Abundantia - The Gifts of the Earth :: Hans Makart
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Abundantia - The Gifts of the Sea :: Hans Makart
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Allegory on the love of life :: Hans Makart
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The victory of light :: Hans Makart
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The harvest :: Hans Makart
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Feeling ( The Five Senses ) :: Hans Makart
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Obedience ( The Five Senses ) :: Hans Makart
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Smell [ The five senses ] :: Hans Makart
![Smell [ The five senses ] :: Hans Makart Allegory in art and painting - Smell [ The five senses ] :: Hans Makart](https://www.fineartlib.info/plugins/p17_image_gallery/images/tb/5/1389.jpg) |
Taste ( The Five Senses ) :: Hans Makart
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Facial ( The Five Senses )- Gesicht :: Hans Makart
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The four parts of the world :: Hans Makart
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Modern Cupids :: Hans Makart
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Sacrificial scene :: Hans Makart
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Renaissance :: Charles Zacharie Landelle
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Allegory of the Birth of Frederik Hendrik :: Caesar van Everdingen
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The Republic :: Jean-Leon Gerome
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From Darkness, the Light. Allegory of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences :: Johann-Nepomuk Ender
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The Muse Of Music :: Karl Ludwig Adolf Ehrhardt
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Peace :: Thiodore Chassiriau
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Youth at the Prow, Pleasure at the Helm :: William Etty
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Love and Innocence :: Leon Bazile Perrault
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Art And Life :: Walter Crane
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The Union of Painting and Sculpture :: Louis Lagrenee
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Allegory Of Autumn :: Andre Charles Voillemot
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Allegory Of Spring :: Andre Charles Voillemot
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Twixt Hope and Fear :: Lord Frederick Leighton
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When poverty comes in at the door love flies out the window :: George Frederick Watts
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Study for The Thorny Path :: Thomas Couture
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The Sring :: Franz Xavier Winterhalter
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Hope :: George Frederick Watts
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Love and Death :: George Frederick Watts
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Allegory of the Faith :: Johannes Vermeer
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The Crystal Ball (Restored Version) :: John William Waterhouse
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Vanity :: John William Waterhouse
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The Republic :: Jules Claude Ziegler
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The Triumph of Justice :: AACHEN, Hans von
 Allegory 1598 Oil on copper, 56 x 47 cm Alte Pinakothek, Munich |
Allegory of Peace, Art and Abundance :: AACHEN, Hans von
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Allegories in themselves are unexpected, eloquent and wise, and allegories in painting are also elegant and doubly expressive. Although, in fact, any artist in the picture of any genre uses allegorical moments. Probably, the allegory first appeared in painting, thanks to the desire of the authors to show some idea in the most clearly way, to convey to the viewer some meaning.
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