“【9種類】「ちびまる子ちゃん」デザインマンホール蓋、静岡市に設置 https://t.co/5PAuqHoT6w 下水道事業100周年を記念して、3種類×3パターンの配色を施して製作。4月25日の静岡市歴史博物館・北側での設置を皮切りに、静岡市内の3区(葵区、駿河区、清水区)に順次設置される。”
“【9種類】「ちびまる子ちゃん」デザインマンホール蓋、静岡市に設置 https://t.co/5PAuqHoT6w 下水道事業100周年を記念して、3種類×3パターンの配色を施して製作。4月25日の静岡市歴史博物館・北側での設置を皮切りに、静岡市内の3区(葵区、駿河区、清水区)に順次設置される。”
“【9種類】「ちびまる子ちゃん」デザインマンホール蓋、静岡市に設置 https://t.co/5PAuqHoT6w 下水道事業100周年を記念して、3種類×3パターンの配色を施して製作。4月25日の静岡市歴史博物館・北側での設置を皮切りに、静岡市内の3区(葵区、駿河区、清水区)に順次設置される。”
“ La Sapienza University Campus - Museum of Classical Art ”
“ノートルダム大聖堂のカッコいいガーゴイル 最高の景色 もう見れなくなるとは。。。”
I'm not posting forgotten books regularly anymore - I simply have run out of steam, possibly because I've forgotten any forgotten books I've read in the past. But occasionally, when I do stumble across one, accidentally or otherwise, I'll be writing about it - kind of on an irregular basis. In the meantime, don't forget to keep checking in at Patti Abbott's blog to see what forgotten (or overlooked) books other readers are talking about - most of them show up every Friday. I know I read Ngaio Marsh's FINAL CURTAIN a while back but damn if I hadn't forgotten who the killer was, not that that really matters much. Remembering would not have stopped me re-reading - it's all about the writing and the re-visiting for me. This is a particularly leisurely mystery as the first murder doesn't happen until well into the book and the second murder happens just a few pages before the end. As for the ending, it is a bit abrupt and not very satisfying, after everything that has gone before. But this is one of those books that you want to read regardless because Ngaio Marsh's gift for characterization and dialogue are absolutely topnotch and the setting is perfection, mystery-writing-wise. Here again we have murder at a large, foreboding, ungainly estate in the English countryside - something I am very fond of reading about. Ancreton is the 'family home' of the Ancreds - a very theatrical and fractious family at whose head sits Sir Henry, a famous and oh-so-egotistical Shakespearean actor now past his prime. 'Drama' is the Ancreds' middle name - they thrive on it, can't manage to get through the day without six or seven exhausting emotional scenes. Everything is a production. Everything has to be hashed over and over until there's nothing left but a morsel of the original idea. They are a wearisome bunch. And now that they are all gathering at Ancreton for Sir Henry's birthday, unpleasant things are bound to happen. Especially since Sir Henry has a habit of changing his will at the drop of a hat, depending on who in his family is momentarily in disfavor. Agatha Troy (known as 'Troy' to her hubby), the famous painter and wife of Scotland Yard Superintendent Roderick Alleyn is commissioned to paint a birthday portrait of Sir Henry in costume as MacBeth. She has been nervously awaiting the return of her husband who has been on overseas duty for MI5 (or its equivalent) during the war. They haven't seen each other in three years, so she's on pins and needles. Judging correctly that working will help pass the time that much quicker (Alleyn is due home in a couple of weeks), Troy arrives at Ancreton ready to paint. What she is not ready for are the constant battle royals and dramatic scenes involving Sir Henry and assorted members of his family, all of whom have arrived at the house to spend a few days. She finds Sir Henry a wonderful subject - though elderly, he is tall, handsome and dignified with a sweeping head of white hair - and the painting goes along relatively smoothly. The first third of the book is taken up with family drama and the feeling of impending doom, yes, but also with the how-to of portrait painting which I found fascinating. I'm very fond of painting minutia. But things can't help but go from bad to worse at Ancreton. Sir Henry has installed a young chippy of a gold-digging actress, the beautiful Sonia Orrincourt, and is making plans to marry her. Needless to say, this does not go down well with the relatives several of whom are in various stages of hysteria at the mere thought. When the very unfunny practical jokes begin early on, Troy realizes that something is seriously amiss. "A lamp, out of sight beyond the first spiral, brought the curved wall rather stealthily to life. Troy mounted briskly, hoping there would still be a fire in her white room. As she turned the spiral, she gathered up her long dress in her right hand and her left reached out for the narrow rail. The rail was sticky. She snatched her hand away with some violence and looked at it. The palm and the under surface was dark. Troy stood in the shadow of the inner wall but she now moved up into light. By the single lamp she saw that the stain on her hand was red. Five seconds must have gone by before she realized that the stuff on her hand was paint." By the time of the expected first murder, we know more than enough about the Ancreds' eccentricities and antagonisms to fill a volume. For me, the fun of this book lies in the family's day to day dramatics and the interaction between parties involved. Ngaio Marsh creates two very memorable characters: the achingly swishy Cedric Ancred (the expected heir) who is persistently hard up for money - adored by his mother but abhorred by the rest of the family - and Thomas Ancred who is incapable of expressing himself without his mind wandering afield. Conversation with Thomas is fatiguing, to say the least. But oh, he makes you smile. It's fun to see how Troy and eventually, Roderick Alleyn (arriving home from the Antipodes to a murder involving his wife) deal with this frenetic and oh-so-very-British bunch. An excellent whodunit although in the end, you won't care that much about the 'why' of it. I will say though that if, like me, you love reading about voluble theatrical families given to grand gestures, this is the book for you. A book, by the way, which would make for a terrific play.
No, your eyes aren't deceiving you, the title of this post probably makes you think you're back in January. But we're in March which means we're way past the traditional time to make new years resolutions but in January I didn't find myself writing that many because there wasn't too much at the time
Флоралы, тропические цветы и павлины заполняют барельефы, которые лепит российский художник Гога Тандашвили. Изящные фрески в натуральную величину украшают стены с жизненной точностью, с высокой степенью натурализма. Тандашвили использует комбинацию лепки и техники резьбы для создания своих…
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Image 9 of 10 from gallery of Scaffoldage. Courtesy of Scaffoldage
うーんこれは俺の実力じゃまだまだ描けねぇモチーフだった。手前のジョルジョ彩度上げて出したいけど淡い逆光の光が当たってらー。
浅原です。 6月に行われたdessinLABO展に出した時の新作2点です。
デッサンのモチーフとしてよく使われる石膏像の知識をまとめてお伝えする石膏物語、今回はメディチ胸像です。実は本人とは似ていない極度に美化された像で、ミケランジェロ作品独特の味わいが出ています。 メディチ像の由来と経緯につい …
浅原です。 もうすぐ試験ですね。 こちらも石膏、構成デッサンをデモンストレーションした時のものを載せてみます。 #デッサン #石膏像 #構成デッサン
先日、絵の描き方に関しての記事を書いたせいか、このブログの読者さんや、Twitterのフォロワーさんで、「絵の練習をしている」とか「デッサン描いたら勉強になった!」と言う方が何人かいます。
#こんにちは基礎科です! 今日は体験入学授業の石膏デッサンの模様をお届け。武装せる女神像をみんなで描きました。 あと7/10(水)に開催される東京芸大現役合格生座談会のお知らせもあるよ! 今年はなんと外部生にも解放ー!! https://t.co/tXrvQ3CPXD
“こいつの光はどっちですか。”