magnum-opus
magnum-opus
yet another Dark Academia blog
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magnum-opus · 25 days ago
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The chronicle of the monk Herbert of Reichenau for the year 1021 ends “My brother Werner was born on November 1.“ 
1021 was not an uneventful year. The emperor began a campaign into Italy. Illustrious abbots died. There was an earthquake. But Herbert took the time to note, at the end of the year, that his brother was born. 
Of such acts of tenderness is history made. 
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magnum-opus · 6 months ago
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Imagine being a Romantic poet and being able to say something like “I am as lonely as a dandelion” (die like two weeks later) and have people analysing that for centuries
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magnum-opus · 6 months ago
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Historians identify lost portrait of Shelley painted days before his death
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The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley has been identified in a portrait painted by an artist who met him just days before his death by drowning off the Italian coast in 1822, aged just 29.
It was created by William Edward West, the American painter, who had been struck by Shelley’s good looks while on a visit to paint Lord Byron in Tuscany.
Professor Andrew Stauffer, who has conducted the research, told The Telegraph: “This portrait captures Shelley just before his death. We don’t have better portraits of him.”
He believes that its modest size - 7.25 inches by 9.25 inches - may explain why it eluded notice before an American academic, Newman Ivey White, decided in the 1940s that it actually depicted Leigh Hunt, the English essayist, journalist and poet.
Until then, it was accepted as a portrait of Shelley, after surfacing in 1905.
Prof Stauffer said: “Then White’s debunking comes along and it disappears. But I’m basically debunking his debunking.”
Shelley had come to Italy to broker an introduction between Hunt and Byron, wanting them to collaborate on a new political poetic journal. They sought Byron’s involvement, both for his money and his fame. Literally a week after Hunt arrived, Shelley drowned after his boat foundered during a stormy return voyage to Lerici.
West later recalled their meeting, telling his nephew: “After seeing Shelley again…, I determined to paint [a] picture of him while his image was fresh in my memory.”
Prof Stauffer is President of the Byron Society of America and head of English at the University of Virginia, in whose library the painting hangs.
‘Misdirected debunking’
He made this discovery while doing research for his forthcoming book, Byron: A Life in Ten Letters, to be published by Cambridge University Press early next year.
He will publish his research in the Keats-Shelley Journal this month.
He points to evidence that West had multiple opportunities to observe Shelley in person. For example, an 1828 article titled Shelley in The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette features West’s description of Shelley as having “the most wonderful-looking head ever seen alive on our earth”.
Prof Stauffer writes: “Published when Shelley was little known in the United States, this reference to West’s opinion of Shelley’s appearance strikes me with the force of authenticity.”
He argues that “the misdirected debunking” of this painting has “distorted our sense of Shelley’s appearance”, with the result that he has been seen primarily through lesser portraits by amateur artists.
In the newly attributed oil painting, the poet was captured by a professional who had observed him firsthand.
Of the amateur portraits, one is by Amelia Curran, who was so unhappy with her work that she threw it onto the fire, only to rescue it at the last minute.
Prof Stauffer said that putting the West and Curran portraits side by side, one sees similarities such as the straight nose with its elongated nostril, a heavily curved upper lip and a rounded chin.
White had argued that, according to contemporaries, Shelley’s hair was beginning to turn grey in 1822 and that this was absent from the portrait. 
Prof Stauffer writes: “Perhaps White never saw the West portrait in person and could not see in reproductions the grey, which is plainly visible in the painting.”
—  The Telegraph, 23 September 2023
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magnum-opus · 6 months ago
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magnum-opus · 8 months ago
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magnum-opus · 10 months ago
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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Painter Haidee Becker's North London home and studio. Photography by Mark Anthony Fox for House & Garden.
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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home of vanessa bell, english painter and sister of virginia woolf
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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from villaarnaino
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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Count Raniero Gnoli’s Italian home. Photo by Oberto Gili
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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Carley Summer
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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SPRING HEADERS (requested by anonymous)
4 MARIE ANTOINETTE AND 4 THE SECRET GARDEN (with and without ripped paper texture)
650 x 350
like/reblog if you use
please don't claim as your own
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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𝖵𝗂𝗅𝗅𝖺 𝖣𝗎𝗋𝖺𝗓𝗓𝗈 𝖯𝖺𝗅𝗅𝖺𝗏𝗂𝖼𝗂𝗇𝗂 𝖻𝗒 𝖯𝖺𝗋𝖼𝗈 𝖯𝗂𝗎̈ 𝖡𝖾𝗅𝗅𝗈 𝖽’𝖨𝗍𝖺𝗅𝗂𝖺
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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Klara Kristin photographed by Dan Beleiu for XOXO The Mag.
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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AD Italia, Agosto 1996. Foto - Massimo Listri
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magnum-opus · 1 year ago
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Atonement (2007) dir. Joe Wright
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