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Aug 23, 2024 31 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Thread of crazy painting details 🧵

1. It's all in the eyes Image
2. This is one of the most incredible details in art history.

Though just 5.5 centimeters wide, the mirror in Van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait reflects the entire room, showing the couple from behind along with two additional figures, one of whom might be the artist himself. Image
3. This painting depicts the process of human aging as you walk by it.

Sergi Cadenas' work is defined by meticulous detail. He uses kinetic optics, applying vertical strips of paint paste to the canvas, then painting a different image on each side after it dries.
4. In Jacques de Bréville's lithograph, young Napoleon Bonaparte is deeply absorbed in his studies at the military academy.

The artwork depicts a shadowy image of his future self looming over Europe, blending seamlessly with the cityscape visible through the window. Image
5. "The most beautiful lips in art history”

Judith Beheading Holofernes is a painting of the famous biblical episode painted by Caravaggio in c. 1598–1602. Image
6. Fast forward to the 20th century, Luciano Ventrone, an Italian artist born in 1942, is often referred to as the "Caravaggio of the 20th century."

Notice the extraordinary level of detail in this hyper-realistic painting of a pomegranate. Image
7. Everyone at this table is judging you.

Even the cat. Carl Bloch's "In a Roman Osteria" (1866) Image
8. In Bosch's painting The Garden of Earthly Delights, a man is shown being punished in Hell with musical notes etched on his backside.

Five hundred years later, the score was transcribed and performed, bringing the music to the ears of modern audiences for the first time.
9. Vincent van Gogh's blues Image
10. Those eyes.

"Fidelity" by Briton Rivière (1840–1920) Image
11. Only Rembrandt could depict hands with such accuracy.

This close-up is taken from the painting "Young Scholar and his Tutor" (1629-30). Image
12. This is a “bubble wrap painting” by Darian Rodriguez Mederos Image
13. Tiny Caravaggio self-portrait revealed by technology

Using multispectral reflectography, researchers found a tiny image of the artist with dark hair and a paintbrush in the wine jug of his painting Bacchus. This could be Caravaggio's only known self-portrait. Image
14. A figure in the background of Diego Velázquez's "Las Meninas" is highlighted with a delicate brushstroke, adding a soft glow that enhances the painting's depth. Image
15. This piece depicts Lucifer right after his fall from Heaven, with a solitary tear falling from his eye, conveying both his profound anger and unshakeable defiance.

The Fallen Angel by Alexandre Cabanel (1847) Image
16. The boy appears to be climbing out of the picture frame and into the world beyond.

"Escaping Criticism" is a remarkable example of "trompe-l'œil," an art technique that creates the illusion of three-dimensionality on a flat surface. Image
17. Vincent Van Gogh’s unique brush strokes Image
18. Michelangelo's self-portrait as the flayed skin held by St. Bartholomew in The Last Judgment. Image
19. Ivan the Terrible’s expression of guilt and sorrow following the tragic moment he unintentionally took his son’s life in a moment of rage. Image
20. The Milkmaid by Vermeer is extraordinarily realistic, conveying both the fine details but also a palpable sense of the physical presence of the woman and the table.

"The light, though bright, doesn't wash out the rough texture of the bread crusts." -Karen Rosenberg Image
21. Sandro Botticelli's masterpiece, "The Birth of Venus," is often celebrated as the ultimate depiction of feminine beauty in art, similar to how Michelangelo's David is considered the ideal representation of male beauty. Image
22. Why are the fingers in Michelangelo's masterpiece not touching?

God's finger is fully extended while Adam’s holds back, signifying human hesitation. God's hand symbolizes eternal presence, accessible only through our own decision, emphasizing the significance of free will. Image
23. One of the most enigmatic smiles in art history Image
24. Although it appears as if it could have been painted yesterday, this artwork is actually over 100 years old.

Every detail in this piece (1909 ) by Russian-French artist Zinaida Serebriakova feels astonishingly modern. Image
25. Initially, Hans Holbein's 1533 portrait appears to be a conventional painting.

However, when viewed from a certain angle, the seemingly random grey spot at the bottom morphs into a skull. Image
26. Critics have long debated the perspective in Manet's A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, but a 2000 photo reconstruction confirmed it to be correct.

The illusion of the barmaid and gentleman’s reflection is an accurate result of Manet's unique and innovative technique. Image
27. Active in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, Flemish painter Clara Peeters masterfully included her own self-portrait in the goblets of this still life.

If you zoom in on the right goblet, you'll find her image reflected several times. Image
28. Claude Monet's blues Image
29. The way a simple shadow can evoke a sense of realism through optical illusion.

"Two Laughing Girls" by Pere Borrell del Caso (1880) Image
30. Rembrandt is the king of detail.

To fully grasp his genius, the Rijksmuseum has published the largest and most detailed digital image of an artwork ever taken.

The original scan of Rembrandts The Night Watch (1642) is 717,000,000,000 pixels in size. Image
Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this deep dive into some of art's most extraordinary details, please share the first post of this thread and follow me for more content! @JamesLucasIT

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