The Baker's Dear Uncle
Eagle and Star
Mary's and the Baker's Kerchiefs
Paradise Lost and the Beaver's Lesson
The Bankers Fate
The Uncle over Darwin's Fireplace
The Vanishing and the Gneiss Rock
IT WAS A BOOJUM (bw)
Darwin's Fireplace and the Baker's Dear Uncle
Holiday - Millais- Anonymous - Galle, detail
Holiday and Gheeraerts I
Priest in the Mouth
Billiard-Marker & Henry George Liddell
Snark Hunt: Square One
Anne I?
Tree of Life
The Bellman and Father Time
A little Zoo in Charles Darwin's Study
William III, Religion and Liberty, Care and Hope
Kerchiefs and other shapes
Anne Hale Mrs. Hoskins
Anne Hale Mrs. Hoskins
42 Boxes, Sheep, Iconoclasm
Holiday and Gheeraerts I
Hennry Holiday, the Bonnetmaker and a Bonnet
See also...
See more...Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
3 442 visits
Darwins snarked Study
Alfred Parsons' depiction of Charles Darwin's study in Downe. The wood cutter was J. Tynan.
I assume that Alfred Parsons quoted shapes from Henry Holiday's illustration (cut by Joseph Swain) to The Bakers Tale in Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark in a similar manner as Henry Holiday used shapes in the works of earlier artists perhaps in order to "point" to these works. The match of each single shape could be quite incidental, but the the spacial relation of most shapes to each other also matches well. That is less likely to be just incidental.
(Alfred Parsons' depiction of Charles Darwin's new study is used here with permission by Dr. John van Wyhe, darwin-online.org.uk/. Henry Holiday's illustration has been scanned from a book published in 1911.)
This is one of the images which I posted on Flickr a few years ago. It is an earlier version of the image below:
I assume that Alfred Parsons quoted shapes from Henry Holiday's illustration (cut by Joseph Swain) to The Bakers Tale in Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark in a similar manner as Henry Holiday used shapes in the works of earlier artists perhaps in order to "point" to these works. The match of each single shape could be quite incidental, but the the spacial relation of most shapes to each other also matches well. That is less likely to be just incidental.
(Alfred Parsons' depiction of Charles Darwin's new study is used here with permission by Dr. John van Wyhe, darwin-online.org.uk/. Henry Holiday's illustration has been scanned from a book published in 1911.)
This is one of the images which I posted on Flickr a few years ago. It is an earlier version of the image below:
(deleted account) has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.