Explore Meaning, Value, and Details in Great Paintings
Discover famous artworks, understand what they mean, see how much they are worth, and zoom in on the details that matter.
Featured Value Pages
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Explore Painting Details
The Nighttime Crowd
in Boulevard Montmartre at Night by Camille Pissarro
Seen from Pissarro’s hotel window, the Boulevard Montmartre becomes a river of motion: pedestrians, cabs, and omnibuses fused into flickering strokes and pricks of light. The nighttime crowd is both subject and sensor, registering new electric illumination against the warmer glow of shopfronts and carriage lamps, and turning the boulevard into a modern stage.
The Gaslights
in Boulevard Montmartre at Night by Camille Pissarro
In Pissarro’s Boulevard Montmartre at Night, the true “gaslights” are the warm, amber shop and café windows that fringe the sidewalks, not the cool orbs marching down the boulevard’s center. Their glow turns the street into a stage of urban commerce and sociability while Pissarro counterposes them with the bluish, newly electric streetlamps to visualize a city remade by modern light.
The Cradle Veil
in The Cradle by Berthe Morisot
The cradle veil in Berthe Morisot’s The Cradle turns a humble nursery net into the painting’s emotional and visual hinge. Drawn by the mother between viewer and infant, it asserts privacy, filters light, and binds mother and child along a luminous diagonal—defining Morisot’s modern vision of caregiving.
The Mother's Gaze
in The Cradle by Berthe Morisot
In The Cradle (1872), Berthe Morisot turns a quiet look into the engine of the painting: a mother’s lowered gaze that meets her sleeping child across a gauzy veil. This tender, watchful focus binds the pair in a strict diagonal and asserts a modern ethics of privacy, recasting motherhood as a serious, contemporary subject.
Featured Study Prints
Famous artworks paired with close readings of the details that make them unforgettable.

Full painting + study sheet
The Convex Mirror in The Arnolfini Portrait
Jan van Eyck
Detail study: Convex mirror with reflected figures and Passion roundels
$79
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Full painting + study sheet
The Scallop Shell in The Birth of Venus
Sandro Botticelli
Detail study: Scallop shell
$79
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Full painting + study sheet
The Almost-Touching Hands in The Creation of Adam
Michelangelo
Detail study: Almost-touching hands (and micro-gap)
$79
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Full painting + study sheet
The Glassy Bubbles in The Garden of Earthly Delights
Hieronymus Bosch
Detail study: Glassy Bubbles and Shells
$79
View study print →Featured Artworks

Girl with a White Dog
Lucian Freud (1950–51)
Lucian Freud’s Girl with a White Dog stages a charged quiet: a woman in a parted robe exposes one breast while shielding herself with a hand, as a white dog’s head lies heavy on her lap. The cool, fine-grained paint makes every surface hyper-present—the matte skin, the nap of the robe, the striped sofa—turning domestic calm into <strong>uneasy intimacy</strong> <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Reflection with Two Children
Lucian Freud (1965)
Lucian Freud’s Reflection with Two Children stages a self‑portrait as a confrontation with a mirror placed on the floor, forcing a vertiginous, low viewpoint. A suited figure looms while a ceiling lamp hovers like a disc behind his head, and two small children puncture the frame at the bottom edge. The painting converts self‑representation into a drama of <strong>authority</strong>, <strong>exposure</strong>, and <strong>accountability</strong> <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Portrait on a White Cover
Lucian Freud (2002–2003)
Lucian Freud’s Portrait on a White Cover turns the human body into a field of <strong>material truth</strong>, setting warm, bruised flesh against a <strong>cool, worked cloth</strong> that is named in the title. The diagonal sprawl, clenched left hand, and twisted feet make <strong>gravity</strong> and <strong>duration</strong> felt as subjects in their own right <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Benefits Supervisor Sleeping
Lucian Freud (1995)
Benefits Supervisor Sleeping is a 1995 oil painting in which Lucian Freud renders a sleeping, unidealized body across a sagging, floral sofa. With dense, tactile brushwork and a close, low vantage, the work asserts <strong>monumental presence</strong> while confronting viewers with the <strong>material truth of flesh</strong> and time’s imprint. It is a late‑century landmark of the School of London’s uncompromising figurative art <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[4]</sup>.

Noon
Joan Mitchell (1969)
Painted in 1969, Joan Mitchell’s <strong>Noon</strong> is a monumental oil whose blazing oranges, ultramarines, and ragged whites condense the glare and density of midday into gesture. A central <strong>mint-turquoise clearing</strong> is ringed by stacked blocks of orange and navy, while drips and dragged impasto stage a volatile equilibrium between dazzle and depth <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

La Grande Vallée VII
Joan Mitchell (1983)
La Grande Vallée VII is a monumental <strong>diptych</strong> in which Joan Mitchell converts a remembered landscape into a charged field of color and motion. Cascades of <strong>blazing yellow</strong>, <strong>leafy green</strong>, and <strong>inky blue</strong> collide across the seam, where drips and slashing strokes keep the surface alive—an arena where <strong>exuberance and elegy</strong> co-exist <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.