What's your favorite painting?

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Brad H

Lifer
Dec 17, 2024
2,005
10,775
These are two of my favorites:
Georges Seurat's - A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1884–1886)
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Edward Hopper's - Nighthawks (1942)
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I observed both of these paintings last year at the Art Institute of Chicago, and bought a small print of each to display in my shop.

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I have never been much one for art but that is my leading contender for favorite.

A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte

 

tartanphantom

Lurker
Oct 20, 2025
46
210
62
Murfreesboro, TN
There is some mighty good stuff already posted in this thread.

Myself, I’m a big fan of American Regionalism and its offshoots.

Andrew Wyeth’s Christina’s World probably tops my list. It has fascinated me since childhood, and my wife gave me a very large framed print of it for my birthday one year. It has hung In our living room ever since. There have been countless times when I’m walking through the house on the way to doing something else, and I’ll stop for a moment and study it even more.

For me it elicits much of the human condition; drawing on both despair and hope, obstruction and determination, and how one’s own world can be incredibly small and yet massively expansive at the same time.

HyuVEPv.jpg
 
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MisterBadger

Lifer
Oct 6, 2024
1,152
9,891
Ludlow, UK
'The Lady Elizabeth Tudor' (artist unknown, circa 1545-6). The future Queen Elizabeth I. Aged about 13 at the time the portrait was made, probably to be shown to prospective suitors. Her mother had been executed for treason when she was 2 years old, her father was dying, herkid half-brother Edward as Edward VI was about to write her out of the succession, as later her half-sister Mary who kept her under house arrest. Regarded as a pawn in the religious and political manoevrings of the mid 16thC, I find this portrait fascinating, and the more I look at it, the more I think I see: smouldering resignation masking abarely repressed defiance and an unsuccessful attempt to look resigned and submissive as in the similar portrait of her foster-mother Queen Jane Seymour. A girl who has become very old for her years, as a child negotiating the snake-pit that was the Tudor court.Princess Elizabeth.jpg