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    <title>Adam and Eve: Gallery Label - Current</title>
    <link>http://www.artsconnected.org/resource/94684/adam-and-eve-gallery-label-current</link>
    <description>ArtsConnectEd.org Art Collector Set: Adam and Eve: Gallery Label - Current</description>
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      <title>Adam and Eve: Gallery Label - Current</title>
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<title>Adam and Eve: Gallery Label - Current</title>
<link>http://www.artsconnected.org/resource/94684/adam-and-eve-gallery-label-current</link>
<enclosure url="&lt;div class=&quot;gallery_item_text&quot; style=&quot;width:135px; height:115px;&quot; &gt;Rembrandt's insistent realism displeased seventeenth-century critics, who preferred classical nudes and the soft, fleshy bodies of Peter Paul Rubens. One critic snipped that Rembrandt chose as his models &quot;a peat stamper or washergirl from the barn.&quot; Brilliantly, he lit his naturalistic Adam and Eve from behind, with reflected light from the distant Eden, where an elephant ambles along, unaware of the scowling pair. The devil is borrowed from an Albrecht Dürer engraving; Rembrandt had acquired a large group of Dürer prints at auction the same year he made this etching.&lt;/div&gt;"  length="2175" type="image/jpeg" />
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2006 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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	&lt;td class=&quot;detail_label&quot;&gt;Title&lt;/td&gt;
	&lt;td&gt;&lt;h3&gt;Adam and Eve: Gallery Label - Current&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;
	&lt;td class=&quot;detail_label&quot;&gt;Author&lt;/td&gt;
	&lt;td&gt;&lt;h3&gt;Minneapolis Institute of Arts&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;
	&lt;td class=&quot;detail_label&quot;&gt;Date&lt;/td&gt;
	&lt;td&gt;&lt;h3&gt;2006-07-14&lt;/h3&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;
	&lt;td class=&quot;detail_label&quot; style=&quot;padding-right:7px;&quot;&gt;Institution&lt;/td&gt;
	&lt;td&gt;Minneapolis Institute of Arts&lt;/td&gt;
&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;/table&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Rembrandt's insistent realism displeased seventeenth-century critics, who preferred classical nudes and the soft, fleshy bodies of Peter Paul Rubens. One critic snipped that Rembrandt chose as his models &quot;a peat stamper or washergirl from the barn.&quot; Brilliantly, he lit his naturalistic Adam and Eve from behind, with reflected light from the distant Eden, where an elephant ambles along, unaware of the scowling pair. The devil is borrowed from an Albrecht Dürer engraving; Rembrandt had acquired a large group of Dürer prints at auction the same year he made this etching.</description>
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<media:thumbnail url="<div class="gallery_item_text" style="width:135px; height:115px;" >Rembrandt's insistent realism displeased seventeenth-century critics, who preferred classical nudes and the soft, fleshy bodies of Peter Paul Rubens. One critic snipped that Rembrandt chose as his models "a peat stamper or washergirl from the barn." Brilliantly, he lit his naturalistic Adam and Eve from behind, with reflected light from the distant Eden, where an elephant ambles along, unaware of the scowling pair. The devil is borrowed from an Albrecht Dürer engraving; Rembrandt had acquired a large group of Dürer prints at auction the same year he made this etching.</div>" type="image/jpeg" /><media:content url="<div class="gallery_item_text" style="width:135px; height:115px;" >Rembrandt's insistent realism displeased seventeenth-century critics, who preferred classical nudes and the soft, fleshy bodies of Peter Paul Rubens. One critic snipped that Rembrandt chose as his models "a peat stamper or washergirl from the barn." Brilliantly, he lit his naturalistic Adam and Eve from behind, with reflected light from the distant Eden, where an elephant ambles along, unaware of the scowling pair. The devil is borrowed from an Albrecht Dürer engraving; Rembrandt had acquired a large group of Dürer prints at auction the same year he made this etching.</div>" type="image/jpeg" /><media:copyright>Copyright Minneapolis Institute of Arts</media:copyright><media:credit>Minneapolis Institute of Arts</media:credit></item>
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