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Get a taste of our exhibition on the vibrant world of printmaking in 19th-century France from the comfort of your own home 🖼
Flick through highlights from the show: https://t.co/ExHGWvohyd
🏛 Journey with us as we visit ancient Rome!
In this blog post we’re exploring the city’s best sights, delicacies, places to stay and more: https://t.co/zxNWLPKo7M
Delany didn’t start making her ‘mosaicks’ until she was 72, but made nearly 1,000 works in just over a decade.
Find out more about the pioneering artist’s life and work on our website, and read all about her contribution to the Museum today: https://t.co/yW8Ly1SXSs
This 19th-century print shows a well-dressed man speeding down a hill on a velocipede – an early form of bicycle without pedals, much like a modern balance bike for children 🚲
Find out where the rest of the months got their names here: https://t.co/KNifqFPMzY
Käthe Kollwitz combined technical mastery with deeply emotional and political subject matter to create some of the most powerful and haunting artwork of her time.
The influential artist died #onthisday 1945 https://t.co/RwRx23ezRT
October takes its name from being the 8th month of the Roman calendar – octō means 8 in Latin.
This autumnal watercolour of the British countryside was made by Cecil Lawson #October1st
September is so called as it was the seventh month of the Roman calendar – ‘septem’ means seven. This print shows the Roman goddess Diana.
Find out how the other months got their names in our blog post: https://t.co/C47h3qIJC1
C R W Nevinson was born #onthisday in 1889. As an official war artist during the First World War he recorded his experiences at the Western Front in works like these prints https://t.co/UDDGGbebjQ
Italian Baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi was born #onthisday in 1593. This symbolic portrait depicts the source of her artistic brilliance – her hand https://t.co/0Flge0Q98z