Edith hoped that the painting would make her famous. Or at least help her find a husband. But what poor Edith didn’t realize was that nobody paid any attention to paintings by American artists.
Jane’s husband, ever the cheap @#!$, said, “I will not pay for a portrait to be painted, we shall go to the starving artist sale, and you will find one that looks kind of like you.”
I told him the gown was ice blue, but he insisted on using cerulean blue. And let’s not even discuss the carroty red he used for my lovely auburn hair!
"Category:Paintings by Charles Courtney Curran" site=commons.wikimedia.org
(syntax supported by the Google, Bing, Yahoo, Duckduckgo, Ecosia, and Yandex search engines) in the address bar (or search for it using one of those search engines) and click first Category: found, and once there, find detail in the text of that webpage, and click its link for info and links that point to more info about this roughly jumbo envelope size painting. As the (currently) first comment here points out, this is a cropped image of the full painting (pointed to by that comment or the upper right inset image in the Summary section; I have added details there since that comment was posted).
Again, a larger strip image is shown by merely (⌘- or Ctrl-) clicking the image in Mr. Melcher’s THROWBACK THURSDAY: MASTERPIECE #32 (11/25/09) (August 24, 2022) blog entry, accessible by the Check out the blog! box after the last comment. I have added a comment there pointing to the artist info I used to point to here. So far 2 works by this artist have been used here (3 times total, including this Throwback Thursday repeat), the March 1, 2012, strip being its first use (the hyperlinks in my comment there have been deactivated; without those it’s pretty much useless).
BE THIS GUY about 2 years ago
The “Portrait of Diana Gray”. The woman in the painting got fatter while Diana remained thin.
This is a cropped version of the painting “Fair Critics.” Here is the complete painting.
https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fair_Critics.JPG
_
ronaldspence about 2 years ago
“Who wore it better?”
rmremail about 2 years ago
Husband, deciding which he was going to keep: The one that made his breakfast, or the one that didn’t spend all of his money.
Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 2 years ago
Painting was done before she got covid.
Solstice*1947 about 2 years ago
/// Though it seems that this woman’s alone,
more than half of the painting’s not shown.
In a large half-dark room
figures sit in the gloom,
passing judgement, their feelings unknown.
/// Women cropped from this image surveyed
how she matches the way she’s portrayed.
In the missing left side
these Fair Critics decide
if that oil’s worth the price that she paid.
rmremail about 2 years ago
Edith hoped that the painting would make her famous. Or at least help her find a husband. But what poor Edith didn’t realize was that nobody paid any attention to paintings by American artists.
rmremail about 2 years ago
I told you this dress makes me look sallow!
Tyge about 2 years ago
I wuz FRAMED!!!
Jonathan Mason about 2 years ago
Jenny Craig? Another reference from the USA lost on the rest of us, I assume?
Bilan about 2 years ago
Back then, selfies were much more difficult.
Jayalexander about 2 years ago
“Charles. Is it me or Memorex?”
P51Strega about 2 years ago
They say the canvas adds 10 pounds.
jdculhane46 about 2 years ago
Selfies were a lot tougher to do back then
dexterwhite about 2 years ago
I suspect that you used a pin hole camera to help paint this portrait of me…
Reader about 2 years ago
Seriously? Are we really saying she’s fat in the painting?!
Reader about 2 years ago
The dinner guests did NOT know they would be enduring a slide show presentation after dinner.
Call me Ishmael about 2 years ago
“Upon reflection,” said she/
“That sure looks a lot like me !”/
And, as she drew nearer,/
She saw ‘twas a mirror-/
How right could a lady be ?
PraiseofFolly about 2 years ago
Sequel to “The Picture of Dorian Grey”
The picture’s of sweet Doreen Grey
True daughter of Dorian, they say,
Who came upon his old picture
Wiped by black magic paint mixture
And for that she’d regret to this day.
.
She had it hung in its old place
Her mind whispered it belonged in that space
And a painter called Hellsent
His morbid disposition hellbent
Painted her picture full of soul grace
.
Later ‘twas Lady Windermere with her fan
Who enquired discretely who was the man
Who painted so inaccurately grim
Her figure that was nubile and slim
And when told she then got up and ran.
.
Oh, why retrace the Wilde story of Dorian?
Doreen did not make the mistakes he did again
She met a young, kind, virtuous art dealer
Who from Hellsent’s evil influence did heal her.
Long tale short, his name was Woke Finnegan.
wincoach Premium Member about 2 years ago
Jane’s husband, ever the cheap @#!$, said, “I will not pay for a portrait to be painted, we shall go to the starving artist sale, and you will find one that looks kind of like you.”
aerotica69 about 2 years ago
I told him the gown was ice blue, but he insisted on using cerulean blue. And let’s not even discuss the carroty red he used for my lovely auburn hair!
Calvins Brother about 2 years ago
“Next item up for auction is this self portrait. Am I bid $1500.?”
Another Take about 2 years ago
“Somethings wrong with this mirror!”
The Wolf In Your Midst about 2 years ago
Chuck had yet to learn that, when trying to flatter your subject, you should only go up one cup size.
mabrndt Premium Member about 2 years ago
Fair Critics (detail):
Paste (including the quote marks)
"Category:Paintings by Charles Courtney Curran" site=commons.wikimedia.org
(syntax supported by the Google, Bing, Yahoo, Duckduckgo, Ecosia, and Yandex search engines) in the address bar (or search for it using one of those search engines) and click first Category: found, and once there, find detail in the text of that webpage, and click its link for info and links that point to more info about this roughly jumbo envelope size painting. As the (currently) first comment here points out, this is a cropped image of the full painting (pointed to by that comment or the upper right inset image in the Summary section; I have added details there since that comment was posted).
Again, a larger strip image is shown by merely (⌘- or Ctrl-) clicking the image in Mr. Melcher’s THROWBACK THURSDAY: MASTERPIECE #32 (11/25/09) (August 24, 2022) blog entry, accessible by the Check out the blog! box after the last comment. I have added a comment there pointing to the artist info I used to point to here. So far 2 works by this artist have been used here (3 times total, including this Throwback Thursday repeat), the March 1, 2012, strip being its first use (the hyperlinks in my comment there have been deactivated; without those it’s pretty much useless).
Funny_Ha_Ha about 2 years ago
This mirror is freakin’ jacked man.
Csaw Backnforth about 2 years ago
That’s the last time a buy a used mirror from the carnival side show.
d1234dick Premium Member about 2 years ago
Edith was hoping for a simple photo, but NO it had to be hours long painting and he made me fat to boot.
Solstice*1947 about 2 years ago
Scottie’d fallen in love with a fiction.
With a painter’s artistic depiction
of a girl no one knew.
What was Scottie to do?
His solution caused heartache and friction.
/// He met someone who vaguely resembled
his “love.” When he saw her he trembled.
Dyed and restyled her hair.
Brought an outfit to wear
which he’d, in his obsession, assembled.
/// Now she stood by her twin made of paint,
tightly corseted, ready to faint.
Scottie frowned at the sight.
“Something’s not yet quite right…”
“No!!!” she screeched, “I can’t be who I ain’t!”
Running Buffalo Premium Member about 2 years ago
Thank you for coming to my dinner party! And now, as my parting gift to each of you …