DAvideo
alle Bilder sehen ;)
Designed by: Hinx3
OSWD 2004

Valid HTML 4.01!

#### UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ
#### SELECT * FROM DAvidKanal WHERE `Chan` ="UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ"
BASE
:::::::: SELECT * FROM DAvidKanal WHERE Chan="UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ"
#~~~~# SELECT * FROM DAvidKanal WHERE Chan="UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ"

#~~~~# http://chegu.de/Ausgabe.php?URL=https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ

**26626

**?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> feed xmlns:yt="http://www.youtube.com/xml/schemas/2015" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"> link rel="self" href="http://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ"/> id>yt:channel:utXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/id> yt:channelId>utXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Ashmolean Museum/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2012-01-17T17:31:23+00:00/published> entry> id>yt:video:qYmksVRivFw/id> yt:videoId>qYmksVRivFw/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Behind the scenes of Pio Abad's Turner Prize 2024-shortlisted Ashmolean exhibition/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYmksVRivFw"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2024-04-04T15:56:14+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-25T15:26:03+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Behind the scenes of Pio Abad's Turner Prize 2024-shortlisted Ashmolean exhibition/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/qYmksVRivFw?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i2.ytimg.com/vi/qYmksVRivFw/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Pio Abad has been shortlisted for the Turner Prize 2024 for his Ashmolean NOW exhibition entitled To Those Sitting in Darkness, which features new drawings and objects by the London-based artist and is open in Oxford until 8 September 2024. Go behind the scenes with this exhibition film. In this video, artist Pio Abad (b.1983) talks to Lena Fritsch, the Ashmolean Museum's curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, about his Ashmolean NOW exhibition To Those Sitting in Darkness. Deeply informed by the history of the world and particularly the Philippines, where Abad was born and raised, his works draw out transnational lines between historical incidents and people, and our lives today. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 8 September 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-pio-abad-those-sitting-in-darkness/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="12" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="555"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:Neh6fRBi_gU/id> yt:videoId>Neh6fRBi_gU/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Bruegel to Rubens: Great Flemish Drawings exhibition - open 23 Mar-23 Jun 2024/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Neh6fRBi_gU"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2024-03-21T16:23:10+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-18T15:53:49+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Bruegel to Rubens: Great Flemish Drawings exhibition - open 23 Mar-23 Jun 2024/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/Neh6fRBi_gU?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i3.ytimg.com/vi/Neh6fRBi_gU/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>This major spring exhibition at the Ashmolean in Oxford showcases over 120 exceptional Flemish drawings from the 16th and 17th centuries. From Pieter Bruegel’s remarkable print designs and landscapes and Rubens’ first sketches to heartfelt friendship albums shared between artists, many of the exhibits have not been on public display before. Some have only recently been discovered. These artworks are among the most exquisite drawings kept in Antwerp and Oxford collections by famous artists such as Pieter Bruegel, Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck and Jacques Jordaens. It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get up close to such delicate and intimate works of art. From 23 March to 23 June 2024 Visit the exhibition website to find out more and buy tickets: https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/bruegel-to-rubens-great-flemish-drawings/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="19" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="25221"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:rvZL3J-oG6g/id> yt:videoId>rvZL3J-oG6g/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>A Drinking Party | Ashmolean Animations/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvZL3J-oG6g"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2024-01-01T20:22:33+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-03T23:26:46+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>A Drinking Party | Ashmolean Animations/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/rvZL3J-oG6g?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i3.ytimg.com/vi/rvZL3J-oG6g/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Happy New Year to you! ✨⁠✨⁠ We're hope you're having as good a time as these partying fish and frogs who've been magically brought to life by talent animator Matilde Senos. Start planning your next visit: https://www.ashmolean.org/plan-your-visit ⁠ 🌟A Drinking Party, part of A Set of Goldfish series, nishiki-e, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797 - 1861). EA1971.157/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="11" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="183"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:glrzlPkxcpw/id> yt:videoId>glrzlPkxcpw/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Black Bear Cub | Ashmolean Animations/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glrzlPkxcpw"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-12-04T23:45:00+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-06T08:07:20+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Black Bear Cub | Ashmolean Animations/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/glrzlPkxcpw?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i4.ytimg.com/vi/glrzlPkxcpw/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Erin Christopher, Illustrator and Animator, brings this little 18th-century bear cub to life. This artwork was originally painted by Japanese artist Mori Shūhō. Shūhō was a member of the Mori School of artists who specialised in depictions of animals. It features in an album of paintings and calligraphy by various artists – an artistic trend which was popular in early-19th-century Japanese art. These albums were made for all sorts of reasons; to celebrate someone’s venerated old age, to wish a friend farewell, for an exhibition; or to commemorate a meeting or visit.⁠ 🐻 Black bear cub, 1799, Mori Shūhō (1728–1813), Ink and colour on silk, EA1964.95.F⁠/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="20" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="232"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:4iEcKVbs_zI/id> yt:videoId>4iEcKVbs_zI/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>John Ruskin's Pigments Revealed/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iEcKVbs_zI"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-11-20T16:34:54+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-05T02:07:27+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>John Ruskin's Pigments Revealed/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/4iEcKVbs_zI?