Remade 2025; used to be around back in the day under the same name but I stupidly did not transfer my blog before deleting my old main account. This is a sideblog and all that entails. Currently re-playing TRT for the millionth time and having a blast!
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My friends! It has been much too long. So much has been happening!
I just needed to share that I went to the Peabody Essex Museum today in Salem, MA. I live in the area (literally was born in Salem), so I’ve been to the PEM a LOT. Like a lot a lot. Like my family were members for the majority of my childhood a lot.
ANYWAYS they have this exhibit going on until February about Spiritualism, and I had to share some photos! I knew there would be references to Houdini, but there was so much more there that reminded me of the games!


What card am I looking at ??

I know that face



Harry Houdini was so big in Salem!
Bonus picture! The ORIGINAL Cottingley Fairies photo!!! I freaked out when I saw this.

Pls enjoy! And visit the exhibit if you’re in the area!
It’s also been like 5 months since I’ve played a Nancy Drew game how am I surviving
#nancy drew in real life#what a cool exhibit!#my favorite harry houdini factoids have always been 1. he died on halloween & 2. bess houdini held seances for 10 years after his death#after she failed to receive any answer according to their code she declared “10 years is long enough to wait for any man”#secret of the old clock#the final scene
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The Final Scene showcases a performance by Harry Houdini and his wife Bess, in which they switch places on stage while in suspended cages. The Houdini Transformation was inspired by Metamorphosis, an illusion the Houdinis featured while on the road in 1894 and which helped secure their first big tour with the Welsh Brothers Circus in 1895. The in-game poster even shares similar design aspects with a poster for the original performance.

According to TheGreatHarryHoudini.com, the illusion was performed as follows:
In this trick, Houdini’s hands would be fastened behind his back as he was placed inside a large bag which was knotted closed. He was then placed inside a large box, which was locked and strapped closed. The box is then placed inside a cabinet. Mrs. Houdini would then draw the curtain closed and clap three times. At the third clap, Houdini himself would draw open the curtain and Mrs. Houdini would be gone. When the box is opened, Mrs. Houdini is found inside the bag with the knots and seals unbroken and her hands secured in exactly the same way as her husband’s.
The answer to this trick begins with the binding of Houdini’s wrists. He was an expert at freeing himself from ropes and ties, especially those in which the knots could be slipped and tightened later. He would simply free himself from the ropes as the bag was being raised above his head. The audience could not see this, as his hands were purposefully bound behind his back. The rope used to secure the sack itself ran through a series of metal eyelets around the upper edge of the bag, so the rope would be both inside and outside of the bag. Houdini merely needed to pull on the rope from the inside of the bag to open the sack. The box or trunk was over-sized, allowing for more freedom of movement. It had a rear panel opening inward with a release on the inside. Having gotten himself free from both the rope and the sack, Houdini would wait for the curtain to drop. As the curtain falls, he simply uses the release and trap panel to exit the box. Contrary to the audience’s assumption, it was Houdini himself who was doing the clapping, as Bessie got inside the box through the open back panel.
Harry would then appear from behind the curtain. When Harry opened the curtain, Bessie was already inside the box. Once inside, she closed the panel, slid into the wrist restraints, left slack by Harry and pulled the sack over her. Inside the sack, she would use the inner loop system to pull the knot tight at the top of the bag. All of this work was performed as Harry went through the motions of unlocking the box.
The Houdini Transformation in the game adds more complexity to the illusion with the addition of a third person, but all in all both performances are very similar! I love the historical aspects of the games, and was fascinated by Houdini and illusion the more I read about him.
The posters in the Magician’s Room (one of my favorite game locations) were also inspired by actual vintage posters. You can see a post on that here, from one of my favorite blogs, Art of Nancy Drew.
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I know this reblog is old and I fell off the face of Clue Crew tumblr, deleted, remade, etc. but I don't mind at all! It didn't occur to me often to include screencaps in the posts themselves (I think I might have done it on only one or two posts total?), so this great for comparison purposes.
Winged Nike of Samothrace; marble, ca. 190 BCE
The winged goddess of Victory standing on the prow of a ship overlooked the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on the island of Samothrace. This monument was probably an ex-voto offered by the people of Rhodes in commemoration of a naval victory in the early second century BC. The theatrical stance, vigorous movement, and billowing drapery of this Hellenistic sculpture are combined with references to the Classical period-prefiguring the baroque aestheticism of the Pergamene sculptors. [x]
Found in: Labyrinth of Lies
#art of nancy drew#labyrinth of lies#and now excuse me for going through your blog for the rest of my posts ||orz
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Today, I learned about the guy who made this, Alphonse Mucha. He was a believer in independence for Slavic countries and Czechia and had made many works of art for the country. Eventually, because of that, he was arrested and interrogated by the Nazis during the rise of Hitler before WWII. After this, he was so weak that after contracting pneumonia, he died. I can only imagine how many artists this happened to, and how many works of art were destroyed.
Idk. For me this just solidifies how important art is in culture and for the world, and how it can last longer than the facism and war and evil. That scares oppressors and dictators.
Sure, we know this artwork from a Nancy Drew game, but the history behind the artist is so interesting.
Also, since his art is absolutely stunning, here are a few more below



