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@YorkshireMuseum Our entry for #CURATORBATTLE #SassiestObject is this super-sassy, mid-C19th print spoofing phrenology. It's called 'Toe-tology' & it features gossip-pativeness, flirtology & cheap-shoe-shop-itiveness!
Capsicum specimen collected at "The Villages retirement community (A drinking community with a golfing problem)" (Florida)
#CURATORBATTLE #SassiestObject #SassiestLabel
[in the NYBG herbarium: https://t.co/unMqMlkMfa]
@YorkshireMuseum Pre-Raphaelite artist Frederick Sandys did an excellent line in sassy women (and chewing your own hair in a fit of pique)
Cassanda and Helen, 1866
Cross Girl (Proud Maisie), undated
Danae in the Brazen Chamber, 1866
Study for Vivien, undated
#CURATORBATTLE #SassiestObject
Charles II's Civil War escape from Cromwell at Worcester was the DEFINITION of sassy - a 6-week adventure full of intrigue and disguise. Here are during and after prints from Worcester's collection #SassiestObject #CURATORBATTLE
@YorkshireMuseum ALL HAIL THE KING of 18th century sassy, caricaturist James Gillray.
In this infamous print, 'Lubber's Hole', the future William IV, a notorious womaniser, is seen singing a shanty as he... ahem 'enters' his mistress 'The Crack'd Jordan'
#CURATORBATTLE #SassiestObject