Showing posts with label Beliefs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beliefs. Show all posts

July 23, 2016

Superheroes Of The Ancient World


                               


                                                                    
Over the past few years, even the most ardent comic book nerd might have wondered if there were too many superhero movies playing in the local multiplex.

For every Iron Man, or Avengers, there have been a couple of less-than Fantastic Fours and enough dubious Hulks to smash the sternest spirit. Studios keep making these films because they know audiences will flock to see them, even if the heroes include a raccoon and a tree. So the question this poses is: why are we so drawn to superhero stories? And since when?

The answer to the second question is more brief than the first. 

Superheroes have existed for as long as stories, before writing and across every culture from which we can find evidence. Fionn mac Cumhaill built the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland, and Gilgamesh defeated Humbaba in Mesopotamia. Rama was exiled from Ayodhya in India, while Beowulf slew Grendel and Grendel’s mother in Scandinavia. And that’s before you think about the ancient Greeks, who boasted a plethora of heroes to match any collection from Marvel or DC.

                                                                        



Many of today’s most popular superheroes have roots in ancient characters – Wonder Woman, like Hippolyta, is one of the Amazons, a female warrior race (Credit: Warner Bros)

The rules about what makes a superhero are pretty flexible. Superman is an alien, pre-empted by almost two millennia by the Assyrian satirist Lucian who wrote in his True Stories of extra-terrestrial armies engaged in a war. 

Spider-Man was bitten by a radioactive spider, and Bruce Banner was dosed with gamma rays: in other words, they are ordinary human beings with an extra power imposed upon them. The ancients used a similar narrative device, but with semi-divinity as the explanation, rather than science: Perseus, for example, is a hero because his father is Zeus. Wonder Woman, like Hippolyta and Penthesilea before her, is an Amazon, and so also semi-divine.

Bruce Wayne and Tony Stark’s superpowers are their limitless credit cards, which also explains why Agamemnon – least heroic of all heroes, surely – is so concerned about acquiring more booty than other Greek hero during the Trojan War: money is power. 

But perhaps my favourite subgroup of superheroes includes Hawkeye and Green Arrow, whose superpower is ‘being especially good with a bow and arrow’. This ties them neatly to the wiliest of all ancient heroes, Odysseus. After a 20-year absence from his home of Ithaca, he proves his identity to those who thought him long dead by stringing a complex bow and shooting an arrow through twelve axe-heads.

Every superhero has his origin story, and a surprisingly large number of modern ones owe those origins to myths of gods and heroes who existed millennia before their cultural descendants. Even Ant-Man isn’t a completely recent phenomenon: Zeus turned himself into an ant, as part of his scheme to have sex with every pretty girl in the ancient world while disguised as an array of different creatures. 
Leda was ravished by him in swan form; poor Eurymedusa was accosted by him as an ant. Achilles’ warriors, the Myrmidons, legendarily owe their name to this union (the Greek word for an ant is myrmex): they too are Ant-men.


Comics and classics
So that brings us back to the first question, which is rather more complicated: what is it about the superhero narrative that has such a primal appeal we’ve been telling stories about men and women with superpowers for as long as we’ve told stories? For the ancients, heroes and gods acted as a kind of bridge between what they could understand and explain, and what they could not. 

For example, ancient Greeks and Romans experienced large numbers of earthquakes; they knew the ground shook, but they could not possibly have guessed the existence of tectonic plates. So they extrapolated: a light, wooden table would shake if you stamped your foot next to it, on a wooden floor. When buildings shook, it made sense then that something very powerful was stamping on the ground somewhere. Thus, Poseidon acquired his honorific title ‘Earth-shaker’. The idea of a god lurking beneath the ocean smacking his trident into the seabed may seem like a fanciful explanation to us. But as a way of explaining the information available to the ancients, it’s not bad.

                                                                  


Some Marvel characters aren’t just indirectly inspired by antiquity – The Avengers’ Thor, and his brother Loki, are supposed to be the gods of Norse myths (Credit: Disney/Marvel)

And heroes in the Iliad, Odyssey and Aeneid – the epic poems of the Trojan War and its aftermath – often have an intimate connection to the gods that shapes their heroic stories. 

Achilles is the son of Thetis (a sea-nymph for whom Zeus has an especially soft spot). Aeneas is the son of Venus, and though Odysseus boasts mortal parentage, he is the favourite of Athena (and bête-noire of Poseidon). 

