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Science, 1971
In a footnote to the review of M. M. Gerasimov's The Face Finder [173, 712 (1971)], the misspelling of Julius Koliman's name is erroneously attributed to a bibliography (1962) by W. M. Krogman. The error occurs in a different authority's work. Kollmann established methods (1898) for building on a skull a face recognizably correct.
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In a footnote to the review of M. M. Gerasimov's The Face Finder [173, 712 (1971)], the misspelling of Julius Koliman's name is erroneously attributed to a bibliography (1962) by W. M. Krogman. The error occurs in a different authority's work. Kollmann established methods (1898) for building on a skull a face recognizably correct.
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2013
In many ways the topic of portraiture seems natural to the Renaissance and Reformation, especially when the Renaissance is defined, in the tradition of Jacob Burckhardt, as the “rebirth of the individual.” Historically, discussions of portraiture intersect thematically not only with discussions of individuality, subjectivity, and self-consciousness but
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In many ways the topic of portraiture seems natural to the Renaissance and Reformation, especially when the Renaissance is defined, in the tradition of Jacob Burckhardt, as the “rebirth of the individual.” Historically, discussions of portraiture intersect thematically not only with discussions of individuality, subjectivity, and self-consciousness but
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2019
Abstract This chapter explores the image of women looking at themselves and being observed by others in a significant body of satirical writing by women writers in the 1730s, 1740s, and 1750s. Though Jonathan Swift famously observed that satire ‘is a sort of Glass, wherein Beholders do generally discover every body’s Face but their Own’,
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Abstract This chapter explores the image of women looking at themselves and being observed by others in a significant body of satirical writing by women writers in the 1730s, 1740s, and 1750s. Though Jonathan Swift famously observed that satire ‘is a sort of Glass, wherein Beholders do generally discover every body’s Face but their Own’,
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2016
Roman portraiture is noted for its verism, and for the imitation of imperial images by private citizens of the Roman empire, notably in their funerary monuments. Portraits were regarded as substitutes for living emperors and expressed the relationship between the ruling power and local elites, notably in Mediterranean urban centres, where local ...
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Roman portraiture is noted for its verism, and for the imitation of imperial images by private citizens of the Roman empire, notably in their funerary monuments. Portraits were regarded as substitutes for living emperors and expressed the relationship between the ruling power and local elites, notably in Mediterranean urban centres, where local ...
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2003
Abstract London, 28 June 1838: at Victoria’s coronation fair in Hyde Park there was a print seller charging 6d. to enter his booth. Therein, you would have the privilege of witnessing the printing of your own engraved portrait of Victoria and a lithograph of the fair.
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Abstract London, 28 June 1838: at Victoria’s coronation fair in Hyde Park there was a print seller charging 6d. to enter his booth. Therein, you would have the privilege of witnessing the printing of your own engraved portrait of Victoria and a lithograph of the fair.
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