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Reading @tor_scott's fascinating article in the latest issue of @Cunningfolkzine (which is extraordinarily beautiful) made me think back to the women surrealists whose work I saw last year at the Whitechapel Gallery, especially Eileen Agar, who seems to have featured birds often
Can't wait to listen to 'Wallflower' - quite apart from the local westcountry folk background, this sort of transformative adaptation & literary/musical crossover fascinates me https://t.co/o7mfZaSO3P
The new issue of 'Symeon' - the magazine of Durham University History Department - has a lovely article on the natural history book collection from Ushaw College Library:
https://t.co/W3SibMQByc
I've long admired the work of Robert Gibbings (1889-1958), so for today's #FolkloreThursday theme of sailors & the deep sea, here's his woodcut depicting a scene from the life of St Brendan the Navigator, used to illustrate Helen Waddell's 'Beasts and Saints' (1934)
As pictures speak a thousand words..... #WhatBrexitMeansToMe #PeterHowson
I've long admired the work of Robert Gibbings (1889-1958), so continue this theme here's his woodcut depicting a scene from the life of St Brendan the Navigator, used to illustrate Helen Waddell's 'Beasts and Saints' (1934) #FolkloreThursday https://t.co/MYjFKJbNgo