Odysseus is described by Homer as ‘Polumetis’, which means ‘of many wiles’. But still, some of his best schemes are provided by one god or another: without the help of Hermes, for instance, he would not have the stratagem in place to defeat the witch Circe.

This connection to a higher power which can influence the world around them (whether it is Zeus or SHIELD) is a crucial aspect of many heroes. And perhaps it is this particular characteristic that grants the superhero one of their more troubling tendencies: the excessive individualism which allows them to operate outside the rules of society and beyond or above the rule of law. 

It’s a common trope of modern superhero films: who is Batman to decide what kind of justice Gotham deserves? He’s a masked vigilante who sets himself above his fellow citizens and acts as judge, jury and sometimes executioner on the villains who populate the city.

The existential X-Men
This question too is not a modern one. In Book II of The Iliad, a man named Thersites makes a brief cameo appearance. He is not described, as so many characters are, with reference to his father: whoever that is, he’s not important enough for a name-check. 

Thersites is also vulgar and misshapen: we are surely supposed to conclude that he is far from heroic material.

More so when he begins to speak, and issues a trenchant critique of the character of Agamemnon, the king who oversees all the Greeks: Theristes accuses him of being greedy and cowardly – sentiments which echo those Achilles has made of Agamemnon earlier in the poem.

Thersites is then beaten by Odysseus and he weeps at the pain and humiliation. 

But the question is now surely lodged in the audience’s mind: why should Agamemnon be treated as a great king, worthy of all the treasure he has claimed for himself. What sets him above us, apart from his monstrous self-regard? Especially when all are agreed that Achilles is the greater warrior, a braver man.

And what happens when a hero turns completely away from the path which most of us would consider good? Magneto, for example, starts out fighting alongside Charles Xavier, before their choices place them on opposing sides. 

His story echoes that of Ajax, who fights alongside the other Greek heroes during the Trojan War. But after he is tricked out of what he sees to be his rightful reward (which is instead given to Odysseus), he turns on his erstwhile comrades. Only an enchantment from Athena (protecting Odysseus as always) clouds his mind, and convinces him that he is slaughtering Greek warriors when he is actually killing livestock. The humiliation is so terrible that he takes his own life when he realises what he has done.

                                                                    


Ancient tales not only depicted the struggles of heroes, but of villains too – such as Polyphemus, brought to terrifying life by Swiss artist Arnold Böcklin
(Credit: Wikipedia)

We are surely drawn to heroes and superheroes because they illuminate the human condition – and they do so precisely because they operate at a slightly inhuman level. Heroes are like us, but more so: stronger, cleverer, faster. They suffer from the same human frailties as we do, but because of their superior powers, these struggles are played out in a more dramatic arena than our own.

Superheroes impose order on a chaotic world, which can often seem to be filled with nefarious powers (from natural disasters to supervillains) that mere mortals cannot identify or hope to fight. We clearly prefer a world of lawless superheroes to one with no superheroics at all. And we always have.

                                                                   





By Natalie Haynes
With many thanks to BBC Culture
Picture credit for Superman: EW.com 
(My favourite).
 
Some related posts on literature:
Helen of Troy - The Movie, The Music and Jon English
'The Great Gatsby': Seven Life Lessons
Shakespeare First Folio found on Scottish Isle of Bute
The Musketeers



Mysterious 'Man in the Iron Mask' Revealed
Father Of Anne Frank Listed As Co-Author Of Diary To Extend Copyright
William Shakespeare is still a relevant literary voice.
Queen Marks Magna Carta Anniversary
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s Press Pass for the Spanish Civil War Found

Palace Found At Tintagel, Fabled Birthplace Of King Arthur 
Ancient Egyptian Works To Be Published Together In English For The First Time
Who Was Cleopatra? 
The Untold Truth About The Holy Grail
 

 




 








 




                                                                       

June 15, 2015

Queen Marks Magna Carta Anniversary



                                                                 




QUEEN Elizabeth has led celebrations of the 800th anniversary of the signing of Magna Carta, a document that cemented a key step on Britain's path to its modern parliamentary democracy. 
 
THE Queen travelled to Runnymede, 30 kilometres west of London, where King John applied his royal seal to the document on June 15, 1215, guaranteeing a new relationship between the king and his subjects.