#alphonse mucha#i love that nancy drew has used so many of his works throughout the years and introduced him to a new generation
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Nancy Drew in real life: Magician Posters in The Final Scene
Claude Alexander Conlin, aka “The Man Who Knows / The Crystal Seer” (active ca. 1902-1924)
A magician who specialized in telepathy. It is said that he originally plagiarized an escape act of Harry Houdini into his usual routine, complete with over-the-top theatrics and showgirls. Only this routine ended one night when he couldn’t get his usual props in time for a show, prompting him to fall back on a telepathy routine as suggested by an assistant. This seeming inconvenience became the backbone of his career and sealed his name as a magician. [x]
Yu-Li-San, “The Enigmatic Medium” (active ca. the 1950s)
Yu-Li-San was a Spanish magician and medium who worked with the hypnotist Professor Alba Jr. Alba took over his father’s magic show after his death and added Yu-Li-San to the line-up, continuing its success. [x]
Thanks to: @nancydrewcomplex for finding the original real-life posters & @littlenancydrewthings for the screencaps.
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Another gif made for the promotion of a Halloween sale in 2016 by Little Jackalope (Calina Herman).
This was taken from the following post on the Amateur Sleuth blog, uploaded on October 7th, 2016.
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Swallows and Flowering Blossoms by Jiang Tingxi; ink and color on silk
Jiang Tingxi (1669-1732) was born in Changshu, Jiangsu. He was also known by the names Nansha, Qingtong Jushi, Qiujun, XiGu, Yangsun, and Youjun. Jiang was a Qing dynasty court painter and, along with Chen Menglei, co-editor of the state-sponsored encyclopedia Gujin tushu jicheng (Complete Collection of Ancient and Modern Writings and Charts), published in 1726. A native of Jiangsu province, Jiang was renowned for his bird and flower paintings. As an official painter and grand secretary to the Imperial Court in Kyoto, Jiang Tingxi used a wide variety of artistic styles, and focused particularly on paintings of birds and flowers. He was also proficient in calligraphy. Biography adapted from the British Museum. The name of the piece comes from a poster printed in 1979. There is not much online for this piece itself, but Tingxi does at least have a Wikipedia page in English, something that is not always the case for Chinese painters. (It's sparsely sourced but it does match with the British Museum's biography.)
Found in: Message in a Haunted Mansion, Nancy's room
#nancy drew#message in a haunted mansion#art of nancy drew#nancy drew art id#found another name! although i will stress that i have not found much about the piece itself online#it is apparently well-known enough to be used as a design in museum gift shops#it does not help that there's the different chinese writing systems + the different romanization systems to sort through
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ack, have finally found this tapestry that's been driving me up the wall for aaaaaaages - it's a cropped (and strangely coloured) section of the massive Imperial hunt and hawking party of Maximilian I in the Sonian Forest, which was commissioned by Emperor Maximilian I and completed in 1510.
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Two Sisters (On the Terrace) by Pierre Auguste-Renoir; oil on canvas 1881
Pierre-Auguste Renoir painted this delightful homage to springtime, youth, and beauty on the terrace of the Fournaise family’s restaurant on the Seine River at Chatou—where, six years before, he had made Lunch at the Restaurant Fournaise. The young woman in this painting wears the blue flannel dress favored by lady boaters at the time. She and the girl at her side were not actually related. [X]
Found in: Treasure in the Royal Tower
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Some of the artwork that can be seen throughout the castle in Treasure in the Royal Tower.
1. Portrait of Marie Antoinette by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1783
2. Anne of Cleves by Hans Holbein the Younger, 1539
3. Marie Antoinette by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1779
4. The Noble Slav by Rembrandt, 1632
5. State Portrait of Marie Antoinette by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1788
6. A Young Patrician Lady by an unknown artist in the school of Leonardo Da Vinci
7. Marie Antoinette by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1783
8. Two Sisters by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, 1881
9. Queen Marie Antoinette of France by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun, 1786
10. Man In Armour by Rembrandt, 1655
11. Sconosciuta con Mantiglia by Franz Xavier Winterhalter
12. Don Antonia Noriega by Francisco de Goya, 1801
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#kevin manthei#treasure in the royal tower#nancy drew music#trt soundtrack#i've tried looking for this one on here and can never find it so here it is. possibly my favorite of them all ♡
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Flowers and Birds, by Hsiao Yung; hanging scroll, ink and colors on silk, ca. 10-11 century CE
Hsiao Yung was a nobleman of the Kingdom of Liao (907-1125 CE) which occupied Manchuria and part of North China. An admirer of T'ang art, he would ask the Liao ambassadors sent to the Sung court to buy in China the paintings he liked, no matter how high the cost might be. He studied the masterpieces they brought back to him and became an artist in his own right. Flowers and Birds is a magnificently colored picture showing bamboo leaves, hibiscus and other flowers, with partridges and other wild birds flying or perched on crags. It is a rare masterpiece by a Liao artist. The picture was signed by the artist and bears his seal. Collection: National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan Republic of China Information from here; backup version
Found in: Message in a Haunted Mansion, Nancy's room
#art of nancy drew#nancy drew art id#message in a haunted mansion#nancy drew#finding this was a fun process of wanting to scream “THIS IS A CHINESE PIECE IT IS NOT JAPANESE” at my laptop#and i used an online image upscaler for the screencap. going fancy-fancy lol#i will hate generative ai to my dying days but image editing programs have long used analytical ai to allow for upscaling and the like
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Nancy's room mhm art post (companion to Abby's room art post)
the tapestry is a version of the same design as one found in TRT, though with a slightly different border. it's an 18th century design by Jean Pillement, originally produced by the Gobelins Manufactory in Paris. this particular design combines two trapestry trends: verdure ('greenery'; tapestries that emphasized plants and the natural world) and chinoiserie (french term for art or furniture of western manufacture inspired by Chinese or other Asian art/style/patterns).

