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Travel Bug Dog Tag Art-Fabritius-The Goldfinch TB

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Owner:
shellbadger Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Origin:
Texas, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

Use TB3M3WV to reference this item.

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Current Goal

This trackable is unusual. In the years 2010 to the present, collections of 100-400 travel bugs have been annually released in the United States (95%) and Europe (5%). This travel bug is part of the mere three percent of the 2010-14 collections that has been dropped off at least 25 times and has survived for at least five years.  As of 7 August 2018, this travel bug had been moved by 36 cachers and had lasted 7.8 years. 

Please drop this item in rural or Premium Member Only caches.  Do not drop it in an urban cache or leave it behind at a caching event.  Transport the bug in the original plastic bag for as long as the bag lasts; this prevents the chain and tag tangling with other items.  Otherwise, take this travel bug anywhere you wish.  No permission needed to leave the U.S.

Travel bug photos in the logs are appreciated.  I will re-post them here, where they can be seen by other cachers.

 

About This Item

TBFABRITIUSThe_Goldfinch

This is one of a series of travel bugs made to recognize paintings seen, and admired by the bug owner. A digital copy of this painting was downloaded from the internet. The copy was reduced in size and proportions cropped to accommodate the laminating materials available to the owner. Regrettably these processes diminish the effort of the artist. One truly must see the original in person to fully appreciate the work. The text below is a mixture of my own observations and material gleaned from the internet (mostly Wikipedia and Web Gallery).

Carel Fabritius (1622-1654) was a painter during the Dutch Golden Age, the 17th century. Prior to this time most patrons of the arts were the church and royalty who largely wanted portraits and paintings with religious or allegorical themes. After the Renaissance, northern Europe became a center of commerce and the middle classes prospered to the point that they wanted art to decorate their homes. And, they had broader tastes is subject matter than institutional patrons. To satisfy the demand, the Dutch and Flemish regions developed an amazing number of artists. Portraiture and religious topics were still important, but landscape, seascape, cityscape, still life and commemorative paintings began to appear. However, another kind of subject matter really flourished at this time, genre paintings. These were scenes from everyday life, depicting people from all classes.

I had never heard of Fabritius before I saw this painting at an exhibit of Dutch Masters at the Phoenix Art Museum in 2007. For some reason it caught my eye and I kept going back for another look. It was common for a Dutch household to have a bird tethered to a roost. Why not a painting of same thing? At that showing the painting was hung on the wall above eye level, as I am certain it was supposed to be—look at it, the bird is peering down at you. However at its permanent home, the Mauritshuis, The Hague, it is at eye level. Fabritius had been a pupil of Rembrandt. From the master he learned to employ define form through the inflection of light. Rembrandt's method was to portray the subject in light surrounded by a much darker background. The paintings of Fabritius, of which The Goldfinch is perfect example, maintain an overall brightness. Light is still more inflected, not by toning it down or intensifying it, but by tingeing it with subtle hues of color.

Gallery Images related to Art-Fabritius-The Goldfinch TB

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Tracking History (31544.6mi) View Map

Mark Missing 11/16/2019 shellbadger marked it as missing   Visit Log

The owner has set this Trackable as missing.

Discovered It 11/19/2018 Roggnrolla discovered it Estonia   Visit Log

Discovered it. Thank you for sharing.

Dropped Off 8/7/2018 bussbosse placed it in Loo ots Estonia - 140.4 miles  Visit Log
Visited 8/2/2018 bussbosse took it to Kuunsi Estonia - 1.27 miles  Visit Log
Visited 8/1/2018 bussbosse took it to Korsi talu/Korsi farm Estonia - 108.61 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/22/2018 bussbosse took it to Lilla Rågö Estonia - 49.22 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/21/2018 bussbosse took it to Lollidemaa Estonia - 52.08 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/18/2018 bussbosse took it to Helsinki City Museum Finland - 220.12 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/16/2018 bussbosse took it to Vanha Valamo Russia - 23.05 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/15/2018 bussbosse took it to Piipun Piha Russia - 254.53 miles  Visit Log
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