Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Mon Rêve

Rodolphe Bresdin
Mon Rêve
1883
etching
British Museum


Marilyn Bridges
Chichén Itzá, Yucatan
1982
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Miller Gore Brittain
The Trial
ca. 1950
gouache and pastel on paper
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, British Columbia

Hablot Knight Browne (Phiz)
Amazon fording a Stream
ca. 1850
watercolor on paper
British Museum

Roger Brown
Natural Bridge
1971
oil on canvas
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Hendrick ter Brugghen
Bravo with Dog
1628
oil on canvas
Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna

John G. Bullock
Marjorie Bullock in the Garden
ca. 1903
platinum print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Edward Burne-Jones
The Turkish Bath
before 1898
drawing
British Museum

Edward Burne-Jones
The Turkish Bath
before 1898
drawing
British Museum

Giuseppe Capogrossi
Superficie 236
1957
oil on canvas
Guggenheim Museum, New York

Joan Cassis
Cecil in the Living Room
1972
hand-colored gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Federico Castellon
The Groom
ca. 1947
lithograph
Tacoma Art Museum, Washington State

Elizabeth Catlett
Angela Libre
1972
screenprint on foil
National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC

Giovanni Domenico Cerrini (il Cavalier Perugino)
Holy Family with young St John the Baptist
ca. 1640
oil on canvas
Galleria Borghese, Rome

Caleb Charland
Atomic Model
2008
gelatin silver print
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Minna Citron
Still Point of the Night
1955
gouache and collage on board
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

John Constable
Mourner with Funerary Urn
1806
drawing
British Museum

from Of the Answers of the Oracle of Apollo at Delphos to Croesus King of Lydia

    Others may wonder how the curiositie of elder times having this opportunitie of his oracles omitted natural questions; or why old magitians discoursed no more philosophie, and if they had the assistance of spirits, could rest content with the common hoties or trite notions of things, without addition by such discoveries; which unwarrantable beginnings time long ere this might have confirmed, and made an innocent part of our knowledge. Some divines conceave a Reality in the acts of the magitians of Aegypt, and that their great performances before Pharaoh were not mere delusions. Rightly to understand how they contrived Serpents out of Rods, froggs and blood of water, were worth half of Porta's magick. 

    Hermolaus Barbarus was scarce in his right witts who upon conference with a spirit would propose no other question than an explication of Aristotles Entelecheia. Appion the Grammarian, that would raise the Ghost of Homer, to decide the controversie about his countrey, made a frivolous and pedantick use of Necromancy; and Philostratus did as litle who called up the ghost of Achilles, for a particular of the warre of Troye. Smarter curiosities would have been at the great Elixir, the flux and reflux of the Sea, with such noble obscurities in nature; butt yet probably all in vayne. In matters cognoscible and framed for our disquisition, Industrie must bee our Oracle, and Reason our Apollo. 

– Sir Thomas Browne (1656)