If you have paid less than $ 50 million, it is not genuine!
I've been looking for the answer to this question for many years. I have an original oil painting that is beautifully done by the artist who signed the painting Rubens. It's a landscape and does not look anything like Peter Paul Rubens paintings. However, I find it very odd why any painter wanting recognition would sign their name that way. Just as someone with the last name Rembrandt wouldn't want to sign their art using only their last name. I'm thinking it is either a fraudulent signature or a valuable painting. Or neither, but I have to know.
Rubens had so many people working for him, imitating his style, that it is difficult to know whether Rubens even touched the painting himself. He would sometimes get another person to do the painting, and then he would touch it up himself. If a patron wanted a painting that was done completely by Rubens, it would be very expensive.
Well, the painting (and some drawings) is done by Rubens, depicting one of his children.
Peter Paul Rubens has written: 'Rubens' -- subject(s): Painting 'Selected drawings' 'Rubenism' 'Rubens selected drawings'
Ferrante artist and painter
Up your but with a coconut
rococo
i have oil painting of a dark lane with w cha[man signed in corner
curvy and voluptuous
I don't know. I bought my painting in Florida and it is a still life floral. No date only signed "Rossy"
I have an old Matador painting signed RiKi,no idea who it is though.
Rubens' painting "Romulus and Remus Being Found by the Wolf" was created in Flanders, specifically in Antwerp, where the artist had his studio. The painting reflects the Baroque style characteristic of Rubens, emphasizing dynamic movement and emotional intensity. It depicts the legendary story of the two brothers being nurtured by a she-wolf, a foundational myth of Rome.