EditorialThe Spoiled Child, Scene II, Lewis Vaslet, 17421808, British, ca. 1802, Watercolor with black ink and gray wash over graphite on moderately thick, slightly textured, cream wove paper, Sheet: 15 3/8 x 20 3/8 inches (39.1 x 51.8 cm) and Image: 13 7/16 x ...
EditorialThe Spoiled Child, Scene VI, Lewis Vaslet, 17421808, British, ca. 1802, Watercolor with black ink and gray wash over graphite on moderately thick, slightly textured, cream wove paper, Sheet: 15 ? 19 5/8 inches (38.1 ? 49.8 cm) and Image: 13 ? 18 7/8 in...
EditorialEXCLUSIVE: ** WARNING: Contains Graphic Content ** A THIRD lion pride has been brutally butchered in a MONTH in South Africa by evil poachers who hacked off their heads and paws and stole them to be used to make black magic potions.
EditorialEinsiedler leads Rosse to the Potions, c. 1837, pen and ink in brown on light gray paper, sheet: 32.4 x 17.4 cm, unmarked, Moritz von Schwind, Wien 1804?1871 Niederp?rking b. M?nchen.
EditorialAt the Potions (Cows in the Yoke), 1888, oil on canvas, 84.1 x 141.2 cm, Signed and dated on the cart: G.SEGANTINI, SAVOGNIN, MDCCCLXXXVIII, Op., LXXXII, ., Giovanni Segantini, Arco/Trentino 1858?1899 Schafberg/Graub?nden.
EditorialCows at the Potions, 1868, oil on canvas, 137 x 204 cm, signed and dated lower right: RKoller [R and K ligiert] 1868. January Zurich, Johann Rudolf Koller, Z?rich 1828?1905 Z?rich.
EditorialRavana's magician son Indrajit again advances on the monkey army, having brewed magic potions to make himself invisible at need. From his chariot and from the sky, where he is invisible, Indrajit overwhelms all the monkey leaders as well as Rama and La...
EditorialSerpentine intaglio: Radiate lion-headed god, Imperial, ca. 2nd?3rd century A.D., Roman, Serpentine, Other: 1 x 1 1/4 in. (2.5 x 3.2 cm), Gems, Radiate lion-headed god.. [Group label], The use of spells, potions, fortune-telling, and other sorts of mag...
EditorialFrench mountebank with sword and stuffed fox selling potions in the Place du Louvre. Lithograph after Jean Duplessis-Bertaux from Paul Lacroix' The Eighteenth Century: Its Institutions, Customs, and Costumes, London, 1876.