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i1.ytimg.com/vi/4iEcKVbs_zI/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Join one of the Ashmolean's Research scientists who dispels preconceptions around a famous 19th-century artist and critic, John Ruskin. Dr Tea Ghigo talks about her investigative journey into analysing the pigments that John Ruskin employed in his artworks, and her exciting discoveries that followed./media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="26" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="394"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:aNdHVs1yO8Y/id> yt:videoId>aNdHVs1yO8Y/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Colour Revolution: Victorian Art, Fashion & Design exhibition (2023-24 exhibition)/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNdHVs1yO8Y"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-11-15T13:30:18+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-28T15:14:35+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Colour Revolution: Victorian Art, Fashion & Design exhibition (2023-24 exhibition)/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/aNdHVs1yO8Y?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i2.ytimg.com/vi/aNdHVs1yO8Y/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Get a glimpse of the vibrant, sensational objects on display in the Ashmolean Museum's Colour Revolution exhibition, open in Oxford until 18 February 2024. Visit the Museum website for more details and tickets: https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design The exhibition dispels any misconceptions of a monochrome, smog-filled Victorian Britain, with its journey through Victorian society at this exciting time when changes in industry and new scientific breakthroughs enabled Victorian artists and designers to become increasingly revolutionary in their use of colour. Over 140 objects are on show, from international collections, including rare artworks by Ruskin, Turner, Whistler, Millais and Sandys, ground-breaking photographs by Atkins and Acland, as well as beautiful fashion items, jewellery and homeware that enlivened the streets and homes of Victorian Britain and Europe./media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="34" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="580015"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:_j5T2IT9guE/id> yt:videoId>_j5T2IT9guE/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Kabuki-inspired stencil prints of Takahashi Hiromitsu/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_j5T2IT9guE"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-11-01T16:00:05+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-28T16:43:55+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Kabuki-inspired stencil prints of Takahashi Hiromitsu/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/_j5T2IT9guE?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i4.ytimg.com/vi/_j5T2IT9guE/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Get up close to the colourful stencil prints of the contemporary artist Takahashi Hiromitsu with Japanese art curator Clare Pollard as she guides us through the Kabuki Legends exhibition at the Ashmolean. Discover the detailed stencil process of kappazuri, which the artist uses to create these vivid scenes inspired by kabuki theatre. From the clash of warriors on a moonlit bridge to the ferocious Cat of Okazaki, you'll also hear some of the dramatic stories of the kabuki characters depicted. Kabuki Legends: Stencil Prints by Takahashi Hiromitsu (part 1) was open at the Ashmolean Museum until 4 Feb 2024. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/kabuki-legends-stencil-prints-of-takahashi-hiromitsu Kabuki Legends: Stencil Prints by Takahashi Hiromitsu (part 2) is open at the Ashmolean Museum until 23 Feb 2025. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/kabuki-legends-part-two-stencil-prints-of-takahashi-hiromitsu/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="20" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="990"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:-KY9SzI-Dps/id> yt:videoId>-KY9SzI-Dps/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Artists in Isolation – Pain Relief by Ibrahim El-Salahi/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KY9SzI-Dps"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-10-27T09:20:54+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-14T04:32:23+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Artists in Isolation – Pain Relief by Ibrahim El-Salahi/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/-KY9SzI-Dps?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i2.ytimg.com/vi/-KY9SzI-Dps/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>World-renowned artist Ibrahim El-Salahi is considered a great pioneer of international Modernism, linking African, Arabic and European influences in a unique visual language. Here, Xa Sturgis, Director of the Ashmolean, tells us more about the artist and spotlights his work ‘Pain Relief’, which was created on a pill box and formed a ‘seed’ for a larger piece of work. Read more: ashmolean.org/article/artists-in-isolation-ibrahim-el-salahi Search the collections at: https://collections.ashmolean.org Pain Relief, Ibrahim El-Salahi, 2017. Pen and ink on medicine packet. WA2019.131. © Ibrahim El-Salahi. All rights reserved, DACS 2021/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="13" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="310"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:XKIUPCwf268/id> yt:videoId>XKIUPCwf268/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Flora Yukhnovich/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKIUPCwf268"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-10-05T14:38:12+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-14T09:59:48+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Flora Yukhnovich/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/XKIUPCwf268?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i1.ytimg.com/vi/XKIUPCwf268/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Meet contemporary artist Flora Yuknovich in the first of the Ashmolean NOW exhibitions as curator Lena Fritsch discusses Flora's work and influences. Get close to Flora's large-sized paintings which play with notions of femininity in art and popular culture, and which feature intense red, pink, peach and green abstract colours. Discover how these artworks were inspired by Flora's time at the Ashmolean and particularly by the Museum’s Dutch and Flemish still life paintings. Flora's work is displayed alongside the work of Daniel Crews-Chubb. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 14 January 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-crews-chubb-yukhnovich/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="69" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="4400"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:Yrj9TNaJHKs/id> yt:videoId>Yrj9TNaJHKs/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Daniel Crews-Chubb/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yrj9TNaJHKs"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-10-05T14:38:06+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-14T12:15:34+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Daniel Crews-Chubb/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/Yrj9TNaJHKs?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i2.ytimg.com/vi/Yrj9TNaJHKs/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Go behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW, a new exhibition series of contemporary art, and get up close to the works of Daniel Crews-Chubb. In this video, Daniel Crews-Chubb talks to Lena Fritsch, curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, about his practice and large-scale paintings that take inspiration from ancient sculptures of deities and non-human figures found in the Ashmolean, which were made specifically for the exhibition. Daniel's work is displayed alongside the work of Flora Yukhnovich. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 14 January 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-crews-chubb-yukhnovich/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="26" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="1497"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:xR0u9KwpPn4/id> yt:videoId>xR0u9KwpPn4/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Skidding Goat Vase | Ashmolean Museum/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xR0u9KwpPn4"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-09-28T13:15:03+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-10T21:03:54+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Skidding Goat Vase | Ashmolean Museum/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/xR0u9KwpPn4?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i1.ytimg.com/vi/xR0u9KwpPn4/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Illustrator Yu Sun brings this dynamic little 5000-year-old vase to life. This “skidding goat” vase was likely made in Iran c.3500 BCE. Similar jars were made at settlements in mountain valleys that connected Mesopotamia in the west to Iran. This goat, or ibex, is native to the Zagros Mountains of western Iran and may have been an important symbol for the people of this region. Mountain goats often appear objects like this one. Perhaps the design of lines and shapes seen across this vase represent mountain peaks surrounding our little skidding goat. This type of painted pottery decoration was extremely sophisticated and vessels like this may have been used for special occasions. You can see this vase on display in our Ancient Middle East gallery on the ground floor. 🐐Vase with 'skidding goat' motif, c.3500 BCE, h 12.5 cm. AN1971.980/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="18" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="307"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:MEE3k_yKVp0/id> yt:videoId>MEE3k_yKVp0/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>A Cricket Cage | Ashmolean Animations/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEE3k_yKVp0"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-07-04T15:00:15+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-13T15:38:37+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>A Cricket Cage | Ashmolean Animations/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/MEE3k_yKVp0?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i2.ytimg.com/vi/MEE3k_yKVp0/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Crickets have been cherished in China for thousands of years. They are an auspicious symbol of luck and virtue. They were favoured for their beautiful song and objects known as ‘cricket cages’ were used to capture their calming sounds. During autumn months, people would collect crickets in these cages and place them by their bed. From the Song Dynasty, crickets started to be selected for their fighting abilities. They would be held in cages made from gourds, or other materials such as bamboo, wooden boxes or clay, and released to battle against each other. Here, animators Kirsty Lloyd and Millie Yarwood respond to a cricket cage in the Museum’s collection and imagine the story behind it. 📷 merloreli | Instagram 📷 yar.woodart | Instagram/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="14" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="181"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:xKFPvVNFxFE/id> yt:videoId>xKFPvVNFxFE/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Figure of the bodhisattva Guanyin | Ashmolean Animation/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKFPvVNFxFE"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-06-29T17:54:41+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-26T00:14:35+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Figure of the bodhisattva Guanyin | Ashmolean Animation/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/xKFPvVNFxFE?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i1.ytimg.com/vi/xKFPvVNFxFE/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>Meet Guanyin, a bodhisattva of mercy and compassion. A bodhisattva is a being that has reached enlightenment but instead of going to nirvana, the perfect state of peace, has decided to stay on this earth to help others. This magical animation by Ike (ike.got.sad | Instagram) brings Guanyin to life and introduces us to this Buddhist figure./media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="9" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="238"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:JK1JWiwQCNc/id> yt:videoId>JK1JWiwQCNc/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>Tang Dynasty Camel | Ashmolean Animations/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JK1JWiwQCNc"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-06-26T09:27:54+00:00/published> updated>2024-03-13T16:31:50+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>Tang Dynasty Camel | Ashmolean Animations/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/JK1JWiwQCNc?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i3.ytimg.com/vi/JK1JWiwQCNc/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>This short film by Carina Hanslik shares an insight into the incredible story behind an ancient ceramic camel. The object that inspired this animation, a ceramic camel dating back to the Tang Dynasty (AD 618–907), helps us to tell the story of Paul Jacobsthal, a Jewish professor of Archaeology at the University of Marburg in the 1930s, who was forced to leave Germany. You can visit this camel in our Asian Crossroads gallery on level 1. 🎞️ carinahanslik on Instagram/media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="25" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="395"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> entry> id>yt:video:_wo758hoFHw/id> yt:videoId>_wo758hoFHw/yt:videoId> yt:channelId>UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/yt:channelId> title>#AshCreators - Made in the Ashmolean by Ellen Clay/title> link rel="alternate" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wo758hoFHw"/> author> name>Ashmolean Museum/name> uri>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCutXrmbI2rMjB0SGgB0pUZQ/uri> /author> published>2023-06-17T08:00:17+00:00/published> updated>2024-04-25T09:44:05+00:00/updated> media:group> media:title>#AshCreators - Made in the Ashmolean by Ellen Clay/media:title> media:content url="https://www.youtube.com/v/_wo758hoFHw?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="390"/> media:thumbnail url="https://i4.ytimg.com/vi/_wo758hoFHw/hqdefault.jpg" width="480" height="360"/> media:description>There’s nothing like the satisfaction of a complete sketchbook. Fill yours with colour and creativity, inspired by the Ashmolean’s collection, just like talented artist and student Ellen. For these creations, Ellen chose ancient sculptures from our Greek and Roman Sculpture Gallery to inspire her work. The Ashmolean’s collection is FREE to wander and open daily from 10am to 5pm. Bring your favourite sketchbook, or even the back of an old receipt, take a seat and put pen to paper. Share your creations with us using #AshCreators./media:description> media:community> media:starRating count="9" average="5.00" min="1" max="5"/> media:statistics views="320"/> /media:community> /media:group> /entry> /feed>

