1 favorite     2 comments    3 480 visits

See also...

New Flickr Survivors New Flickr Survivors


Cucho B&W Cucho B&W


See more...

Keywords

allusion research
The Banker's Fate
Nachbild
Bildzitat/Nachbild als künstlerische Strategien
teaching literature
teaching arts
hidden images
Victorian era
pictorial allusions
image comparison
Jubjub
inspiration revealed
Allusionsforschung
juvenile books
The Bone Player
William Sidney Mount
crazy artwork
F4R
metropolitan_museum
Snark after May 2013
Bankersnatch
Bildervergleich
Cryptomorphism
The Hunting of the Snark
Bildzitat
allusions
Lewis Carroll
pictorial
hidden pictures
comparison
ruff
favorites
Henry Holiday
conundrum
interpictorial
pictorial citation
pictorial quote
visual semiotics
visuelle Semiotik
Kunstwissenschaft
English literature
arts research
Joseph Swain
crossover
crossover books


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
Attribution + non Commercial + no derivative

3 480 visits


White Spot

White Spot
[left]: Segment from an Illustration by Henry Holiday to Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark (1876).

[right, mirror view]: Segment from The Bone Player (1856) by William Sidney Mount, now displayed in MFA, Boston.

Two Bone Players

Later Macmillan damaged the puzzle: They removed the white spot.
The removed
In a 1910 edition of The Hunting of the Snark, the white spot had disappeared. However, it had a reason, as you see in the inset. The inset shows a segment from a 1876 edition with the white spot and a segment from The Bone Player (1856) by William Sidney Mount with a white spot (reflection from a glass).

Christina Sonnenschein has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
Hi Jennifer,

Thank you for the feedback.
10 years ago. Edited 10 years ago.
 Götz Kluge
Götz Kluge club
The Flaw was no Flaw
10 years ago.