The Queen's husband, Prince Phillip, and her grandson, Prince William, also attended Monday's ceremony. Prime Minister David Cameron was scheduled to speak at the event, to which 4500 guests were invited. 
Prince William unveiled Hew Locke's art installation The Jurors, which features 12 bronze chairs symbolising the right to a fair trial under the Magna Carta. Many other events were held in Britain and other countries to mark the anniversary, including a series of parliament-sponsored "LiberTeas" tea parties and political debates across Britain on Sunday. 
In Canberra, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Magna Carta "remains a very important foundation stone of our democracy".
 "It remains a very important watershed for the whole world, because decency, civilisation, human rights utterly depend upon the rule of law," Mr Abbott said. The Latin document's most famous clause grants the right to justice and a fair trial to all "free men", although in 1215 most British people were peasants tied to landowners so they were not counted as "free men" under the law. 
Meaning "great charter," Magna Carta is credited with inspiring democratic reformers in Britain and other nations, including Thomas Jefferson in the United States and Mahatma Gandhi in India, and documents such as the US Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
With many thanks to The Australian                                                           

Related:

Original Magna Carta Copy Found In Sandwich Archive

Leonardo Da Vinci's: The Leicester Codex sale price.
World’s Most Expensive Printed Book - “The Bay Psalm Book” - Sells For $14.2 mn
 Scribbled Draft Lyrics of Bob Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone” Sells for Record $2 Million
 Rorke's Drift: Rare Account Of Zulu Battle Written The Day After Sells For £15k
Original Magna Carta Copy Found In Sandwich Archive
Shakespeare First Folio discovered In French Library

 'American Pie' Lyrics Sell For $1.2 million In New York
Alan Turing Manuscript Sells For $1 million 
 Beatles’ First Recording Contract to Be Auctioned For An Estimated $150,000 
Shakespeare First Folio found on Scottish Isle of Bute
William Shakespeare Folios Net $3.6 Million At Christie’s
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s Press Pass for the Spanish Civil War Found 
Letter From Paul McCartney To Prince Sells For $15K
The Voynich Manuscript: World's Most Mysterious Manuscript To Be Released
500-Year-Old Hidden Images Revealed In Mexican 'Manuscript'
The Memory of Mankind Archive: The Greatest Time Capsule Ever                  
John Lennon MBE Return Letter Valued At £60k

         

 





 



March 21, 2015

Accessing Self Love To Access Your Higher Self


                                                                    


                                                                 

Hear Daniel Rechnitzer share insights from Universal Intelligence on the importance of Self Love as the gateway to extraordinary knowledge, wisdom and health.


Discover how unlock your Self Love now! 

For more information visit: www.DiscoverUi.com, or visit Daniel's You Tube Channel.

More posts on Daniel Rechnitzer, The All Knowing Diary and Universal intelligence can be found by using the search engine - top left.There are quite a lot!


March 01, 2014

Why Do We Dream?


                                                               


                                                                                                                                          
We all have them. Some are good others not so much.But it seems it is hard to ascertain why we have them and what they mean.

by
The human brain is a mysterious little ball of gray matter. After all these years, researchers are still baffled by many aspects of how and why it operates like it does. Scientists have been performing sleep and dream studies for decades now, and we still aren't 100 percent sure about the function of sleep, or exactly how and why we dream. We do know that our dream cycle is typically most abundant and best remembered during the REM stage of sleep.

 It's also pretty commonly accepted among the scientific community that we all dream, though the frequency in which dreams are remembered varies from person to person.

The question of whether dreams actually have a physiological, biological or psychological function has yet to be answered. But that hasn't stopped scientists from researching and speculating. 

There are several theories as to why we dream. One is that dreams work hand in hand with sleep to help the brain sort through everything it collects during the waking hours. Your brain is met with hundreds of thousands, if not millions of inputs each day. Some are minor sensory details like the color of a passing car, while others are far more complex, like the big presentation you're putting together for your job. 

During sleep, the brain works to plow through all of this information to decide what to hang on to and what to forget. Some researchers feel like dreams play a role in this process.

It's not just a stab in the dark though -- there is some research to back up the ideas that dreams are tied to how we form memories. Studies indicate that as we're learning new things in our waking hours, dreams increase while we sleep. Participants in a dream study who were taking a language course showed more dream activity than those who were not. In light of such studies, the idea that we use our dreams to sort through and convert short-term memories into long-term memories has gained some momentum in recent years.

Another theory is that dreams typically reflect our emotions. During the day, our brains are working hard to make connections to achieve certain functions. When posed with a tough math problem, your brain is incredibly focused on that one thing. And the brain doesn't only serve mental functions. If you're building a bench, your brain is focused on making the right connections to allow your hands to work in concert with a saw and some wood to make an exact cut. The same goes for simple tasks like hitting a nail with a hammer. 