Ashmolean Museum

01.08.2023 19:27:12
09.03.2023 02:11:13
14.04.2023 15:02:01 5 33 xXx
28.07.2024 20:32:29
09.03.2023 02:11:13
14.04.2023 15:02:01 5 44 xXx

1:: Behind the scenes of Pio Abad's Turner Prize 2024-shortlisted Ashmolean exhibition

01.01.1970 01:00:00 04.04.2024 15:56:14
Pio Abad has been shortlisted for the Turner Prize 2024 for his Ashmolean NOW exhibition entitled To Those Sitting in Darkness, which features new drawings and objects by the London-based artist and is open in Oxford until 8 September 2024. Go behind the scenes with this exhibition film. In this video, artist Pio Abad (b.1983) talks to Lena Fritsch, the Ashmolean Museum's curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, about his Ashmolean NOW exhibition To Those Sitting in Darkness. Deeply informed by the history of the world and particularly the Philippines, where Abad was born and raised, his works draw out transnational lines between historical incidents and people, and our lives today. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 8 September 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-pio-abad-those-sitting-in-darkness

2:: Bruegel to Rubens: Great Flemish Drawings exhibition - open 23 Mar-23 Jun 2024

01.01.1970 01:00:00 21.03.2024 16:23:10
This major spring exhibition at the Ashmolean in Oxford showcases over 120 exceptional Flemish drawings from the 16th and 17th centuries. From Pieter Bruegel’s remarkable print designs and landscapes and Rubens’ first sketches to heartfelt friendship albums shared between artists, many of the exhibits have not been on public display before. Some have only recently been discovered. These artworks are among the most exquisite drawings kept in Antwerp and Oxford collections by famous artists such as Pieter Bruegel, Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck and Jacques Jordaens. It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get up close to such delicate and intimate works of art. From 23 March to 23 June 2024 Visit the exhibition website to find out more and buy tickets: https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/bruegel-to-rubens-great-flemish-drawings

3:: A Drinking Party | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 01.01.2024 20:22:33
Happy New Year to you! ✨⁠✨⁠ We're hope you're having as good a time as these partying fish and frogs who've been magically brought to life by talent animator Matilde Senos. Start planning your next visit: https://www.ashmolean.org/plan-your-visit ⁠ 🌟A Drinking Party, part of A Set of Goldfish series, nishiki-e, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797 - 1861). EA1971.157