the prints on either side of the tapestry are from the Activities of the Twelve Lunar Months series, painted by anonymous court artists during the Quing dynasty, probably completed in the 18th c. the ones on either side of the tapestry are the 7th month and the 9th month, and the 12th month can be found hanging above the fireplace


.
now, the bird-and-flower paintings. while i was able to track down the images, I couldn't find much legitimate info or sources, boo hiss etc. I was able to find a copy of the picture on the left in a National Palace Museum article on museum labelling practices of all things! if your chinese is better than mine (mine is nonexistent) you might be able to make something of it.




the tapestry next to the bed is an example of a more traditional 'verdure' design: lotta emphasis on the natural world, lotta different tree/plant species, very very green. and... I couldn't find the original image. however since I've spent approximately a thousand hours looking tapestries I feel comfortable enough wagering a guess. based on the composition, stylization and border design it seems like it's most likely a 17th c. flemish design - for comparison see the three examples of flemish verdures from that period below.

#amazing work!#but a flemish tapestry.... louis chandler did this. only plausible explanation to me#the chinoiserie tapestry i get because that was of the era and trendy but a tapestry from flanders in the “chinese room”#anyways! going to try my best to find more about the chinese bird and flower scroll paintings. google don't let me down#message in a haunted mansion
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Thank you so much!
If I'm remembering correctly (because it has been so long, just saw a timestamp on one of my old posts and it was 2015), a lot of what I posted were sourced descriptions from the gallery pages, whatever little tid-bits caught my eye in the process of tracking things down, or that I knew from elsewhere (like Edmund Dulac's Firebird being an illustration for the Russian fairytale; I used to have the most beautiful HQ picture of it until my computer troubles hit, and the site that hosted it has pulled it, presumably because the prints were all sold. Pain, not even the WayBack saved it).
I can't necessarily say if I'll dive back into it all right now when I am still slowly catching up, both with what's been posted since my absence and replaying the games for the first time since... I can't remember when. (I say this, as if I did not spend two to three hours last night digging around for details on a Chinese scroll painting from MHM, lol. I was successful in my efforts, but I need to transcribe what I found and so on. Experience has taught me that auction listings, sale prints, and the like will not always be around for viewing online. And yes, auction websites might be the answer to tracking down the Chinese wall scrolls but even that feels like a matter of sheer luck.)
But I will say it is so amazing to see what all you have tracked down! Finally, there's names I can place on these images! I haven't reblogged everything yet—like Nancy Drew I have been lurking and snooping—but it is blowing my mind to see everyone's posts tracking things down and everything I managed to miss for all those years, both on here and in the games themselves.
How on earth do you identify all the art? What’s your process lol
hA. erm. slowly and also painfully, basically. I don't have an art history background but I loved when artofnancydrew and littlenancydrewthings used to put their art id posts together and wanted to see if I could figure it out myself, so it's just a lot of trial-and-error and a decent amount of patience.
unfortunately most of the in-game images are too small for google’s reverse/search-by-image thing to pick up, boo. so for paintings I generally end up at wikiart because their advanced search tool lets you filter by genre/style/date of creation. they also have a ‘tags’ feature but it isn’t all that robust - most of the artworks are not comprehensively tagged, so i mostly avoid that. honestly, I usually end up searching by by genre (ie ‘landscape’ or ‘portrait’), use the timeline thing to limit the number of results, and then just. scroll through all of what comes back.