Have you ever lost focus and smashed your finger because your mind was elsewhere?

Some have proposed that at night everything slows down. We aren't required to focus on anything during sleep, so our brains make very loose connections. It's during sleep that the emotions of the day battle it out in our dream cycle. If something is weighing heavily on your mind during the day, chances are you might dream about it either specifically, or through obvious imagery. 

For instance, if you're worried about losing your job to company downsizing, you may dream you're a shrunken person living in a world of giants, or you're wandering aimlessly through a great desert abyss.

There's also a theory, definitely the least intriguing of the bunch, that dreams don't really serve any function at all, that they're just a pointless byproduct of the brain firing while we slumber. 

We know that the rear portion of our brain gets pretty active during REM sleep, when most dreaming occurs. Some think that it's just the brain winding down for the night and that dreams are random and meaningless firings of the brain that we don't have when we're awake. 

The truth is, as long as the brain remains such a mystery, we probably won't be able to pinpoint with absolute certainty exactly why we dream.

With thanks to How Stuff Works

Picture Credit: Huffington Post and more “Recurring Dreams:Your Dreams Are Trying to Tell You Something. Lots more information there.

See also


A day in the life of dreams

SWEET dreams are made of leaves. Who am I to dis a tree? That is at least one conclusion of a study into how sounds influence sleep, which found that those who listened to a recording of the rustling of a breeze through trees were likelier to have pleasant dreams. 

The same was true when they listened to a relaxing beachscape. Conversely, those whose unconscious mind heard a jarring cityscape reported more bizarre and disjointed dreams.
The results came after 500,000 people downloaded an iPhone app called Dream:ON that is primed to play different music for the final phase of sleep. Placed under the pillow, it uses motion sensors to play the music while users are dreaming.

They are asked to write down their dreams when they wake up, and have produced more than a million such reports.

One thousand of the most coherent were selected and compared with placebo reports where no music was played.

Richard Wiseman, of the University of Hertfordshire, who conducted the study, said: “One of our most regular dreams is having an imaginary affair with George Clooney.”
He cited an indisputably happy dream. “The two of them first met when George asked if she would like to go for a walk with his imaginary giraffe.”





February 03, 2014

Charles Dellschau: Secrets of An Undiscovered Visionary Artist


                                                                  


I like to think I have an open mind. Some things cannot be easily explained.
I have to say the illustrations are somewhat astonishing in their detail and artistic merit.They are certainly worth a look.
I haven't seen this story on Ancient Aliens as yet, but that is not to say I take all their shows at face value, even though I always watch and enjoy it:)
I'll leave it to you.

                                                                    

From You Tube:
Clip now deleted.

"Charles A.A. Dellschau is one of art history's most mysterious and puzzling characters. Unknown, literally hidden away in a Texas attic the last 20 years of his life, he produced a massive volume of wildly imaginative illustrations only discovered in 1923, nearly 50 years after his death. The product of a tortured mind perhaps, or a visionary, his art predates the invention of the airplane by 50 years, but depicts flying machines propelled by anti-gravity gas. Was this merely art, or true documentation? Can UFO sightings of the 19th Century be attributed to these aircraft, the ones Dellschau drew?"   

But now another You Tube clip:

                                                             
In the fall of 1899, Charles A.A. Dellschau (1830-1923), a retired butcher from Houston, embarked on a project that would occupy him for more than 20 years.

What began as an illustrated manuscript recounting his experiences in the California Gold Rush became an obsessive project resulting in 12 large, hand-bound books with more than 2,500 drawings related to airships and the development of flight.


Dellschau's designs resemble traditional hot air balloons augmented with fantastic visual details, collage and text. The hand-drawn "Aeros" were interspersed with collaged pages called "Press Blooms," featuring thousands of newspaper clippings related to the political events and technological advances of the period.

After the artist's death in 1923, the books were stored in the attic of the family home in Houston. In the aftermath of a fire in the 1960s, they were dumped on the sidewalk and salvaged by a junk dealer.


Eight made their way into the collections of the San Antonio Museum of Art, the Witte Museum and the Menil Collection; the remainder were sold to a private collector. Dellschau's works have since been collected by numerous other museums including the American Folk Art Museum, the High Museum, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. 

