
Love
From blossoming romances to painful heartbreaks or lifelong connections, artists capture all stages of love. This most universal human emotion has inspired countless moving works of art.
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Article: Queer Artists Grete Stern and Ellen Auerbach: ringl + pit
How the duo’s book documents their artistic collaboration and romantic relationship through beautiful, witty, and sometimes irreverent mixed media art.

Article: 34 Artworks About Love at the National Gallery
From first kisses to tragic romances, our collection abounds with love, in all its forms.

Video: “Agrippina and Germanicus” with Mary Beard
Scholar Mary Beard explores the story of Agrippina and Germanicus by Sir Peter Paul Rubens.
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Romanticism
Romanticists, who placed emotion and intuition before reason, caused a re-evaluation of the role of art and the artist. They believed in the importance of the individual, the personal, and the subjective. This late-18th and early-19th century movement was a backlash to the ideals of rationality that had remained central since the Renaissance.

Flowers
A bounty of bouquets can be found in art. Flowers have inspired artists from Vincent van Gogh to Alma Thomas. Eighteenth-century Dutch artist Jan van Huysum painted lavish floral still lifes, while modern painters like Georgia O’Keeffe created far more abstract flowers. Not only are these floral forms beautiful but they also often have symbolic meaning.