Hannah Brown (British, b. 1977, Salisbury, England, based London, England) - Day for Dusk (Pedlarspool) 2, 2022, Paintings: Oil, Acrylic on Linen
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Hannah Brown (British, b. 1977, Salisbury, England, based London, England) - Day for Dusk (Pedlarspool) 2, 2022, Paintings: Oil, Acrylic on Linen
Robert Borlase Smart - Moonlight on the Grand Canal, Venice (ca. 1924)
In April 1924, Smart and his wife accompanied George and Minnie Turland Goosey on a visit to Venice. Minnie recorded, “We arrived in Venice at midnight with a full moon turning the place into an artist’s dream of heaven. It was as if it had all been rehearsed and timed perfectly. Around each turn in the smaller canals, we passed other gondolas whose occupants were singing softly, some to the accompaniment of mandolins, and there were those who were silent like ourselves just drinking in the beauty of it all. Moonlight in Venice is wonderful. George told me afterwards B.S., our Artist friend, unconsciously held his hand in a firm grip murmuring, ‘I can’t believe its true, it must be a dream’. This painting, which was hung at the Paris Salon in 1927, aims to capture that moment and is a very daring composition. (source)
‘Six Dancers’, 1911 - Ernst Ludwig Kirchner(1880–1938)
A Flaunt Film | Emma D'Arcy
[ID: Four screencaps from Taskmaster. Amy Gledhill stands at a table with three sealed envelopes in front of her. She says, "Two tasks." From off-screen, Alex Horne asks, "Pardon?" Amy looks at the envelopes again. She says excitedly, "Oh, three tasks!" End ID.]
Marguerite Zorach (USA 1887 -1968) Boothbay Harbor, Maine oil on canvas 19 x 26.12 in.
why must a film be "good" is it not enough to see katharine hepburn having a gender crisis on your laptop screen , small
Katharine Hepburn as Sylvester/Sylvia in a publicity portrait for the RKO Radio Pictures/George Cukor romantic comedy Sylvia Scarlett, photo by Ernest A. Bachrach, 1935.
Screenland magazine, January 1938
ゲームボーイ。
Been haunted by a kids interactive exhibit my sister and I went to some 25 years ago. I could remember blurry bits and pieces, even was able to find the museum that housed it. But thanks to reddit I was finally able to find proof that it existed and the name of it and I feel so free now.
I feel like I should mention the concept of this exhibit: a family of four goes missing and it is up to the children to pick a family member and figure out what happened to them by exploring their house. The house was colorful with funky proportions, probably to seem fun and whimsical for kids, but just ended up feeling very... off.
(You could crawl out of the toilet through a pitch black tunnel in the washing machine. I was too scared to do this.)
Also there was a head in the freezer.
Anyway the family member I chose got shrunk down and trapped in a doll house and I watched her get carried away by mice never to be seen again. Cool!
Miss Perception's Mystery House exhibit located in the Port Discovery Children's Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.
Here's a blog with extra pics/blueprints
(Flowers on purple background - many colored), Marguerite Thompson Zorach, 20th century, Brooklyn Museum: American Art
© Estate of Marguerite Thompson Zorach Size: Sheet (watercolor): 9 9/16 x 9 11/16 in. (24.3 x 24.6 cm) Sheet (backing paper): 10 ½ x 10 9/16 in. (26.7 x 26.8 cm) Medium: Watercolor on paper mounted to backing paper
https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/objects/96252
Marguerite Zorach (1887-1968), Signs of Autumn, 1935. Oil on canvas.
well that can't be good
Hill House (1903-04) in Helensburgh, Scotland, by Charles Rennie Mackintosh
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