64. Study for ‘In the time of anarchy’, by Paul Signac. 1893. Canvas, 58.6 by 81 cm. (Private collection; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
65. Bathers by the river, by Henri Matisse. 1909–10, 1913 and 1916–17. Canvas, 260 by 392 cm. (Art Institute of Chicago; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
66. The large bathers, by Paul Cézanne. 1900–06. Canvas, 210.5 by 250.8 cm. (Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Exhibition Review
Rembrandt and the face of Jesus. Paris, Philadelphia and Detroit
40. Half-past three (The poet), by Marc Chagall. 1911. Canvas, 195.9 by 144.8 cm. (Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
41. Tea time (Woman with a teaspoon), by Jean Metzinger. 1911. Oil on cardboard, 75.9 by 70.2 cm. (Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
42. A ma fiancée, by Marc Chagall. 1911. Gouache, watercolour, metallic paint, charcoal and ink on paper, mounted on cardboard, 61 by 44.5 cm. (Philadelphia Museum of Art).
58. Seated bather, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1914. Canvas, 81.6 by 67.7 cm. (Art Institute of Chicago; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
59. Seater bather in a landscape, called Euridyce, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. c.1902. Canvas, 116 by 89 cm. (Musée Picasso, Paris; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
60. Portrait of a model, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1916. Canvas, 55.5 by 46 cm. (Musée Picasso, Paris; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
61. Dancing girl with tambourine, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1909. Canvas, 155 by 64.8 cm. (National Gallery, London; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
62. Jean as a hunter, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1910. Canvas, 173 by 89 cm. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
63. The bathers, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1918–19. Canvas, 110 by 160 cm. (Musée d’Orsay, Paris; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
Attributed works:
64. Gabrielle with a rose, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. 1911. Canvas, 55.5 by 47 cm. (Musée d’Orsay, Paris; exh. Grand Palais, Paris).
86. Wallpaper with nymphs and satyrs, by Sebald Beham. c.1520–25. Woodcut, photomontage reconstruction. (Herzog Anton-Ulrich Museum).
Attributed works:
87. Feast of the gods, by Diana Mantuana, after Giulio Romano. 1575, republished 1613.
Engraving, printed from three plates, 37.1 by 111.2 cm. (Baltimore Museum of Art, Garrett collection; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
88. Detail of the Submersion of Pharaoh’s army in the Red Sea, after Titian. c.1513–16. Woodcut, printed from twelve blocks, 118 by 215 cm. (Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Exhibition Review
Frida Kahlo. Minneapolis, Philadelphia and San Francisco
103. The two Fridas, by Frida Kahlo. 1939. Canvas, 172 by 172 cm. (Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art)
Attributed works:
104. Henry Ford Hospital, by Frida Kahlo. 1932. Oil on metal, 31 by 40.2 cm. (Museo Dolores Olmedo, Xochimilco, Mexico City; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art)
66. Bombs bursting on the Cité d’Aleth, Saint-Malo, by Lee Miller. 1944. Gelatin silver print, 12 by 12.8 cm. (Lee Miller Archives, East Sussex; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art)
Attributed works:
67. SS prison guard found floating in canal, Dachau, Germany, by Lee Miller. 1945. Gelatin silver print, 15.8 by 15.2 cm. (Lee Miller Archives, East Sussex; exh. Philadelphia Museum of Art)