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Photo Credit: photo: M. Cook
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Lady with a Lute
190920th century
203 x 175 mm (8 x 6.9 in.)
Henry Wolf, American, (1852–1916)
After Jan Vermeer, Dutch, (1632–1675)
- genre - Use for pictorial representations, which may be in various media, that represent scenes or events from everyday life; usually used with another term such as "paintings" or "prints." [April 1991 descriptor moved.]
- music - The art concerned with the combining of vocal or instrumental sounds in measured time to communicate emotions, ideas, or states of mind, usually according to cultural standards of rhythm, melody, and, in most Western music, harmony. [January 1995 scope note added. December 1991 related term added; related term added.]
- musical instruments - Sound-producing apparatuses whose primary function is to play music.
- musicians - Those skilled or specializing in the art or practice of music, such as composers, conductors, and performers. [January 1995 scope note added. February 1993 descriptor moved. November 1992 alternate term added. March 1992 related terms added.]
- image Dimensions: 203 x 175 mm (8 x 6.9 in.)
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Open Access Image from the Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University
(photo: M. Cook)
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Henry Wolf, American, (1852–1916) Jan Vermeer, Dutch, (1632–1675) . Lady with a Lute, 1909. Wood engraving on tissue paper with four corners glued down on board. image : 203 x 175 mm (8 x 6.9 in.). Sheet : 354 x 273 mm (13.9 x 10.7 in.). DAC accession number 1956.10.21. Gift of the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, 1956. Open Access Image from the Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University (photo: M. Cook) .