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.

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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.

Featured Artworks

Hero and Leandro by Cy Twombly

Hero and Leandro

Cy Twombly (1985)

<strong>Hero and Leandro</strong> compresses myth into a single, diagonal surge of paint that fuses sea, storm, and desire. The impasto wave drives from lower left to upper right, while the faint graphite name “leandro” thins into the white ground, turning language into a last breath. Twombly converts Marlowe’s poem and the Greek legend into a <strong>painterly elegy</strong> where gesture stands in for fate <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

Blackboard by Cy Twombly

Blackboard

Cy Twombly (1968)

Blackboard stages <strong>writing without words</strong>: looping, chalk‑like lines sweep diagonally across a smoky gray field, rehearsing language as pure rhythm. Twombly turns the schoolroom slate into a <strong>theater of inscription</strong>, where repetition, erasure, and breath register as the true subject <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Leda and the Swan by Cy Twombly

Leda and the Swan

Cy Twombly (1962)

Cy Twombly’s Leda and the Swan condenses the Greek myth into an <strong>orgiastic collision</strong> of marks: graphite scrawls, smeared whites, blush pinks, and eruptive reds radiate from a dark, compressed vortex. A sketched <strong>window-like rectangle</strong>, heart and phallic glyphs puncture the storm, making desire and violence legible as emblems rather than images <sup>[1]</sup>.

Untitled (New York City) by Cy Twombly

Untitled (New York City)

Cy Twombly (1968)

Cy Twombly’s Untitled (New York City) (1968) converts the city into <strong>tempo and gesture</strong>: white, looping lines lash across a slate field like cursive untethered from words. The work stages <strong>writing-as-motion</strong>, registering pressure shifts, drips, and erasures as a live record of urban time <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[5]</sup>.

Whaam! by Roy Lichtenstein

Whaam!

Roy Lichtenstein (1963)

Whaam! stages a split-second airstrike as a two-panel, comic-derived spectacle where <strong>cool control</strong> meets <strong>hot impact</strong>. Lichtenstein converts lethal action into <strong>graphic codes</strong>—Ben-Day dots, speech balloon, and the yellow onomatopoeia “WHAAM!”—to expose how mass media packages warfare as crisp design <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[3]</sup><sup>[5]</sup>.

Ohhh...Alright... by Roy Lichtenstein

Ohhh...Alright...

Roy Lichtenstein (1964)

Roy Lichtenstein’s Ohhh...Alright... captures a suspended beat of romance‑comic melodrama in the cool idiom of <strong>Pop Art</strong>. A tightly cropped red‑haired woman grips a telephone as a speech balloon—“<strong>OHHH… ALRIGHT…</strong>”—signals reluctant acquiescence, while the hand‑painted <strong>Ben‑Day dots</strong> mimic mass printing to stage emotion as a commodity sign <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.