This painting's central figure wears a fur-lined red hat called a kuczma (KOOCH-mah) and carries a warhammer in an odd reverse grip near his full quiver as he passes in front of a domed citadel. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this painting from the 1650s, now in the Frick Collection. Since its artist rarely painted equestrian portraits, scholars have suggested it could be by students like Aert de Gelder or Willem Drost.
ANSWER: The Polish Rider
[10e] The Polish Rider is generally attributed to this Dutch master who painted The Night Watch.
ANSWER: Rembrandt (Harmenszoon) van Rijn [accept either underlined portion]
[10h] An essay by Julius S. Held opens by comparing The Polish Rider to the anonymous 13th-century sculpture of a horseman in this cathedral, which is also home to Tilman Riemenschneider's tomb for Henry II and Cunigunde.
ANSWER: Bamberg Cathedral [or Bamberger Dom (St. Peter und St. Georg)]
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