4:: Black Bear Cub | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 04.12.2023 23:45:00
Erin Christopher, Illustrator and Animator, brings this little 18th-century bear cub to life. This artwork was originally painted by Japanese artist Mori Shūhō. Shūhō was a member of the Mori School of artists who specialised in depictions of animals. It features in an album of paintings and calligraphy by various artists – an artistic trend which was popular in early-19th-century Japanese art. These albums were made for all sorts of reasons; to celebrate someone’s venerated old age, to wish a friend farewell, for an exhibition; or to commemorate a meeting or visit.⁠ 🐻 Black bear cub, 1799, Mori Shūhō (1728–1813), Ink and colour on silk, EA1964.95.F⁠

5:: John Ruskin's Pigments Revealed

01.01.1970 01:00:00 20.11.2023 16:34:54
Join one of the Ashmolean's Research scientists who dispels preconceptions around a famous 19th-century artist and critic, John Ruskin. Dr Tea Ghigo talks about her investigative journey into analysing the pigments that John Ruskin employed in his artworks, and her exciting discoveries that followed.

6:: Colour Revolution: Victorian Art, Fashion & Design exhibition (2023-24 exhibition)

01.01.1970 01:00:00 15.11.2023 13:30:18
Get a glimpse of the vibrant, sensational objects on display in the Ashmolean Museum's Colour Revolution exhibition, open in Oxford until 18 February 2024. Visit the Museum website for more details and tickets: https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design The exhibition dispels any misconceptions of a monochrome, smog-filled Victorian Britain, with its journey through Victorian society at this exciting time when changes in industry and new scientific breakthroughs enabled Victorian artists and designers to become increasingly revolutionary in their use of colour. Over 140 objects are on show, from international collections, including rare artworks by Ruskin, Turner, Whistler, Millais and Sandys, ground-breaking photographs by Atkins and Acland, as well as beautiful fashion items, jewellery and homeware that enlivened the streets and homes of Victorian Britain and Europe.

7:: Kabuki-inspired stencil prints of Takahashi Hiromitsu

01.01.1970 01:00:00 01.11.2023 16:00:05
Get up close to the colourful stencil prints of the contemporary artist Takahashi Hiromitsu with Japanese art curator Clare Pollard as she guides us through the Kabuki Legends exhibition at the Ashmolean. Discover the detailed stencil process of kappazuri, which the artist uses to create these vivid scenes inspired by kabuki theatre. From the clash of warriors on a moonlit bridge to the ferocious Cat of Okazaki, you'll also hear some of the dramatic stories of the kabuki characters depicted. Kabuki Legends: Stencil Prints by Takahashi Hiromitsu (part 1) was open at the Ashmolean Museum until 4 Feb 2024. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/kabuki-legends-stencil-prints-of-takahashi-hiromitsu Kabuki Legends: Stencil Prints by Takahashi Hiromitsu (part 2) is open at the Ashmolean Museum until 23 Feb 2025. www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/kabuki-legends-part-two-stencil-prints-of-takahashi-hiromitsu

8:: Artists in Isolation – Pain Relief by Ibrahim El-Salahi

01.01.1970 01:00:00 27.10.2023 09:20:54
World-renowned artist Ibrahim El-Salahi is considered a great pioneer of international Modernism, linking African, Arabic and European influences in a unique visual language. Here, Xa Sturgis, Director of the Ashmolean, tells us more about the artist and spotlights his work ‘Pain Relief’, which was created on a pill box and formed a ‘seed’ for a larger piece of work. Read more: ashmolean.org/article/artists-in-isolation-ibrahim-el-salahi Search the collections at: https://collections.ashmolean.org Pain Relief, Ibrahim El-Salahi, 2017. Pen and ink on medicine packet. WA2019.131. © Ibrahim El-Salahi. All rights reserved, DACS 2021

9:: Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Flora Yukhnovich

01.01.1970 01:00:00 05.10.2023 14:38:12
Meet contemporary artist Flora Yuknovich in the first of the Ashmolean NOW exhibitions as curator Lena Fritsch discusses Flora's work and influences. Get close to Flora's large-sized paintings which play with notions of femininity in art and popular culture, and which feature intense red, pink, peach and green abstract colours. Discover how these artworks were inspired by Flora's time at the Ashmolean and particularly by the Museum’s Dutch and Flemish still life paintings. Flora's work is displayed alongside the work of Daniel Crews-Chubb. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 14 January 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-crews-chubb-yukhnovich

10:: Behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW with Daniel Crews-Chubb

