News

Art history sleuths in Europe have determined that two separate portraits by a 17th-century Flemish artist actually belong together — and the two works of art have been reunited in a Danish museum.
Airbrushing and beauty filters may feel like a modern phenomenon, but conservation work to a portrait painted in the 17th century has revealed that touch-ups to images are nothing new.
Four row of portraits of men and women in 17th-century costume, each dated below with the year of their death. Portrait at lower right identified as Catherine of Braganza, Queen of Charles II, who ...
A 17th-century portrait of English aristocrat Diana Cecil apparently received a modern-day photoshopping, with portions of Cecil’s face being painted over to make for a lower hairline, among ...
English Heritage’s paintings conservator Alice Tate-Harte finishes the conservation of a 17th-century portrait of Diana Cecil, Countess of Oxford, that had been revised by an unidentified ...
18.5 x 12 x 26.25 in. (47 x 30.5 x 66.7 cm.) Depicting the Roman rulers of Otho and Tiberius, these remarkable busts date to the 17th century and exhibit the masterful sculptural qualities synonymous ...
A 17th century portrait discovered in an attic by the Dutch Golden Age painter Rembrandt sold for $1.4 million in Maine, breaking a state record. The painting, titled "Portrait of Girl" by ...