 There’s just something about the mingling of artistic media that 
always puts a smile on my face. I’m thinking, for example, of such works
 as Pictures at an Exhibition (completed in 1874) by the Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky, or Emile Zola’s novel The Masterpiece (1886) based loosely on the life of Paul Paul Cézanne (and if you’re into novels featuring art and artists, see this earlier Book Riot post). But above all, I just love love love
 paintings of famous writers because they offer alternate windows into 
these literary lives. Each artist approaches his/her subject with a 
necessarily unique perspective, and the outcome is always fascinating.
There’s just something about the mingling of artistic media that 
always puts a smile on my face. I’m thinking, for example, of such works
 as Pictures at an Exhibition (completed in 1874) by the Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky, or Emile Zola’s novel The Masterpiece (1886) based loosely on the life of Paul Paul Cézanne (and if you’re into novels featuring art and artists, see this earlier Book Riot post). But above all, I just love love love
 paintings of famous writers because they offer alternate windows into 
these literary lives. Each artist approaches his/her subject with a 
necessarily unique perspective, and the outcome is always fascinating.For your viewing pleasure, therefore, I present nine portraits of famous writers by (mostly) famous painters (and yes, Manet shows up a lot here- dude must have really loved the writers). I’m sure there are many more out there, so tell me about them in the comments! The more the merrier!
 Theodore Dreiser by Henry Varnum Poor (1933); source
 Gertrude Stein (1905-6) by Pablo Picasso; source
 Portrait of Emile Zola (1868) by Edouard Manet; source
Stéphane Mallarmé (1876) by Edouard Manet; source
Beatrice Hastings (1914) by Amedeo Modigliani; source
Willa Cather (1923) by Leon Bakst; source
Charles Dickens (1859) by William Powell Frith; source
Herman Melville (1870) by Joseph Eaton; source
George Moore (1879) by Edouard Manet; source
(first posted on Book Riot 2/18/14)








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