Lincoln Center Murals by Marc Chagall
The Triumph of Music
The Sources of Music
1966 / Painting on panels / 36’x30′ / Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, NYC
1966 / Painting on panels / 36’x30′ / Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, NYC
1923 / Oil on canvas / 17″x14″ / Private collection
1910 / Color lithograph / 49″x36″ / Various collections
1923 / Oil on canvas / 39 4/5″x32 3/10″ / Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Germany
Trittico Botticelliano by Ottorino Respighi
“Although the theme of “The Adoration of the Magi” is recognizable as the carol “O come, O come, Emmanuel,” Respighi’s mind was not on the Advent season. Rather, the three movements of the Trittico Botticelliano each take their inspiration from a different painting by Sandro Botticelli, renowned artist of the Italian Renaissance. The first and third are likely familiar: La primavera (Spring) and La nascita di Venere (The Birth of Venus). The middle part of the triptych, “L’adorazione dei Magi,” is less humanistic and more traditional, with its subject from the Book of Matthew.”
~https://www.redlandssymphony.com/pieces/trittico-botticelliano
c.1475-1476 / Tempera on wood panel / 43 3/4″x52 3/4″ / Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
1913 / Oil on canvas / 71 1/2″x35 1/2″ / Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
1910 / Pen and Ink and Watercolor / 18 1/2″x14 1/3″ / Illustration for The Rhinegold & the Valkyrie
c.1934 / Tempera with oil on canvas, mounted on panel
45″x38″ / The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO
1909 / Oil on canvas / 51″x31 1/2″ / Private Collection
1933 / Silver print / 13 1/2″x10 1/2″ / Private collection
Who was Hazel Scott?
https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/instruments/piano/hazel-scott-jazz-entertainer-fought-racial-segregation/