@alamira2006: #على_سبيل_السعاد_أقترب_عيد_ميلادي🌝🤭♥️ #عيد_ميلادي_قرب_🥺💞 #اميرتكن_قرب_عيد_ميلادها🌝🙈🥹 #أمـــٓــيـ ࢪة_مـــٓـــاࢪܚࡅߺ🦋♥️#جميلة_مارس🤤💕 #اعادة_النشر🔃 #اعملولي_اعادة_نشر😒 #رفعولي__ياه__إكسبلور #CapCut #وصلوني10k #متابعه_ولايك_واكسبلور_احبكم #شعب_الصيني_ماله_حل😂😂 #مالي_خلق_احط_هاشتاقات😩❤ #شعب_الصيني_ماله_حل😂😂

آـآمـۭم جٰجٰوꪆد💙👑
آـآمـۭم جٰجٰوꪆد💙👑
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Tuesday 05 March 2024 11:56:24 GMT
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little.sweetie.sar
Little sweetie Sarah Dz :
افتحي التنزيل 🙏
2026-03-07 22:36:04
0
x_yasin_z
ٱمُﮱږ ٱڷٱڛڷٱمُ 🍃💚 :
كل سنه وانتي سالمه خيت 💙🥹
2024-03-11 22:30:12
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mayada.gaper4
♥️Mayada♥️🌹 :
😂
2025-07-02 15:01:27
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user8510522601727
ترندماكس :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-04-15 16:45:54
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In this painting, Paton depicts a moment rarely chosen by earlier artists. Instead of staging the temptation as a confrontation, he shows Christ asleep on the rocky ground of the wilderness while Satan crouches above him on a higher outcrop. Light falls on Christ, picking out his face and the folds of his robe, while Satan sits in shadow with a crown of flame on his head. The hierarchy is inverted visually. The figure of evil looms over the scene, watchful and patient, while the divine figure lies exposed and motionless. The painting belongs to the strand of Paton's career devoted to grand religious subjects, which he turned to after building his reputation on fairy paintings drawn from Shakespeare and Celtic legend. He had met John Everett Millais at the Royal Academy Schools in London and was invited to join the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1848. He declined formal membership but worked in their style throughout his career, applying the same close observation of rock, foliage, and fabric to biblical narrative. His Victorian audience responded strongly to these works, which were widely reproduced as engravings and circulated well beyond gallery walls. The iconography draws on the accounts of Christ's temptation in the wilderness found in the Synoptic Gospels and on Milton's Paradise Regained, a poem Paton knew well from his earlier work as an illustrator of British literary classics. By placing the encounter outside the moment of direct confrontation, he reframes the episode as one of vigilance rather than combat. Satan does not strike. He waits. The work was acquired by Kirkcaldy Galleries in 1974, where it remains today.
In this painting, Paton depicts a moment rarely chosen by earlier artists. Instead of staging the temptation as a confrontation, he shows Christ asleep on the rocky ground of the wilderness while Satan crouches above him on a higher outcrop. Light falls on Christ, picking out his face and the folds of his robe, while Satan sits in shadow with a crown of flame on his head. The hierarchy is inverted visually. The figure of evil looms over the scene, watchful and patient, while the divine figure lies exposed and motionless. The painting belongs to the strand of Paton's career devoted to grand religious subjects, which he turned to after building his reputation on fairy paintings drawn from Shakespeare and Celtic legend. He had met John Everett Millais at the Royal Academy Schools in London and was invited to join the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1848. He declined formal membership but worked in their style throughout his career, applying the same close observation of rock, foliage, and fabric to biblical narrative. His Victorian audience responded strongly to these works, which were widely reproduced as engravings and circulated well beyond gallery walls. The iconography draws on the accounts of Christ's temptation in the wilderness found in the Synoptic Gospels and on Milton's Paradise Regained, a poem Paton knew well from his earlier work as an illustrator of British literary classics. By placing the encounter outside the moment of direct confrontation, he reframes the episode as one of vigilance rather than combat. Satan does not strike. He waits. The work was acquired by Kirkcaldy Galleries in 1974, where it remains today.

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