This chariot horse is worn out from carrying moon-goddess Selene to the Parthenon. 435 BC.Does the Parthenon look inviting to you?…At the Parthenon, who’s stronger — a centaur or a Lampith?This maenad, two satyrs, and panther are followers of Dionysos, a.k.a. Bacchus, the god of wine. Roman, about 100 AD.These Assyrians are hunting through a garden. About 645-635 BC.“I’m looking at you.” This King Ramesses II was carved from one block that was quarried almost 200 kilometers south of the king’s mortuary temple!General Horemheb has rather pronounced breasts — yet his wife’s are concave… Hmmm… 18th Dynasty, probably reign of Ay (about 1327-1323 BC), Horemheb’s tomb.An ancestral figure from Easter Island, Chile, about AD 1000-1200.The flames of Hindu god Shiva, here as Nataraja, the Lord of the Dance, demonstrate how one cycle gives over to another. He creates and then he destroys. About 1100, south India.Only one flap of Garuda’s wings is needed to orbit the cosmos while he protects followers from serpent spirits. 1800s, Tibet.
Is there an era’s art that you prefer?…
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Happiness Between Tails speaks to and from the heart. It connects lovers — of pets, authors, books — and of my still-unreleased novels, “Flamenco + the Sitting Cat” and “Tango + the Sitting Cat.” The stories are my love letters to all who fear they're too odd, too damaged, too old, too whatever to find happiness. ContactdaAL@gmail.com • BuyMeACoffee.com/SupportHBT
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42 thoughts on “Part 2 of 3: Strolling the British Museum by da-AL”
[…] into more than one post. We’d landed in London and had fun at the British Museum here and here and here. Then we drove to Bath, then admired Avebury and a bit of Wales on the route to […]
[…] and Conwy and Penrith and Ullswater, and the Kelpies of Scotland. The British Museum (here’s Part 2 and Part 3 of our trip to see it) is best known for the Rosetta Stone that helped scholars […]
Essential publication.
I agree with you that there,s much to learn at the British museum that I was three times.
I love the Egyyptian culture and symbolisms that last until today.
I was struck by the Rossetta stores.
Cheers. María.
[…] into more than one post. We’d landed in London and had fun at the British Museum here and here and here. Then we drove to Bath, then admired Avebury and a bit of Wales on the route to […]
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[…] and Conwy and Penrith and Ullswater, and the Kelpies of Scotland. The British Museum (here’s Part 2 and Part 3 of our trip to see it) is best known for the Rosetta Stone that helped scholars […]
LikeLiked by 1 person
Essential publication.
I agree with you that there,s much to learn at the British museum that I was three times.
I love the Egyyptian culture and symbolisms that last until today.
I was struck by the Rossetta stores.
Cheers. María.
LikeLiked by 1 person
There was such a crowd around the Rosetta stone…
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👍
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https://twitter.com/outosego/status/1214792203538698240
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Thanks for the tweet 🙂
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You’ re welcome !
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Lovely capture
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Thank you 🙂
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