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@VictorianWeb That reminds me of this masterful 16th century print (https://t.co/XTvpneJH6e):
@ArtDayByDay @MUnterlinden Matthias Grünewald played not only with my pareidolia. So probably I am not the first one who discovered the monstrous "face". I think that Gustave Doré saw it too.
+++ https://t.co/wq33UBESZP +++
@Mike_Batt John Tufail also found possible references to geology in Egypt.
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@Mike_Batt I was searching for something Bruegelesque, but didn't find anything yet. In that illu, so far, I found references (https://t.co/WT05SyvEAQ) to C.L. Dodgson, Gustave Doré, Marcus Gheeraerts I+II, Matthias Grünewald, John Martin, J.E. Millais.
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@wikivictorian The inset is a segment from one of Henry Holiday's illustrations to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark" (1876).
@kouinzel The Ancient of Bad Hair Days
※ 6200×8200: https://t.co/Mc0Im0JY5c
※ Firefox theme: https://t.co/ugwTy3aoj6
@kateblyn I could not stop myself from symmetrizing Urizen: https://t.co/Mc0Im0JqfE is a 6200×8200 reproduction of "The Ancient of Bad Hair Days".
(There also is a Firefox theme: https://t.co/ugwTy39Qty)
@Bonnetmaker @karenagardner 4 years after 2013 I started my blog https://t.co/a7Xmw1bSlx (and a bit later also @snark150 as a 2nd twitter account). There you can find my Escher/Martin comparison (https://t.co/S2WeWHEpvm) as well. But 99% of my blog is Snark (https://t.co/h5RYNoEqAv).
@etscrivner I think that William Blake's "Ancient of Days" is a very inspiring painting.
※ Color (8000×10000): https://t.co/Mc0Im0JqfE
※ BW (8000×111111): https://t.co/450ikT9TWF