Video de Pareja en Larapa Cusco Actos Contra el Pudor Twitter The Talks Today
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Video de Pareja en Larapa Cusco Actos Contra el Pudor Twitter The Talks Today
Juan de Pareja (c. 1606 in Antequera – 1670 in Madrid)[1] was a Spanish painter born in Antequera, near Málaga, Spain. He is known primarily as a member of the household and workshop of painter Diego Velázquez, who enslaved him until 1650. His 1661 work The Calling of Saint Matthew (sometimes also referred to as The Vocation of Saint Matthew) is on display at the Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain.
Pareja accompanied Velázquez on his second visit to Italy (1649–51), where Velázquez painted Pareja’s portrait. The portrait was purchased at auction by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1970 for nearly $5.5 million, a record at the time. According to early writers, Pareja painted in the manner of Velázquez, but his only known portrait is a mere reflection of Velázquez’s style. Other works, such as The Flight into Egypt (1658) and The Calling of Saint Matthew (1661), show greater variety in style. In 1650, while in Rome, Velázquez signed a legal document that granted Pareja his freedom four years later.
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