fly-like insect to our right. Lit from the upper left, the rosemary and insects cast shadows on the surface. The artist signed and dated the work with gray in the lower left corner: “J v. kessel . . f. Ao 1653.”

    Featured exhibition:

    Little Beasts: Art, Wonder, and the Natural World

    Now on view
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    3. Andrea Solario

    Andrea Solario

    Solari, Andrea

    Milanese, active 1495 - 1524

    Information from Wikipedia, made available under the Creative Commons Attribution – Share Alike License

    Italian painter (1460-1524)

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    Three men and four women gather in a tight group around the lifeless body of a bearded young man in a landscape in this vertical painting. The people all have pale skin with red around their eyes, and tears fall down most of their cheeks. The dead man, Jesus, is at the center of the composition. His skin is ashen white, and his brown hair falls around his shoulders. Blood trickles from wounds on his forehead, palms, feet, and over his right ribs. He wears only a white loincloth. He rests across the lap of a woman, Mary, who sits on the ground and supports Jesus with her knees. Her brows are gathered high over her eyes as she looks up, her cheeks red. An ochre-yellow cloth wraps across her forehead, down the sides of her face, and across her neck and chest. A white cloth drapes over that, all under a sky-blue cloak that covers most of her burgundy-red dress. One hand disappears behind Jesus’s back, and the other arm is held out, palm up, over Jesus’s legs. The people around Jesus wear dresses, robes, and cloaks in amber yellow, emerald green, carnation pink, rose red, orange, and pale lilac. A clean-shaven man, Saint John the Evangelist, supports Jesus under the armpits as he looks at us. Saint John's lips are parted, and his long, copper-colored hair tumbles over his shoulders. By his side, in the lower left corner of the painting, a woman with long, flowing blond hair, kneels and cradles one of Jesus’s hands. She and Mary lock eyes. Another woman with a white veil over a parchment-brown wimple covering her forehead and neck crouches low to lift one of Jesus’s feet, and she looks down at the wound there. Behind her, a balding, bearded man with a fringe of white curly hair stands with his hands out wide. He holds a pair of pincers in the hand closer to us. To our left, behind Mary, the fourth woman clutches her robe to her chest with one hand and wipes tears with a fist of the fabric with the other. Along the left edge of the composition, behind Saint John the Evangelist, a man looks forlornly down at Jesus as he holds long iron nails in one hand and a hammer down by his side in the other. Grassy mounds rise steeply up to an overlook taking up the top right quadrant of the painting. There, two men hang from crosses to either side of an empty cross. Two pairs of people look at those men. A man carrying a spear and wearing a feathered cap walks on a path along the ridge. In a distant grassy meadow to our left, two men ride horses as another holds up a spear, all facing a person with their hands raised. A river winds through rolling hills back to the horizon, which comes four-fifths the way up the composition. An arched bridge spans the river, and people walk across it or row on a boat in the water near the pilings. The mountains are hazy pale blue in the deep distance, and the sky above fades from azure blue along the top of the painting to milky white along the horizon. A scrolling strip of white paper curls in the lower right corner of the composition.
    Andrea Solario, Lamentation, c. 1505-1507, oil on panel, Samuel H. Kress Collection, 1961.9.40

    Lamentation

    Lamentation

    Andrea Solario · c. 1505-1507 · oil on panel ·  Accession ID  1961.9.40

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