Codie Young and Joseph Ferns by Tung Walsh for O magazine S/S 2013
ritualistics:

Detail at Dior Homme FW 13/14 nataliakoptseva:

1497-1498 Albrecht Durer
Apocalypse. Beast of blasphemy and
beast of temptation
cavetocanvas:

Jusepe de Ribera, Aristotle, 1637
From the Indianapolis Museum of Art:

Ribera’s image of Aristotle is one of a series of six imaginary portraits of ancient philosophers commissioned in 1636 by the prince of Liechtenstein. Ribera’s conception of Aristotle as an ordinary man wearing a scholar’s skullcap and a ragged robe, a “beggar philosopher,” is a type that enjoyed great popularity in the 17th century. The artist’s direct, naturalistic style and his dramatic use of light, both of which derive from the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio, combine to create a powerful evocation of a philosopher deep in thought.
Jusepe de Ribera, born in the Valencian town of Játiva in 1591, spent his entire career in Italy, principally in Naples, which was then governed by Spanish viceroys. He frequently asserted his Spanish nationality, as he does in this painting, by adding the word “español” to his signature. In 1618, the year Ribera received his first commission from the Spanish viceroy, the artist Ludovico Carracci wrote with admiration of the “young Spaniard working in the manner of Caravaggio.” The bold Caravaggesque naturalism of Ribera’s work is enhanced by his achievement of a more tactile sense of physical presence, readily seen in the thickly brushed lines and creases of his philosopher’s worn face and coarse hands.


eleonora baumann ph. patricia kahn
poboh:

Smoker, Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier. French Academic Painter (1815 - 1891) 
Orbit (Detail)
sfmoma:

SUBMISSION:
Youthfulness
By Wenxin Zhang baroqueart:

Three Peasants Travelling by Rembrandt
Date: 1652