I dearly love the RKDimages database (their TAGGING SYSTEM holy mother of dog it’s FUCKING MIRACULOUS). it’s main focus is Netherlandish art, but seriously, give this thing every gold star on the planet, it’s so damned beautiful. all other databases, get on the RKD’s level. holy frick.
other than that? we know HeR used to use the Corel image library but of course i haven’t had any luck actually finding/accessing said image library. that said, I’ve had some luck plugging the term into wikimedia commons, and then there’s this old site which seems to have significant overlap - I’ve found a few difficult-to-place pictures there. once I know the artist who created a painting I’ll look through the rest of their catalogue, see if any of their other pieces were used as well. I keep a spreadsheet of the paintings/artists I’ve found and which game their art was in. like I said at the beginning, it’s just a lot of trial-and-error.
paintings are really the most straightforward things to identify. photographs and tapestries (fucking treasure in the royal tower making me try and id tapestries) are, in my experience, way harder, and basically ruin my life if I spend too much time thinking about them lmao. the photos in last train to blue moon canyon - I’ve used the US Library of Congress’ digital collections, the Getty institute, the Met, a couple other US museum catalogues/databases.. browsing their collections basically. the LOC has a substantive civil war image collection available online, which is cool. but all that said I still came across the Buck Taylor cabinet card via a random link on a site dedicated to old bicycle photography. because fuck me I guess :P and tapestries are hell on earth. because as it turns out, there’s no handy database for tapestry art. at all. RKD has some, Getty has some, but basically I’ve been browsing through museum collections and trying to find decent images that might lead me in the right direction? until i get fed up and lose my cool and need to go do something else for a bit.
#i might be remaking some of my old posts. like the firebird i could kick myself for not linking to project gutenberg for it#and wiki commons has a version of reynolds' painting that renders her dress as white for once and i'm in awe#i've tried to recreate it myself but i still can't get it right. photoshop witchcraft
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The watch read 7 PM in the game when I knocked on Abby's door to go to the seance. Returned to room at 10:15 PM after the seance.
3 hours and 15 minutes. What else did we do that night or did the seance last that long.
#maybe abby made our natal charts and read our horoscopes lol#if nancy drew's birthday is april 28 she's a taurus#message in a haunted mansion
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I know in-universe we could claim that Rose only had lesser print reproductions of these paintings to start with or that Louis was lying through his teeth about their value and she foolishly never sought another opinion because she was already out of her depth, stressed out and growing discouraged, and keeping the house from collapsing was more pressing. I know some pieces are more highly valued than others, but Rose could've sold a Gainsborough or two at auction to help ease financial stress (she has 7 Gainsboroughs and I believe most are full-sized framed portraits, not small print reproductions on a side table. Even his reproductions fetch a good price if that site is to be believed).
Like, she has two portraits of Abigail Smith Adams in great condition. Why does she need two of them?
Caps from littlenancydrewthings
#message in a haunted mansion#nancy drew#nancy drew games#clue crew#rose... ma'am... please get a second opinion#maybe the real treasure was all these paintings in great condition just chilling on the walls#biggest sign that chandler was a fraud. man could've been making bank from day one
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I know this post is old and I dropped off the face of the Clue Crew side of tumblr, deleted earlier this year, and now remade, but...
This was my same process! Some pieces I already knew thanks to art history classes over the years and pop culture recognition (Van Gogh qualifies for the latter, imho. ND introduced me to Mucha as an artist way back when as a kid so his work was easy to spot once that info took root, for the most part. Could kick myself to play MHM for the first time in ages yesterday and spot Mucha in Abby's room the whole time) so that helped in identifying them. A lot of my posts were mostly, "Hey, I recognize that piece!" Others were the result of searching wikiart and then hoping to find a nice gallery photo to use. (I feel like wikipedia and wikiart have gotten better on quality over the years, or that awful pre-restoration Age of Innocence has scarred me, lol. She was so yellow, so flaky.)