Like the eccentric outpourings of Adolf Wölfli, Henry Darger and Achilles Rizzoli, these private works were not created for the art world, but to satisfy a driving internal creative force. Dreamer, optimist and visionary, Charles Dellschau is one of the earliest documented outsider artists known in America. Http://www.romanoart.com

                                                                


His story is one shrouded in mystery, almost lost forever, intertwined with secret societies, hidden codes, otherworldly theories and seemingly impossible inventions before his time. Unseen for decades and salvaged by a junk dealer in the 1960s from a trash heap outside a house in Texas, his entire body of work would later go on to marvel the intellectual world. But during his lifetime, Charles Dellschau had only been known as the grouchy local butcher.


In 1969, used furniture dealer Fred Washington bought 12 large discarded notebooks  from a garbage collector, where they found a new home in his warehouse under a pile of dusty carpets. In 1969, art history student, Mary Jane Victor, was scouring through his bazaar of castaways when she came upon the mysterious works of a certain Charles Dellschau. Inside the scrapbooks she discovered a remarkable collection of strange watercolours and collage pieces. More than 2,500 intricate drawings of flying machines alongside cryptic newspaper clippings filled the pages, crudely sewn together with shoelaces and thread.



Victor immediately notified the Art Director of Rice University, Dominique de Menil, Houston’s leading fine art patron, who snapped up four of the books for $1,500 and promptly put on an exhibition at the university entitled, “Flight”. Charles Dellschau, a Prussian immigrant had finally been discovered, nearly 50 years after his death in 1923.



He had arrived in the United States at 25 years old from Hamburg in 1853 and documents show he lived in both California and Texas with his family, working as a butcher. After his retirement in 1899, he took to filling his days by filling notebooks with a visual journal of his youth. He called the first three books, Recollections and recounts a secret society of flight enthusiasts which met in California in the mid-19th century called the ‘Sonora Aero Club’.


The Wright Brothers wouldn’t even make their famous first flight until 1903, but Dellschau draws dapperly-dressed men piloting brightly-coloured airships and helicopters with revolving generators and retractable landing gear. No records have ever been found of the Sonora Aero Club but Dellschau’s artworks hide a secret coded story. Whatever it was that he had to say was apparently too private even for his own notebooks and even today, much of the mystery has yet to be revealed.
                                                                   



A Mr. Pete Navarro, graphic artist and UFO researcher, heard about the “Flight” exhibition in 1969 and became enthralled. He believed there was a connection between Dellschau’s drawings and mysterious mass of “airship” sightings at the turn of the century across 18 states from California to Indiana. In 1972, he discovered that 8 remaining books of Dellschau were still sitting at the junk shop, unwanted and unclaimed. He bought the lot for $565 and spent the next 15 years obsessively decoding Dellschau’s work.



Dellschau never draws himself aboard the fantastical aero inventions and represent himself as the club’s scribe/ record-keeper, rather than as one of its inventors or pilots. There are as many as 100 designs for airships with names like the Aero Mary, the Aero Trump and even an “Aero Jourdan”. The club’s secret mission? To design and build the first navigable aircrafts using a secret formula he coded as “NB Gas” which could negate gravity and drive the ships wheels, side panels and compressor motors … all in a day’s work during an era when air travel was still viewed as a mystical impossibility.


Some of his drawings tell of fatal crashes of the society’s airships, sabotage of other club members and the banning of members who talked about the secret organisation to outsiders. According to Dellschau, the club’s aero prototypes would travel the open roads disguised as gypsy wagons to avoid detection.

In the notebooks’ strange code of germanic lettering, Pete Navarro found a phrase that translated as “NYMZA”. Dellschau reveals this to be an even larger secret society that allegedly controlled the Sonora Aero Club branch. Based on Navarro’s findings, UFO theorists have come up with some far-fetched speculation that the NYMZA was in fact an extra terrestrial entity. (When talking about secret societies, I think it comes with the territory).

                                                                     


While Navarro rubbished those claims, he did manage to find press clippings in Texas archives linking one of the names of Dellschau’s secret society members to an article published in 1897 about a local airship sighting. The San Antonio Daily Express article identified one of the airship’s mysterious occupants as Hiram Wilson, who according to witnesses, revealed that his airship design came from his uncle named Tosh Wilson, the very name Navarro had found mentioned in Dellschau’s watercolours as a Sonora club inventor.

But even Navarro, despite his exhaustive research, had his doubts about Charles Dellschau’s story and how much of it was fiction. Were they tall tales to keep an old man entertained? Or were they true accounts of his youth, perhaps innocently exaggerated here and there?
Fiction or not, a single page from Dellschau’s notebooks could fetch as much as $15,000 in the late 1990s. Today, Navarro is no longer in possession of his books; he sold them off in need of some cash to museums, galleries and private collectors in Texas, New York and Paris.

