The Two Sisters-in-Law, plate twelve from Landscapes and Interiors, 1899
Édouard Jean Vuillard
Notched Ovate Bannerstone, c. 4800 BCE
Archaic
Near the Lagoon, 2002
Jasper Johns
Foliage—Oak Tree and Fruit Seller, 1918
Édouard Jean Vuillard
Phaedre, Having Declared Her Passion, Attempts to Kill Herself with the Sword of Hippolytus, c. 1801
Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson
Earthly Paradise, 1916–20
Pierre Bonnard
The Actor Ichikawa Danjuro IV in a "Shibaraku" Role, Possibly from the Play Ima o Sakari Suehiro Genji (The Genji Clan Now at Its Zenith), Performed at the Nakamura Theater from the First Day of the Eleventh Month, 1768, c. 1768
Katsukawa Shunsho
David Garrick as King Lear, c. 1815
Richard Westall
White Heron in a Pool in a Garden, c. 1929
Frank Weston Benson
Fishing in Spring, the Pont de Clichy (Asnières), 1887
Vincent van Gogh
A City Park, c. 1887
William Merritt Chase
Moulin de la Galette, 1889
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
A Woman at the Élysée Montmartre (Femme à l’Élysée Montmartre), 1888
Louis Anquetin
Builders and doctors in Brasilia: Brasilia, the most modern capital city in the world has 65,000 inhabitants in 1959. Today, its population totals 250,000. In three years this figure will increase to 500,000. Since the first foundations were laid, builders and doctors worked closely together, first of all to see to it that the 60,000 workers who took part in building the new city stayed in good health, then to prevent the town from being invaded by the diseases of bush and forest. Immigrants' health is checked systematically on the road into Brasilia, while specialists study the flora and fauna of the environment in order to discover possible sources of dangerous diseases. At present time the symbol of Brasilia is its National Assembly Hall, its Senate Building and the two skyscrapers which house all the administrative services of the national government. The National Assembly Hall is in the form of an immense saucer while the Senate building looks like an enormous dome. Ca, 1960s
Field Building, Chicago, Illinois, Presentation Drawing, c.1930–1931
Henry T. Harringer
Dr. Jonathan Potts (1745-1781), 1770–76
Henry Benbridge
Fragment, Roman period (30 B.C.–641 A.D.), 4th/5th century