EditorialGate Toward Bursit, Aix-la-Chappelle, Charles Gore, 17291807, British, 1785, Watercolor with pen and brown ink over graphite on moderately thick, moderately textured, blued white laid paper, Sheet: 11 3/8 x 18 1/2 inches (28.9 x 47 cm), architectural s...
EditorialBauma - World's Leading Trade Fair for Construction Machinery, Building Material Machines, Mining Machines, Construction Vehicles and Construction Equipment, Munich, Germany - 30 Oct 2022
EditorialGodesberg on the Rhine, Attributed to Mary Darby, active mid 19th century, 1850, Graphite and white chalk, with stumping on moderately thick, slightly textured, blue-green wove paper, Sheet: 10 x 14 inches (25.4 x 35.6 cm), architectural subject, build...
EditorialGate Toward Bursit, Aix-la-Chappelle, Charles Gore, 17291807, British, 1785, Watercolor with pen and brown ink over graphite on moderately thick, moderately textured, blued white laid paper, Sheet: 11 3/8 x 18 1/2 inches (28.9 x 47 cm), architectural s...
EditorialLandscape with children and goats, 1913, watercolor, gouache and chalk on detail paper, sheet: 31.4 x 40.2 cm, U. r., dated in pencil: 1913, August Macke, Meschede/Nordrhein-Westfalen 1887?1914 gefallen bei Perthes-les-Hurlus/Champagne.
EditorialLandscape with children and goats, 1913, watercolor, gouache and chalk on detail paper, sheet: 31.4 x 40.2 cm, U. r., dated in pencil: 1913, August Macke, Meschede/Nordrhein-Westfalen 1887?1914 gefallen bei Perthes-les-Hurlus/Champagne.
EditorialCARLOMAGNO (742-Aquisgr?n,814). Rey de los francos (768-814), de los lombardos (774-814) y emperador (800-814) del imperio romano de occidente. BUSTO-RELICARIO DE CARLOMAGNO. (Posterior a 1349). Realizado en plata y oro por encargo del emperador Carlos...
EditorialARTE CAROLINGIO. ALEMANIA. PERENNIDAD DEL TRONO IMPERIAL, conocido popularmente como TRONO DE CARLOMAGNO. Realizado en m?rmol, pasaba por ser una r?plica del de Salom?n. Situado sobre una tribuna de seis pelda?os, en ?l se celebraban ceremonias de coro...
EditorialThe Princes in the Tower. According to Shakespeare and Thomas Morus, but unconfirmed by modern historians, the sons of King Edward IV, Edward and Richard were mur-dered in the Tower by their uncle, Richard III. Oil.