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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
From Manet and Morisot to Cassatt and Cézanne, our new free show captures the vibrant and dynamic world of prints in 19th-century France. Find out more: https://t.co/i1zymlEb0q
These picturesque scenes were painted by English artist Thomas Girtin, who was born #onthisday in 1775. His landscape paintings helped to establish watercolour as a respectable art form in the late 18th century.
Today is the first of #February!
The second month of the year is named after Februa – the Roman festival of purification. In this etching Februa is personified as a goddess sitting in a shell pulled by two fish representing Pisces https://t.co/CmRUkPXSQN
Explore the flourishing world of prints in 19th-century France in our upcoming free show which captures the vibrant and dynamic work of the Impressionists, from Manet and Morisot to Cassatt and Cézanne.
Find out more about our 2020 shows: https://t.co/c7U3Py5LfM