As for how they ended up in a trash heap in the 1960s? The books had been hiding in Charles Dellschau’s attic where he worked for many years before his death. In the 1960s, the husband of Dellschau’s step-daughter, Anton Stelzig was living in the home during the 1960s with his two ageing sisters and a nurse hired to care for them, when the fire department assessed that the house was a hazard and ordered that it be cleared of debris. The nurse was given the task of “cleaning-up”. Her way of doing things resulted in many of the family’s treasures being thrown out onto the street, including Dellschau’s books.

 Anton’s grandson Leo, painfully recalls the nurse saying, “I took care of that mess and cleaned it all up.” Some of Dellschau’s work is still believed to be missing, possibly lost forever.

In 2009, Pete Navarro finally published his co-written The Secrets of Dellschau, revealing a lot of the script he had decoded from the books. Four books still remain in the Menil Collection, locked in a humidity-controlled room. Researchers continue to unearth new pieces of information through  surviving relatives.

A Dellschau enthusiast, William Steen, obtained the aviation enthusiast’s journals in the late 1990s which included details of a secret club boarding house, with a bar and dining room where the society would have meets, dream up their newest flying machines (and probably just have a bit of guy time)!



“The more details I see about Dellschau, the more convinced I am that a great deal of it is highly possible,” he told the Houston Press. “Even though it’s fantastic, it’s more than just fairy tales.”

Sources: The Houston Press, The Observatory via Kateoplis

Article and pictures thanks to Messy Nessy Chic.

More on Charles Dellschau here, posted with caution as Wiki is not definitive and relies on editable texts.

Many thanks to Tom for sending me this.

Other posts on art:
Van Gogh On Dark Water Animation

Christopher Allen:50 Years of Australian Visual Arts

This Fake Rembrandt Was Created By An Algorithm  

Fore-edge Painting: Artists Hide Paintings Along The Edges Of Old Books  

Insanely Realistic Pencil Drawings

Found: A Missing Paul Gauguin Painting

Royal Academy of British Art Coming To Town

Australia and the UK Battle Over Historic Paintings Of A Kangaroo And A Dingo

Finally: A Digital Home For Lost Masterpieces

America: "Painting a Nation" Exhibition in Art Gallery of NSW

Chauvet Cave Paintings: Cave Women Left Their Artistic Mark

London exhibition of Australian art holds up a mirror to our nation: more iconic images
 
500 Years of Female Portraits in Western Art

Some Fascinating Pictures featuring Alyssa Monks

Visual Art of the Human Body by Cecelia Webber

Ronnie Wood: His Art and The Rolling Stones

The lost Van Gogh: Painting found in Norwegian attic is confirmed as priceless work by Dutch master

Market Find Turns Out To Be A Lost Faberge Egg

Charles Dellschau: Secrets of An Undiscovered Visionary Artist

Tom Pinch: Time - Lapse Portraits of Paul McCartney and John Lennon

How JMW Turner Set Painting Free 

The Curious Case Of The Renaissance Cockatoo

Images On Andy Warhol’s Old Computer Discs Excite University Students

Human Ingenuity: From the Renaissance to the Age of the Internet - The Sistine Chapel

Katsushika Hokusai: Japanese Artist

Picasso's "Women of Algiers" Breaks Auction Record

Looted Treasures Open Door To The Dark Nazi Past

Long-lost Caravaggio Masterpiece Found In French Attic

Frederic Remington: The Man Who Helped Bring The West To Life 

Loving Vincent: The World's First Fully Painted Film 

Vincenzo Peruggia: The Man Who Stole The Mona Lisa And Made Her more Famous Than Ever

The Isleworth Mona Lisa: A Second Leonardo Masterpiece? 

 Optical Illusions In Art

MC Escher: An Enigma Behind an Illusion                                
                          
Hidden Degas Portrait Revealed

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The World’s Priceless Treasures

Woman in Gold: Another Biopic For Dame Helen Mirren 

Australia and the UK Battle Over Historic Paintings Of A Kangaroo And A Dingo

Finally: A Digital Home For Lost Masterpieces

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Artemisia Gentileschi - Her Biography And Her Art

John Constable Painting Sold By Christie's For £3,500 In June 2013 Will Now Go To Market To Sell For £2 million

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Images On Andy Warhol’s Old Computer Discs Excite University Students

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