01.01.1970 01:00:00 05.10.2023 14:38:06
Go behind the scenes of Ashmolean NOW, a new exhibition series of contemporary art, and get up close to the works of Daniel Crews-Chubb. In this video, Daniel Crews-Chubb talks to Lena Fritsch, curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, about his practice and large-scale paintings that take inspiration from ancient sculptures of deities and non-human figures found in the Ashmolean, which were made specifically for the exhibition. Daniel's work is displayed alongside the work of Flora Yukhnovich. The Ashmolean NOW exhibition is open until 14 January 2024 in Gallery 8 on the Museum's lower ground floor. https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/ashmolean-now-crews-chubb-yukhnovich

11:: Skidding Goat Vase | Ashmolean Museum

01.01.1970 01:00:00 28.09.2023 13:15:03
Illustrator Yu Sun brings this dynamic little 5000-year-old vase to life. This “skidding goat” vase was likely made in Iran c.3500 BCE. Similar jars were made at settlements in mountain valleys that connected Mesopotamia in the west to Iran. This goat, or ibex, is native to the Zagros Mountains of western Iran and may have been an important symbol for the people of this region. Mountain goats often appear objects like this one. Perhaps the design of lines and shapes seen across this vase represent mountain peaks surrounding our little skidding goat. This type of painted pottery decoration was extremely sophisticated and vessels like this may have been used for special occasions. You can see this vase on display in our Ancient Middle East gallery on the ground floor. 🐐Vase with 'skidding goat' motif, c.3500 BCE, h 12.5 cm. AN1971.980

12:: A Cricket Cage | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 04.07.2023 15:00:15
Crickets have been cherished in China for thousands of years. They are an auspicious symbol of luck and virtue. They were favoured for their beautiful song and objects known as ‘cricket cages’ were used to capture their calming sounds. During autumn months, people would collect crickets in these cages and place them by their bed. From the Song Dynasty, crickets started to be selected for their fighting abilities. They would be held in cages made from gourds, or other materials such as bamboo, wooden boxes or clay, and released to battle against each other. Here, animators Kirsty Lloyd and Millie Yarwood respond to a cricket cage in the Museum’s collection and imagine the story behind it. 📷 merloreli | Instagram 📷 yar.woodart | Instagram

13:: Figure of the bodhisattva Guanyin | Ashmolean Animation

01.01.1970 01:00:00 29.06.2023 17:54:41
Meet Guanyin, a bodhisattva of mercy and compassion. A bodhisattva is a being that has reached enlightenment but instead of going to nirvana, the perfect state of peace, has decided to stay on this earth to help others. This magical animation by Ike (ike.got.sad | Instagram) brings Guanyin to life and introduces us to this Buddhist figure.

14:: Tang Dynasty Camel | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 26.06.2023 09:27:54
This short film by Carina Hanslik shares an insight into the incredible story behind an ancient ceramic camel. The object that inspired this animation, a ceramic camel dating back to the Tang Dynasty (AD 618–907), helps us to tell the story of Paul Jacobsthal, a Jewish professor of Archaeology at the University of Marburg in the 1930s, who was forced to leave Germany. You can visit this camel in our Asian Crossroads gallery on level 1. 🎞️ carinahanslik on Instagram

15:: #AshCreators - Made in the Ashmolean by Ellen Clay

01.01.1970 01:00:00 17.06.2023 08:00:17
There’s nothing like the satisfaction of a complete sketchbook. Fill yours with colour and creativity, inspired by the Ashmolean’s collection, just like talented artist and student Ellen. For these creations, Ellen chose ancient sculptures from our Greek and Roman Sculpture Gallery to inspire her work. The Ashmolean’s collection is FREE to wander and open daily from 10am to 5pm. Bring your favourite sketchbook, or even the back of an old receipt, take a seat and put pen to paper. Share your creations with us using #AshCreators.

16:: Japanese plate with kintsugi repair | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 07.06.2023 09:00:14
Here, animator Charlie Black brings the poetic story behind this beautifully broken 17th-century Japanese plate to life. You can see this plate on display in our Conservation Gallery on the lower ground floor. 🎬 charlieblackart | Instagram and TikTok ✨Japanese plate with gold lacquer repair, 17th century. EA1988.11

17:: #AshCreators - Made in the Ashmolean by Meg Erridge

01.01.1970 01:00:00 05.06.2023 10:44:42
Artist Meg Erridge's practice ranges across the mediums of performance, sculpture, installation and costume. Inspired by a visit to the Museum’s Cast Gallery, Meg created a piece titled Letter to the Motherland. This video shows a glimpse into the artistic process behind the finished work. The Ashmolean Cast Gallery is one of the oldest, largest and best-preserved collections of casts of Greek and Roman sculpture in the UK, containing some 900 plaster casts of statues, reliefs and architectural sculptures. Next time you visit, be sure to ask our Visitor Experience Assistants for a stool, so you can pick up and sit down in front of any sculpture, artwork or object that inspires you and start creating. Share your creations with us using #AshCreators. ✏️ @megs_not_home on Instagram

