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Examples
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Wtewael, provide contrast and context; otherwise it's just "Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene" and "Bagpipe Player."
An Artist of Dual Allegiances Karen Wilkin 2011
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Earlier, "Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene" was at the Metropolitan, in New York, for comparison with that museum's own large ter Brugghen crucifixion, a gnarled, "Northern" picture so different from "Saint Sebastian" in spirit, scale and conception of the body that it was surprising to realize that the two pictures were painted about the same time.
An Artist of Dual Allegiances Karen Wilkin 2011
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At the National Gallery of Art in Washington, "Larger Than Life" united two superb works by the 17th-century Dutch interpreter of Caravaggism, Hendrick Ter Brugghen: Oberlin College's "St. Sebastian Tended by Irene," a large-figure composition that is unquestionably the Utrecht painter's masterpiece, and the National Gallery's recently acquired "Bagpipe Player," as exemplary of Ter Brugghen's secular side as "St. Sebastian" is of his devotional aspect.
Museums Reveal Degas's Nudes and Islam's Splendor Karen Wilkin 2011
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The currently mandated Man-Tended Moonbase (MTM) shares cacellability with sorties, because it takes less political capital to forget about monies expended on hardware expended than to buy more hardware to expend.
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The painting is "Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene, 1625," a religious scene by the Dutch artist Hendrick ter Brugghen.
At National Gallery, two paintings by one Dutch master add up to a sublime exhibition 2011
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The cover is a detail from "Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene," a spectacular devotional picture by the Dutch painter Hendrick ter Brugghen 1588-1629, from the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College.
An Artist of Dual Allegiances Karen Wilkin 2011
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Tended it By the hearth the white-armd venerable mother
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Hendrick ter Brugghen's 'St. Sebastian Tended by Irene' (1625).
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Probably the most spectacular of the Oberlin loans is "St. Sebastian Tended by Irene" (1625) by Hendrick ter Brugghen, shown near the Met's own ter Brugghen.
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Tended to by a mix of experts and bureaucrats, the ordnance corps exercised de facto veto power over arms designed by anyone else.
The Gun C. J. Chivers 2010
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