'Wuthering Heights' by John Frederick Greenwood, (1885- 1954).

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'Wuthering Heights' by John Frederick Greenwood, (1885- 1954).
❤️💛💜Mesa de desayuno de Mike Hall, 2023
© The Lady of Shalott, circa 1875, by John Atkinson Grimshaw (1836–1893)
The Fighting Temeraire
J.M.W. Turner, 1839, Oil on canvas
This is Turner at his most poetic — a ghost ship and a sunset, saying goodbye to an era.
The painting shows the HMS Temeraire, a legendary warship from the Battle of Trafalgar, being towed by a small steam tug to be scrapped. Once mighty and heroic, she’s now a pale silhouette, fading into the evening light. The contrast between the glowing sunset and the black smoke of the tugboat says everything: the age of sails is over, and the industrial age is here — smaller, grittier, louder.
Turner didn’t just paint what he saw. He painted what it meant. This isn’t just about a ship. It’s about loss, change, and the bittersweet end of glory.
Fun fact: this painting was a favorite of Queen Elizabeth II, and was voted “Britain’s greatest painting” in a 2005 BBC poll.
Harry Brown Ashurst (1904–1995)
Little is known about the life of British painter Harry Brown Ashurst, whose surviving works suggest a close connection with the industrial communities of northern England.
This touching painting portrays a working man seated beside his Whippet, capturing the quiet companionship that made the breed such a familiar presence in mining towns throughout the twentieth century.
Far from the glamour of the show ring, the Whippet appears here as it so often was: a loyal companion at the end of a day's work, sharing the silence of ordinary life.
Sometimes, a simple painting tells the history of a breed better than a hundred photographs.
Ink Remnants
Henry Scott
(1911 - 2005)
Rough Seas
Oil on canvas
40 x 50 inches
Signed