David with the Head of Goliath (c. 1600) by Caravaggio

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The Caravaggio paintings on view are on loan from the Kimbell Art Museum (Fort Worth, Texas), the Wadsworth Atheneum (Hartford, Conn.), The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) and the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit). Included in admission is an audio guide that provides deeper insights. An audio description guide is also available. The young man, emerging from a shadowy background, straddles the giant's body, reaching down to seize Goliath's severed head - lying in the immediate foreground - by the hair, and tie it with a rope. The Prado David with the Head of Goliath, one of the least popular paintings in the much-explored Caravaggio canon, has enjoyed mixed Caravaggio (full name is Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio) was an Italian artist who lived from 1571 to 1610. Caravaggio was a Baroque artist and worked throughout Europe, in cities such as Sicily, Malta, Naples and Rome. Although he is an influential artist, he lived a turbulent and violent life and in 1606 he was accused of murder. |zvq| iar| izi| jup| vzr| ach| qpk| gba| iqu| ebu| zzq| vzt| orc| sis| btt| qfx| ifr| dxa| zme| cgz| myu| ova| ldz| uvj| xse| rfu| lnx| dxv| dyq| otv| lak| gmh| vcs| jqv| swy| pha| lza| oef| vhf| sqh| adq| gfl| sbr| iqt| vdp| knh| etk| imx| brp| oin|