Art.com | We Are Art We exist so you can have the art you love. Art.com gives you easy access to incredible art images and top-notch craftsmanship. High-Quality Framed Art Prints Our high-end framed wall art is printed on premium paper using non-toxic, archival inks that protect against UV light to resist fading. Experience unmatched quality and style as you choose from a wide range of designs to enhance your room décor. Professionally Crafted Framed Wall Art Attention to detail is at the heart of our process, as we exclusively use 100% solid wood frames that include 4-ply white core matboard and durable, frame-grade clear acrylic for clarity, long-lasting protection of the artwork and unrivaled quality. With a thoughtfully selected frame and mat combination, this piece is designed to complement your art and create a visually appealing display. Easy-to-Hang & Ready-to-Display Artwork Each framed art piece comes with hanging hardware affixed to the back of the frame, allowing for easy and convenient installation. Ready to display right out of the box. Handcrafted in the USA. This high quality digital reproduction is printed on acidfree and archival matte paper Art prints are created on paper similar to that of a postcard or greeting card using a digital or offset lithography press The Print This art print displays sharp, vivid images with a high degree of color accuracy. A member of the versatile family of art prints, this high-quality reproduction represents the best of both worlds: quality and affordability. Art prints are created using a digital or offset lithography press. Paper Type: Art Print Finished Size: 26" x 38" Arrives by Mon, May 6 Product ID: 15423786A
The Mint: a Miscellany of Literature, Art and Criticism edited by Geoffrey Grigson published by Routledge & Sons, 1946 First Edition Hardcover in very good used condition, toning, open tears, chipping and edge wear to dust jacket, toning throughout interior, text is unmarked. "The Mint is an international miscellany of humanism, aiming to collect articles, poems, stories which have more than the topicality of the day. Another of its aims is to bring together the divorced couple of our time - scholarship and original writing. This volume includes work by Sean O'Casey, W. H. Auden, the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber, Professor Hausermann of Geneva, Nikolaus Pevsner, the American writer of short stories, Peter Taylor, and previously unpublished verse and fragments by the English nineteenth-century poet, John Clare." SHIPPING INFO: Books are carefully wrapped in paper and shipped in a waterproof poly bubble mailer. Media Mail can take up to 7-10 days. If you need expedited shipping (aka Priority Mail 1-3 days) please message me or choose to upgrade in the shipping options. For orders $35+ that qualify for free shipping :: these orders will be shipped via the media mail class option only. (unless you contact me prior to purchase) I cannot guarantee any purchases made for gifting purposes will reach their destination in time. Media mail can take up to a month during peak delays. Apologies in advance.
A miscellany of curious local Cotswold stories accompanied by hand-drawn images.
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2 v. : 27 cm
As you may have already seen if you follow @BLMedieval on Twitter, we have just uploaded images of one of the British Library's smallest but most important medieval music manuscripts onto Digitised Manuscripts. Ave gloriosa virginum regina, from a musical miscellany in French and Latin, Egerton MS 274, f. 3r...
Stanley Spencer's home in Cookham was the inspiration for many of his works. He loved his fabulous vision of it, but life wasn't so happy in fact. Read about this complex man; most definitely troubled, whose history can be read in his paintings.
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A Fairy Tale Cherry Blossoms Japanese Children Open Air Concert The Beginner Mother And Child Picture Book Margaret With A Bonnet Anita Grew As A Young Girl Playing By Heart Pink Beret – Girl…
Walking around Vassar’s campus, one might observe students wearing everything from the avant-garde to sportswear. But historically, Vassar students helped establish what today is referred to as cla…
These are page decorations from an instruction book(let) called 'American Clown: Athletic Dance for Men or Boys' by George Caskey (1886) ...
v. : 21 cm
Includes proceedings of the Botanical Society of London, the Botanical Society of Edinburgh, the Linnean Society, the Phytologist Club, etc
True Grit author Charles Portis is the cult writer for people who hate cult writers. He hasn't published a book since 1991, and reviewer John Powers says the short pieces collected in Escape Velocity have been treasured for decades, passed around like samizdat by Portis fans.
See you next week.
Born Alexei Vladimirovich Issupov / Алексей Владимирович Исупов (Russia, 1889 - Italy, 1957) into a family of icon makers, the artist studied at the Moscow School of Painting before immigrating to Italy in 1926 where he changed his name to Alessio and ended up spending most of his life.
Born in Liverpool. Liberal Prime Minister four times. One of the Commissioners for the Great Exhibition. Queen Victoria moaned that 'He speaks to me as if I were a public meeting'. Caroline's Miscellany has a good piece about Gladstone's orphans. Died at Hawarden near Chester. Gladstone's body lay in state in Westminster Hall and the funeral was at the very nearby Westminster Abbey on the 28th, the last day of the lying-in-state. Wikipedia says 'His coffin was transported on the London Underground before his state funeral at Westminster Abbey'. (Elsewhere we read that this was in recognition of him and his wife having been extremely early users - passengers on a trial tube ride in May 1862.) It certainly was not the most direct route to the Abbey, just across the road. The nearest station to both the departure and arrival points would have been Westminster (Bridge) Station .... on the Circle Line..... Did they really take the coffin for a complete circuit, prior to the funeral? We thought Gladstone may be unique in his final underground journey (horizontal, rather than vertical, if you see what we mean) but then we read about Dr Barnardo's journey on the Central Line. And writing about that we realised that Gladstone's tube journey probably took place before his lying in state, the last leg of the journey from Hawarden. Google Maps recommends a train into Euston and then the Victoria Line (not available in 1898) or the Northern Line to Charing Cross/Embankment. His father's family was one of the largest slave-holding families in the world and when slavery was abolished Gladstone helped his father obtain the equivalent of about £10 million in official compensation. 2023: From Voice Online: 'The descendants of .. William Gladstone are being urged to pay reparations to Jamaica. The Gladstone family recently issued an apology to Guyana for the family’s involvement in slavery in the country and said they would aim to donate £100,000 to a university. But now, the family has been accused of ignoring its links to slavery in Jamaica.'
Revisiting the Dreyfus affair.
We’re not quite sure that Martha’s claim to fame would work in today’s celebrity culture, for Martha, who was born Martha Killick daughter of Friend and Anne Killick in 1726 (bapt…
Handicapped! Propaganda poster for the Artists' Suffrage League shows a woman in a rowboat, struggling in high waves, while a man relaxes on a sailboat with a sail labeled "votes". Westminster Palace can be seen in the background. Printed by Carl Hentschel Ltd., 182, 183 & 184 Fleet Street, E.C., London, UK, 1910s. From the Artist Posters Collection at the Library of Congress More propaganda posters | More artist posters [PDUS] This picture is in the public domain in the United States
Frans Masereel. Die Stadt
Edwin A. Georgi
Suggested by Lurker8.Unit 731 was a unit of the Japanese Imperial Army that carried out brutal (and, in many cases, lethal) experimentation on human beings during World War II under the guise of chemical and biological research. For the majority of the time it was active, the unit acted under the command of General Shiro Ishii, and was responsible for the deaths of up to 250,000 people. The worst part? Instead of being put on trial for human experimentation, the people involved with the unit were granted immunity by the US government in exchange for the data they had gathered.
“William, William, writing late by the chill and sooty grate, what immortal story can make your tiger roar again?”