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Category: Art

By The Generalist Posted on March 8, 2021March 7, 2021

The tempest enigma

Around 1508 the Italian Renaissance artist Giorgione painted The Tempest. No-one knows what it means.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Places
By The Generalist Posted on January 29, 2021January 25, 2023

Akan goldweights

From the 15th to the 19th century CE, the Akan used sets of ornate statues as a measurement system for weighing gold dust, but also encoding and reinforcing cultural knowledge at the same time.

Categories: Africa, Art, Arts & recreation, Early modern history, Economics & business, History, Places, Sciences, Weights & measures
By The Generalist Posted on January 12, 2021January 25, 2023

The Library Cave

On June 25, 1900, tens of thousands of important historical manuscripts were found in a secret room within the Caves of the Thousand Buddhas in Dunhuang, China, where they had been hidden for nearly a millennium.

Categories: Ancient history, Art, Arts & recreation, East Asia, History, Literature, Medieval history, Places, Religion & belief
By The Generalist Posted on January 8, 2021January 5, 2021

First vanishing point

Masaccio’s Holy Trinity is possibly the earliest surviving work of art to use a single vanishing point. His work and that of Brunelleschi triggered a Renaissance explosion of mathematical perspective in art.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, History, Mathematics & statistics, Medieval history, Places, Sciences
By The Generalist Posted on January 8, 2021April 28, 2021

First vanishing point

Masaccio’s Holy Trinity is possibly the earliest surviving work of art to use a single vanishing point. His work and that of Brunelleschi triggered a Renaissance explosion of mathematical perspective in art.

Categories: Architecture, Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, History, Mathematics & statistics, Medieval history, Places, Sciences
By The Generalist Posted on December 25, 2020December 23, 2020

Christmas cannibals (Part 2)

One of the miracles attributed to Saint Nick is the resurrection of three children before they could be turned into Christmas hams.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Places, Religion & belief
By The Generalist Posted on December 21, 2020December 20, 2020

First Jesus

The first pictorial representation of Jesus Christ is insulting Roman graffiti that gives him a donkey’s head.

Categories: Ancient history, Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, History, Places, Religion & belief
By The Generalist Posted on December 11, 2020April 28, 2021

The savages of the Pacific

In 1806 the French artist Jean-Gabriel Charvet premiered one of the first multi-panel artistic wallpapers: it depicted a romanticised and colonial panorama of explorations in the South Pacific.

Categories: 19th century history, Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Fashion & design, History, Oceania, Places
By The Generalist Posted on November 25, 2020November 24, 2020

Mona Lisa, shaved

In 1919, Marcel Duchamp drew a moustache and goatee on a postcard of the Mona Lisa, renamed it with a bawdy French pun L. H. O. O. Q., and called it art. Half a century later, he framed an unmodified Mona Lisa postcard and named it L. H. O. O. Q. Shaved.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Places
By The Generalist Posted on November 14, 2020November 13, 2020

Igbo-Ukwu bronzes

In the 9th century CE, a town in what is now Nigeria produced the most masterful bronze artefacts in the world.

Categories: Africa, Art, Arts & recreation, Fashion & design, History, Medieval history, Places, Sciences, Technology
Arno
By The Generalist Posted on October 12, 2020April 17, 2021

Da Vinci and Machiavelli steal a river

Leonardo da Vinci and Niccolò Machiavelli once teamed up to steal the Arno river.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Early modern history, Earth science, Europe, History, Politics & law, Sciences
Pat Noise
By The Generalist Posted on July 2, 2020June 29, 2020

Hoax plaque

In 2004 a plaque commemorating Father Pat Noise was installed on a bridge in Dublin, Ireland. Pat Noise never existed.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Places
Guitarist
By The Generalist Posted on June 5, 2020August 7, 2021

Ghost in the painting

Artists sometimes change or improve paintings by painting over old versions. Through careful examination or special imaging, we can sometimes see these ghosts of lost art again.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Sciences, Technology
By The Generalist Posted on May 1, 2020April 28, 2021

Baroque perspective

There is a courtyard gallery in the Palazzo Spada in Rome that is designed to fool the eye. It looks like it should be 37 metres long, but in fact it’s only 8 metres in total.

Categories: Architecture, Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Mathematics & statistics, Places, Sciences
By The Generalist Posted on April 22, 2020April 19, 2020

Monet’s haystacks

Monet’s 1890-1891 painting series Les Meules à Giverny captured haystacks at multiple times of the day, seasons, and weather conditions. He did this by painting several canvases at once, swapping them as the day changed.

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Europe, Places
HP chip
By The Generalist Posted on March 2, 2020April 17, 2021

Computer chip graffiti

The silicon chip pictured here is the central processor from a 1991 Hewlett-Packard 9000 700-series workstation. It contains 577,000 transistors… and a horse?

Categories: Art, Arts & recreation, Computer science, Sciences

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