William Blake
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No title new19/William Blake-624699.jpg Painting ID:: 53639
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mk234
1794
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Job and his dottrar new19/William Blake-252652.jpg Painting ID:: 53883
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mk234
1799-1800
27x38cm |
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sir james macdonald and sir alexander macdonald new20/William Blake-667569.jpg Painting ID:: 56119
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mk247
1749,oil on canvas,69.5x58 in,176.5x147.5 cm,scottish national portait gallery,edinburgh,uk |
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Hecate or the Three Fates new21/William Blake-797258.jpg Painting ID:: 62538
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1795 Pen and ink with watercolour, 430 580 mm Tate Gallery, London Recently the painting is called The Night of Enitharmon's Joy. The many titles show the many levels of meaning, or the impenetrable mystery of Blake's work. Author: BLAKE, William Title: Hecate or the Three Fates Form: graphics , 1751-1800 , English , mythological |
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Los Entering the Grave new21/William Blake-542623.jpg Painting ID:: 62539
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1804-20 Etching with pen, watercolour and gold, 220 x 160 mm Yale Center for British Art, New Haven This is the frontispiece of the illustrated poem Jerusalem. In the coloured version of the frontispiece to his Jerusalem, Blake placed the thorns of the Passion beneath his own personification, Los, as he steps bravely through a door into a dark, grave-like void. This is not an end but the beginning: Los has embarked on an adventure, one hand raised in greeting and the other holding a blazing sun to illuminate the truths to be revealed in the following pages. Author: BLAKE, William Title: Los Entering the Grave Form: graphics , 1751-1800 , English , mythological |
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