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You can really feel the storm form this painting. 'The Fishery' by Richard Wright (c.1723–c.1775) #Storms
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#MuseumUnlocked #MuseumsUnlocked #Museum #Art
'St Nicholas of Bari Rebuking the Storm' by Bicci di Lorenzo (1380s-1452). The saint comes to the rescue of sailors caught in a storm - note the fleeing #mermaid in the bottom left corner. This gem is in the #AshmoleanMuseum, Oxford. #MuseumsUnlocked #Storms
Dancing Peucetian women. Tomb of the dancers, Ruvo di Puglia, Italy. C5th/C4th BCE. Now @MANNapoli
Peucetians - people in ancient Apulia (between Bari & Tarentum).
#ItalyBeforeTheRomans
The colours & movement of this painting are so spectacular!
#MuseumsUnlocked #Dance
"To caper nimbly in a Lady's Chamber to the lascivious pleasing of a Lute." Put some music on and have a #Dance for #MuseumsUnlocked today!
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1850.
#MuseumsUnlocked One type of "offerings" found in Bornholm "woodhenges" were burned flint axes...When flint is heated it explodes with loud bangs. These were basically #Neolithic firecrackers 🙂 spirting razor sharp flakes everywhere as they exploded. Cool https://t.co/Y4K51uWnjw
For #MuseumsUnlocked #neolithic Stonehenge, a woodcut by Tokyo-born Yoshijiro Urushibara, aka 'Mokuchū' (1888-1953). He worked in the UK, France, USA and was an important influence on the development of the colour woodcut in UK art schools in the 1920s. @AberArtSchool colls.
We draw today's #MuseumsUnlocked thread to a close with a light-hearted drawing from Jack B. Yeats...
Found on the verso of another drawing, this image depicts a boy in roller skates coming to the aid of another whose foot has become stuck in a hole in a sidewalk. Growing pains!
'Notes on Gesture (for H.C.)' (2015). A series of 34 photographs, each of which replicates a pose made by the female character (played by Hélène Chatelain) in Chris Marker's 'La Jetée'. While her hand gestures were replicated, her facial expressions were not.
#MuseumsUnlocked
#MuseumsUnlocked - Megalithic Architecture
Rev James Bulwer painted these atmospheric watercolour views of Stanton Drew, Somerset, in the 1820/30s. The structure had long been noted by antiquarians - the first detailed map and drawings had been made by William Stukeley in 1723.
This pen and ink drawing is titled ‘West View of Nine Ladies stone circle’ by British soldier and antiquarian Major Hayman Rooke (1723-1806).
Nine Ladies Stone Circle is located on Stanton Moor, Derbyshire.
#MuseumsUnlocked #MegalithicArchitecture
#MuseumsUnlocked Day 116 #Hats, you say? Rich Regency pickings: Hats & bonnets were all the rage. We included several in our 2017 #JaneAusten exhibition @BrightonMuseums Royal Pavilion. Also had repros for trying on.
Model: Curator's own.
Cartoon: Les Invisibles by Gillray,1810
By contrast, female Met officers have had six #hats in about half the time as perceptions of their image and role evolved. They switched in 1946 (1), 1967 (2), 1978 and 1979 (3) and finally gained protective headgear in the form of the 'bowler' in 1985 (4). #MuseumsUnlocked
Check out Prospects of Empire: Slavery and Ecology in Eighteenth-Century Atlantic Britain, an online exhibit from Yale University Library, curated by Hazel V. Carby and Heather Vermeulen!
#HECAA #ArtHistory #18thCentury #MuseumsUnlocked
Check it out here: https://t.co/8HT0ah9JwF
Today's #MuseumsUnlocked theme is prisons &
incarceration.
This is 'Roman Charity: Cimon and Pero' by Dirck van Baburen,1623. The subject of Cimon, condemned to starve in prison, being breast-fed by his daughter Pero was a favourite with artist and patrons in the 17th century.
The Prison Corner of Peck Lane, Birmingham by Samuel Lines Snr, 1820-1830. Both the prison and Peck Lane have disappeared from Birmingham.
@MuseumsUnlocked theme today is Prisons & Incarceration. This one is perfect for you @WMPHistory! #MuseumsUnlocked
#MuseumsUnlocked #Humour
Here are a couple of cartoon from our collection:
a cartoon of Richard Forster from 1949
a postcard depicting cartoon drawing of two fishermen, with humorous caption from 1910.
Prehistoric Peeps by cartoonist and caricaturist, Edward Tennyson Reed, first appeared in Punch magazine in 1893. A book collection was published in 1894 and a live-action silent film was released in 1905 (the billiards picture is in my local pub) #MuseumsUnlocked #Humour
While we see slaves depicted in Roman frescoes & mosaics—often skulking in the margins & shown as diminutive in size—there’s no image more powerful of their cruel treatment than the shackles around the ankles of a slave who failed to escape #Pompeii.
#MuseumsUnlocked #slavery
Day 109 Slavery #MuseumsUnlocked the Antiguan artist Frank Walter, a descendant of a white slave owner and a black slave, left after he died thousands of art works and writings. The first ever exhibition of his work was in 2013 at @InglebyGallery
@MuseumsUnlocked We love the Fuseli "Night Mare." Apparently the late 18th-century satirists did too:
#MuseumsUnlocked (Day 108 Part 2)
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