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Abandoned Bridge, Alaska

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The End of Days by Jenny Erpenbeck, translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky

Sounds very engaging.

james b chester's avatarMay Contain Spoilers

A child is born during a very cold winter in early 20th century Germany. Her parents, a Catholic father and a Jewish mother, are not in the best of marriages. He is unable to rise above the 11th salary rank at work due to prejudice against his Jewish wife. She has been declared dead by her monied grandfather who actually sat shiva for her because she married a Christian. When their baby daughter becomes ill, neither of them knows the trick of putting snow on her chest to shock her back into breathing. The baby girl, Nora dies during her first weeks of life.

But what if they had known to put snow on her chest? In The End of Days Jenny Erpenbeck examines this idea by telling the story of Nora had she survived childhood. The novel follows Nora as she goes through many lives living a little longer…

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Bishopsgate Institute EC2

Jane's avatarJane Sketching

Here is the Bishopsgate Institute entrance, seen from the other side of the road.

Bishopsgate Institute, west entrance, 28th Dec 2022 in Sketchbook 12

The Bishopsgate Institute opened in 1895, as a centre for adult learning. Amazingly, it continues this mission to this day, with a huge range of courses and classes, as well as a library and an event programme: https://www.bishopsgate.org.uk/

The Institute was founded by Reverend William Rogers (1819-1896), a clergyman who took action to improve the lot of London’s poor and provide educational opportunities for people of all backgrounds. He secured funding for his educational initiative by using charitable funds from the City of London:

On arriving at St Botolph’s, Rogers discovered that a pot of charitable donations had been accumulating in the City for over five hundred years. These donations were often death bed bequests, with the donor hoping to secure his or her place in…

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Zhang Daqian: “Palace Crimson” Peony (1952)

Beautiful

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

Zhang Daqian (Chang Dai-chien, 1899-1983), “Palace Crimson” Peony, ink and colour on paper, framed, signed, dated 1952, with three seals of the artist, 55 x 40.3 cm 21⅝x 15¾in., Image source: Sotheby’s

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Zhang Daqian: A guide to China’s most popular artist

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Zhang Daqian at Christie’s

Zhang Daqian at Sotheby’s

Thanks for Visiting 🙂

~Sunnyside

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Autoportrait Day 307~ Maria Noguera Puig

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Jean-Étienne Liotard: Portrait of a Young Woman (c.1760)

Lovely portrait!

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

Jean-Etienne Liotard, Swiss, (1702–1789), Portrait of a Young Woman, pastel on paper, 16 x 12 3/4 in. (40.6 x 32.4 cm), Painted late 18th century, St. Louis Art Museum, Image Source: wikimedia

“For its beauty, vivacity, freshness and lightness of palette,” Liotard wrote, “pastel painting is more beautiful than any other kind of painting.” Liotard is known for pressing pastel quite forcefully onto the paper to create extra brilliance in order to exaggerate these qualities. This peculiar technique and desire for luminosity is what set him apart from other artists working with pastel and makes his works unique.”

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Expert audio commentary on this portrait at St. Louis Art Museum

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Jean-Étienne Liotard at wikiwand

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Jean Étienne Liotard at Meisterdrucke

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I was introduced to this lovely pastel portrait in the post Jean-Étienne Liotard – Portrait of a Young Woman (c.1760) on the…

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Courtyard Gate, Devon, England

Always find wrought ironwork engaging- hen I remember my father used to make some.

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Die bemerkenswerten Fotografien von Schiffskoch Carl Schiesser aus Ochsenfurt

Ich mochte gern dies atmospharisches Bilder

juergenfeytiat's avatarDas kurze, aber bewegte Leben des Frachtdampfers „Fürth“

Titelbild:
Carl Schiesser (Karl SchieĂźer) mit seiner Kamera, Aufnahme vermutlich zwischen 1912-1914 in Parramatta (GroĂźraum Sydney), Fotograf unbekannt; Album Carl Schiesser, National Library of Australia, https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-153362071/view

Eine kurze Karriere auf See

Carl Schiesser aus Ochsenfurt hatte eine kurze Karriere als Schiffskoch. Sie kann nicht länger als zwei bis drei Jahre gedauert haben.

Der 1889 in Ochsenfurt (Unterfranken) geborene Schiesser ging nach Kochlehre und Militärdienst nach Australien.

Die Kosten für seine Überfahrt hat Schiesser wahrscheinlich auf dem NDL-Dampfer „Scharnhorst“ als Schiffskoch abgearbeitet. In Parramatta, Großraum Sydney lebt er bei Verwandten (Freunden?), wie viele Aufnahmen vom ihm nahelegen. Die meiste Zeit verbrachte er jedoch auf See. Er arbeitete als erster Schiffskoch (chief cook) auf dem Dampfer „Prinz Sigismund“.

Wir finden Schiesser auf Mannschaftlisten vom Dezember 1912 und März 1913. Im August 1914 war Schiesser immer noch (oder wieder) als Schiffskoch auf der „Prinz Sigismund“. Damit war seine Seefahrerkarriere auch schon…

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Franz Marc: The Foxes (1913)

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

Franz Marc, The Foxes, (1913), oil on canvas, eight: 880 mm (34.64 in); width: 660 mm (25.98 in), Museum Kunstpalast , Image Source: wikimedia

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Franz Marc at wikiwand

Franz Marc at Art Story

Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses

Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim

Franz Marc Museum website

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Thanks for Visiting 🙂

~Sunnyside

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The Glass Hotel (2020), by Emily St John Mandel

I enjoyed “Almost English”- chacun Ă  son goĂ»t!

Lisa Hill's avatarANZ LitLovers LitBlog

I’ve been having a bit of a binge on the M shelf: nothing to make a serious dent in it, but when I didn’t have room for Simon Mawer’s new novel Ancestry, I chose four books at random for the bedside table.  I can’t imagine what possessed me to buy Almost English by Charlotte Mendelson and I abandoned it, but I enjoyed Claire Messud’s The Woman Upstairs (see my review); Andrew Miller’s Now We Shall Be Entirely Free is looking good so far, and Emily St John Mandel’s The Glass Hotel has turned out to be an excellent choice!

Quite apart from the subject matter, which is a splendid takedown of the amoral greed of neoliberalism, I really enjoyed the fractured narrative. The Glass Hotel is a cunningly structured jigsaw puzzle which reveals its interlocking parts over the course of its 300 pages.  It’s a book that…

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