18:: #AshCreators - Made in the Ashmolean by Rohit Soni, Doodle Project

01.01.1970 01:00:00 14.05.2023 11:24:05
There’s inspiration at every turn in the Museum. Artist Rohit Soni (at doodleproject_ on Instagram) transformed portraits, sculptures and spaces into playful illustrations. We asked Rohit about the power of doodling: “You need not to be an artist to be creative. One of the great advantages of doodling is its ability to enhance creativity and focus. When we engage in the rhythmic and repetitive motion of doodling, it can help us enter a state of flow, where our mind becomes fully absorbed in the present moment. This state of flow promotes creativity, as it allows ideas to flow freely and encourages new connections and insights to emerge. So, whenever you lift your pen to doodle, embrace the journey it takes you on and enjoy the limitless possibilities of creativity.” Whether you’re a budding artist, expert draughtsman, feeling full of creativity or looking for inspiration, be inspired by the Museum’s collection. Our collection is FREE to explore. Find your favourite objects or artworks and enjoy some time being creative. Bring a sketchbook with you for live drawing or take photos so you can create at a later date. @9812250118

19:: Curator's spotlight on 'Mosul: Panorama of Destruction,' by Dia al-Azzawi

01.01.1970 01:00:00 12.05.2023 16:02:46
Get face-to-face with Dia al-Azzawi's monumental 10-metre tapestry in his Painting Poetry exhibition as exhibition curator Francesca Leoni tells its story. The epic black-and-white artwork entitled 'Mosul: Panorama of Destruction' immortalises the impact of war on Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, and was created specially for the exhibition at the Ashmolean. Discover how the tapestry originated from a much smaller drawing by this leading contemporary Iraqi artist and how it was made and installed, while exploring in detail some of the poignant scenes and elements of the tapestry itself. The Dia al-Azzawi: Painting Poetry exhibition is on until 11 June 2023. In Gallery 8 at the Ashmolean, FREE https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/dia-al-azzawi-painting-poetry

20:: Curator's Introduction to Dia al-Azzawi: Painting Poetry

01.01.1970 01:00:00 26.04.2023 16:50:48
'The Arab world's most influential living artist', Dia al-Azzawi is best known for monumental and colourful canvasses. His work spans many genres, including a type of artist books known in Arabic as 'dafatir'. Here Francesca Leoni, curator of Dia al-Azzawi: Painting Poetry at the Ashmolean, introduces us to the work of this important contemporary artist and takes us through the Ashmolean's 2022-23 exhibition. Dia al-Azzawi: Painting Poetry is open and free to visit until 11 June 2023. Find out more: https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/dia-al-azzawi-painting-poetry

21:: A 17th-cenutry souvenir model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.04.2023 16:39:37
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem is one of the most important Christian sites. This elaborate miniature model of the Church was made to be sold as a pilgrim souvenir - 17th century memento. Produced in olive wood inlaid with mother of pearl, it has lettered parts which would have made it easier to carry and reassemble. Model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 1600 - 1700. AN2009.53

22:: The story of a remarkable coin and emperor Domitianus

01.01.1970 01:00:00 19.04.2023 11:32:23
Learn the story of the remarkable coin that revealed the incredible story of a man named Domitianus who claimed to be Roman emperor early in the AD 270s. Found on farmland near Chalgrove, just less than 10 miles from Oxford, this coin is one of just two that evidence his rule! It is thought that Domitianus’ reign lasted just a few weeks.⁠ The coin, discovered in a largely intact Roman jar alongside 5000 other coins, was found this month just 20 years ago. You can see this coin on display in the Money Gallery on the lower ground floor.

23:: Gentle Spring by Frederick Sandys | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 06.04.2023 13:41:50
In the latest in our animation series, Qi Sun introduces us to the story of Proserpina, the goddess of spring, and transports her to 2023. This animation was inspired by Frederick Sandys’ Gentle Spring. You can see this artwork on display in our Pre-Raphaelites Gallery.

