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"content": "\"Caesar at the Rubicon,\" Wilhelm Trübner, 1878.\n\nTrübner (1851-1917) was a German Realist painter. Although never a major name (many of his paintings were too somber to really be popular) he did achieve a few humorous paintings with his dog, Caesar, that have endured.\n\nHe also did a lot to advance the idea of \"art for art's sake,\" that is that a work of art should not just depict something beautiful, but be beautiful in and of itself, and that art should be free of utilitarian and didactic concerns. This was a reaction to a generation of artists who felt their art had to have a message and make a stand.\n\nEh...there's more than enough room for both, I say.\n\nFrom the Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna.\n\n#Art #GermanArt #Realism #DogsOfMastodon #WilhelmTrubner #ArtForArtsSake\nhttps://social-cdn.vivaldi.net/system/media_attachments/files/113/551/836/896/337/239/original/7b02a08ddcf29c5e.png\n",
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