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Madness Collection (page 4)

"Exploring the Depths of Madness: From Hogarth's Gin Lane to Van Gogh's Asylum" Step into a world where madness reigns, as depicted by artists throughout history

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Madness Collection: 'The English ran after him like mad'(litho)
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Madness Collection: Deux figures masculines (Two male Figures). Peinture de Kasimir Severinovich Malevitch (Malevich)
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Madness Collection: The Hermits by Egon Schiele
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Madness Collection: Autoportrait avec manches a rayures - Oeuvre de Egon Schiele (1890-1918), gouache sur papier
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Madness Collection: 'Composition au cavalier'(Composition with a rider) Peinture de Pavel Nikolayevich Filonov
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Madness Collection: Moonlit Night
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Madness Collection: Il n y a pas plus sot qu un vieux sot (There is no fool like an old fool)
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Madness Collection: The Homeopaths: Second Treatment (plate 5), 1843. Creator: Charles Emile Jacque
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Madness Collection: Moon Madness, 1928 (pastel on board)
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Madness Collection: The Prayer Book of Bonne of Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy f
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Madness Collection: The old fool. Painting by Lucas Cranach the former (1472-1553), circa 1530
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Madness Collection: The Beggars or The Cripples - oil on wood, 1568
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Madness Collection: Charcot designed by one of his students. From left to right
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Madness Collection: The passion for the game expressed by satyres players
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Madness Collection: A skinny old man with an emacie face is stretching, his suit
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Madness Collection: Sleepwalking or The Seeker (oil on canvas, 1865)
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Madness Collection: The concert in the egg Satire of alchemy symbolized by the philosophical egg
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Madness Collection: Don Quixote delights his madness through Wisdom. 'The Ingenious Gentleman Don
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Madness Collection: The cripples A crowd of poor and infirm in a city (in Flanders?) (Court of Miracles)
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Madness Collection: Love and Madness. Fables by Jean de La Fontaine (1621-95)
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Madness Collection: La parabole des vierges folles et des vierges sages - '
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Madness Collection: Carnival in the streets of Paris Detail. Painting by Etienne Jeaurat (1699-1789) 1757
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Madness Collection: Jesus Christ warriors a posseof Exorcism. Painting by Mattia Preti dit il Cavalier
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Madness Collection: Marion Delorme (or Marie de Lon, Lady of Lorme, 1611-1650) and Edward Somerset
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Madness Collection: Exorcism: a demon leaves the body of a witch possedee while a priest offers him Communion
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Madness Collection: Don Quixote and the windmills - Illustration of Jules David (1808-1892
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Madness Collection: Personification of madness holding a cat, n. d. 18th century
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Madness Collection: Passionate attitudes in 'Photographic iconography of the Salpetriere
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Madness Collection: The U. S. S. Pennsylvania Under Tow at the Outbreak of the American Civil War with Fort
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Madness Collection: A Mad Bull, 1806 (1824) (aquatint)
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Madness Collection: President Mole returning from the Palais-Royal during the Fronde, (black chalk
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Madness Collection: Lever des Ouvrieres en Linge, (w / c heightened with white on paper)
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Madness Collection: Lear, King of Britain, from Shakespeares King Lear (colour litho)
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Madness Collection: Removing the Rocks in the Head, c. 1550-1600 (oil on panel)
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Madness Collection: The Play Scene, Hamlet, from the picture in the Vernon Gallery (engraving)
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Madness Collection: Twelfth Night; or, What You Will, Act III, Sc 4 (litho)
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Madness Collection: Scene from Shakespeares Hamlet (Act IV, Scene 7) (litho)
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Madness Collection: 'Kate is crazed'(engraving)
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Madness Collection: Polonius tests Hamlets sanity while the the King and Queen observe
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Madness Collection: Ophelia, from Hamlet by William Shakespeare, edition published by Hodder
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Madness Collection: Laila and Majnun converse beneath a tree, c. 1730 (opaque w / c & gold on paper)
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Madness Collection: Shakespeares King Lear (chromolitho)
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Madness Collection: Charles VI is warned by a leper that he will be betrayed (chromolitho)
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Madness Collection: Drama on a transatlantic voyage (colour litho)
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Madness Collection: La sagesse des fous, F Rabelais (engraving)
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Madness Collection: Two Gunners Victims Of Four Horses Fleeing On The Hills Along The Right Bank Of The Po
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Madness Collection: The Possest man healed (engraving)
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Madness Collection: A deranged man who was shooting in the galleries of the Louvre in Paris suddenly... (colour litho)


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"Exploring the Depths of Madness: From Hogarth's Gin Lane to Van Gogh's Asylum" Step into a world where madness reigns, as depicted by artists throughout history. In Hogarth's iconic "Gin Lane, " we witness the devastating consequences of excessive alcohol consumption on society. The moon casts an eerie glow, fueling Moon Madness and distorting reality. Venturing further down the rabbit hole, Alice encounters the enigmatic Cheshire Cat, whose mischievous grin embodies the essence itself. Meanwhile, in England's Lunacy era, a man dressed as a chicken runs wild across fields and hills, embodying both absurdity and freedom. William Hogarth returns with "A Rake's Progress, " illustrating the descent into melancholy and raving madness within Bedlam Hospital walls. Erik XIV of Sweden also succumbs to insanity during his reign—a reminder that even kings are not immune to its grip. Irish Drunk Pat stumbles through life with his drinking logic, blurring lines between reason and chaos. Ophelia floats amidst flowers in her tragic demise—an embodiment of fragile sanity shattered by heartbreak. Goya takes us inside The Madhouse (Asylum), exposing humanity at its most vulnerable state—struggling against inner demons while society looks away. Vincent van Gogh invites us into the Vestibule of Asylum; brushstrokes convey swirling emotions that mirror his own battle with mental illness. In these artistic depictions lies a fascination with madness—a reflection of our collective curiosity about what lies beyond rationality’s boundaries. They remind us that within this realm exists both tragedy and beauty—an exploration worth undertaking for those brave enough to delve into its depths.