Blaue Reiter expressionism exhibition interesting but unpersuasive that it was a great movement - but makes you wonder where the energy in European art and culture would have got to without the great disruptive of the 1WW - European development and confidence never recovered
Congratulations Britney Dao who came from our Trinity Church of England partner school for achieving AAA in Maths, Economics & Psychology. We wish you all the best at @KingsCollegeLon!
#CTKSixthForms#ALevels#Results
Some 4,500 years ago, a child was buried at Tarkhan, #Egypt, with a simple #ball made of linen rolled into a ball and tied together with a string.
It was certainly a much-loved #toy, which the child was also supposed to play with in the afterlife.
📷Bristol Museum & Art Gallery
The famous opera “The Barber of Seville” by Gioachino Rossini.
The way director Chuck Jones synchronizes the slapstick action to the soundtrack is flat-out masterful.
some pointed truth in this.But a risk not a necessary outcome - any significant work if actually read will have multiple meanings and inspire multiple reactions (the nature of language). The groupthink comes when books aren’t read and a popular shorthand stands in for the book
Pluto hasn't yet made a full orbit of the Sun since its discovery in 1930.
Pluto will complete its first full orbit since its discovery on Monday, March 23, 2178.
another fallen angel - wildly successful public art because everyone stops and looks and is “engaged” by them - partly because of their very ordinariness, less Miltonian fallen angels than a mirror of us, caught and tumbled up into a Last Judgement, damnation mid-shop
This lovely Hellenistic mosaic glass bowl looks so modern, yet it was made over 2,000 years ago!
Ancient glassmakers created the tiny flower pattern using a technique now known as ‘millefiori’ (thousand flowers). A timeless design still made by glassmakers today!
Photo my own. British Museum: https://t.co/HlAt7na6ta
#Archaeology
What always astounds me about the (admittedly small sample of) surviving wooden idols from prehistoric Britain is that they seem to remain basically unchanged in form between the Neolithic and the Iron Age - this one middle Iron Age