It is fun because it is a form of sleuthing—and, well, what would the Clue Crew be without sleuthing?—but it definitely has its drawbacks! The limited quality of the old games makes things look fuzzier and fuzzier as monitor displays get better, so finding the details from blurry images becomes even harder, especially if it is a small image in the background. And I never even touched any tapestries because they were too daunting to try. Kudos to you, @you-have-made-a-fatal-error!
How on earth do you identify all the art? What’s your process lol
hA. erm. slowly and also painfully, basically. I don't have an art history background but I loved when artofnancydrew and littlenancydrewthings used to put their art id posts together and wanted to see if I could figure it out myself, so it's just a lot of trial-and-error and a decent amount of patience.
unfortunately most of the in-game images are too small for google’s reverse/search-by-image thing to pick up, boo. so for paintings I generally end up at wikiart because their advanced search tool lets you filter by genre/style/date of creation. they also have a ‘tags’ feature but it isn’t all that robust - most of the artworks are not comprehensively tagged, so i mostly avoid that. honestly, I usually end up searching by by genre (ie ‘landscape’ or ‘portrait’), use the timeline thing to limit the number of results, and then just. scroll through all of what comes back.
I dearly love the RKDimages database (their TAGGING SYSTEM holy mother of dog it’s FUCKING MIRACULOUS). it’s main focus is Netherlandish art, but seriously, give this thing every gold star on the planet, it’s so damned beautiful. all other databases, get on the RKD’s level. holy frick.
other than that? we know HeR used to use the Corel image library but of course i haven’t had any luck actually finding/accessing said image library. that said, I’ve had some luck plugging the term into wikimedia commons, and then there’s this old site which seems to have significant overlap - I’ve found a few difficult-to-place pictures there. once I know the artist who created a painting I’ll look through the rest of their catalogue, see if any of their other pieces were used as well. I keep a spreadsheet of the paintings/artists I’ve found and which game their art was in. like I said at the beginning, it’s just a lot of trial-and-error.
paintings are really the most straightforward things to identify. photographs and tapestries (fucking treasure in the royal tower making me try and id tapestries) are, in my experience, way harder, and basically ruin my life if I spend too much time thinking about them lmao. the photos in last train to blue moon canyon - I’ve used the US Library of Congress’ digital collections, the Getty institute, the Met, a couple other US museum catalogues/databases.. browsing their collections basically. the LOC has a substantive civil war image collection available online, which is cool. but all that said I still came across the Buck Taylor cabinet card via a random link on a site dedicated to old bicycle photography. because fuck me I guess :P and tapestries are hell on earth. because as it turns out, there’s no handy database for tapestry art. at all. RKD has some, Getty has some, but basically I’ve been browsing through museum collections and trying to find decent images that might lead me in the right direction? until i get fed up and lose my cool and need to go do something else for a bit.
#i ought to see if i still have some art history books around... do some truly old school sleuthing...#iirc my whole blog stemmed from my grandmother giving me a satin reproduction of reynolds' the age of innocence#and it just brought all those years back of looking at it as a kid and thinking “but that's from nancy drew!”#but i hit a wall on combing through for art and computer issues hit#i'm in awe to see what all i have missed#don't mind me if i keep hitting reblog on old posts~#combing through the tags and blogs is like christmas for me
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