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  1. Picasso borrowed the composition and figures for this series from Nicolas Poussin's Rape of the Sabine Women 1637-38 and Jacques-Louis David's The Intervention of the Sabine Women 1799. The Roman Empire in his variationsrepresents all empires, the Napoleonic, the Nazi, and the contemporary Russian and the American empires of the Cold War, and is depicted as grotesque and barbaric.

  2. The present model is derived from the celebrated three-figure group of the Rape of the Sabines by Giambologna (born Jean de Bologne, 1529-1608), executed in marble in the early 1580's and unveiled on the 14th January 1583 in the Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence.

  3. 25 de mar. de 2013 · Painting by Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825), oil on canvas, 1799. On display at the Louvre Museum, Paris, France. The Abduction (or Rape) of the Sabine Women is an episode in the legendary history of Rome, traditionally said to have taken place in 750 BC, in which the first generation of Roman men acquired wives for themselves from the neighboring Sabine families.

  4. Hall of Pietro da Cortona - Pietro da Cortona and his Circle. Baroque was born around the 1630s, out of the intense Roman cultural environment of the first decades of the seventeenth century, coinciding with the papacy of Urban VIII Barberini. Pietro da Cortona was the first authentic representative of this new style, especially for his ...

  5. Rape of the Sabine women. Cavalier d'Arpino (Giuseppe Cesari 1568-1640) Fresco. Statue of Pope Urban VIII. Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598-1680) ed aiuti. Sculpture. Statue of Pope Innocent X. Alessandro Algardi (1595-1654) Sculpture. Door of the Hall of the Orazi e Curiazi. Giovan Battista Olivieri.

  6. "The Rape of the Sabines" depicts a legendary event from Roman history. To secure wives for his men, Romulus—who with his twin brother Remus founded Rome—invited the neighboring Sabines to witness celebratory games. During the festivities, the Romans stole over to the Sabine town and carried off the women.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SabinesSabines - Wikipedia

    The Sabines (US: / ˈ s eɪ b aɪ n z /, SAY-bynes, UK: / ˈ s æ b aɪ n z /, SAB-eyens; Latin: Sabini; Italian: Sabini—all exonyms) were an Italic people who lived in the central Apennine Mountains (see Sabina) of the ancient Italian Peninsula, also inhabiting Latium north of the Anio before the founding of Rome.. The Sabines divided into two populations just after the founding of Rome ...