24:: Still Life Painting of Fruit and Flowers by Clara Peeters | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 08.03.2023 12:28:57
Clara Peeters was a pioneer of still-life paintings and is thought to have been one of the first professional women artists in early modern Europe. This beautiful film by award winning animator Yu Sun @yusunnnnnn responds to and celebrates the work of this inspiring artist. Often in Clara’s work you’ll find her name engraved in objects that you can see in her paintings. The silver knife that you can see in the foreground of this painting contains her signature and is perhaps her own knife, possibly a wedding present, as it appears in several of her paintings. Clara is also considered to be the first known artist to include self-portraits in still-life paintings.⁠ Today is International Women's Day, a celebration of the achievements of generations of women, past, present and future, across the globe. Explore collections and stories which celebrate women’s achievements in art and archaeology throughout history and today on our website: https://www.ashmolean.org/shout-out-for-women

25:: German Design Drawings explored at the Ashmolean Museum

01.01.1970 01:00:00 08.03.2023 09:39:50
Discover how a group of stunning German drawings were used as designs for the production of artworks in metal, glass, and wood, as well as other artworks on paper, such as prints and book illustrations. Created against the backdrop of the Holy Roman Empire and the turbulent Reformation, these fascinating drawings reveal the creative process of German-speaking artists, as they invented and designed on paper. They also provide clues as to how these designs were transformed into three-dimensional items by other artists. The Ashmolean Museum 's collections hold exceptional examples of design drawings by some of the most famous German artists, including Albrecht Dürer and Hans Holbein the Younger. Explore some of the most remarkable of these drawings and associated discoveries through this film. The content presented here is the outcome of a research project based at the Ashmolean Museum within the Western Art department (2022–23) led by An Van Camp and Mailena Mallach. More than 300 German drawings dating from the 1480s to 1800, were catalogued in collaboration with experts worldwide, including art historians, academics, material specialists and even an inventor. This collaboration has generated many new discoveries and revelations. The project has been generously funded by the Getty Foundation’s The Paper Project: Prints and Drawings Curatorship in the 21st Century and additionally sponsored by the University of Oxford’s Oxford-Berlin Research Partnership. You can read more about the German design drawings discoveries on Storymaps: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/8969a29b70314e558b831f05cafed15d 00:00 New Discoveries in the Collection 01:32 German Design Drawings 09:49 The Ashmolean's German Collections - - Image Credits - - 01:44 Hotel in Bad Schinznach, stained-glass panel: Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery, about 1530/40, anonymous Swiss (probably Bern), stained glass. Kurhotel, Bad Schinznach, Switzerland 06:44 Metropolitan Museum, stained-glass roundel: Ecce Homo, about 1525, After Hans Sebald Beham, attributed to workshop of Augustin Hirschvogel, stained glass roundel. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Rogers Fund 1911, inv.no. 11.93.10. © Public Domain 07:51 Nuremberg, stained-glass panel: The Coronation of the Virgin, 1476, anonymous German, stained glass. St Lorenz Church, Nuremberg (Corpus Vitrearum Medii Aevi, F21173, Photo: Andrea Goessel) 08:11 Hannover, Holbein’s lid of a box: Box with the portrait of Philipp Melanchthon, about 1535, Hans Holbein the Younger, oil on wood. Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum, Hannover, inv.no. PAM 798.

26:: Meet the animals of the Ashmolean

01.01.1970 01:00:00 06.03.2023 11:02:06
From pigs to pugs, animals have been inspiring us all throughout history. Want to meet some of these extraordinary creatures? Visit our website to start planning your visit: https://www.ashmolean.org/

27:: Cretan Octopus Jar | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 24.02.2023 18:34:40

28:: Discover the Ashmolean Museum

01.01.1970 01:00:00 21.02.2023 11:53:17

29:: Labyrinth: Knossos, Myth & Reality – exhibition open now in Oxford

01.01.1970 01:00:00 06.02.2023 14:02:31

30:: The hare in the moon – Japanese netsuke | Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 24.01.2023 16:31:03

31:: COMING SOON - Ashmolean Animations

01.01.1970 01:00:00 09.01.2023 17:15:18

32:: Working with Jon Whiteley, with Sir Nicholas Penny - Ashmolean 'Beauforest Lecture' 2022

01.01.1970 01:00:00 30.11.2022 17:08:03

33:: Ghosts, witches, skulls... all things frightful at the Ashmolean

01.01.1970 01:00:00 27.10.2022 14:56:57

34:: The Pre-Raphaelites in Oxford, and the role of Thomas and Martha Coombe

01.01.1970 01:00:00 06.09.2022 10:28:13

35:: Pre-Raphaelites: Drawings & Watercolours, 2022 – open in Oxford from 15 Jul 2022

01.01.1970 01:00:00 27.07.2022 12:26:14

36:: Pre-Raphaelites: Drawings and Watercolours exhibition trailer (2022 exhibition)

01.01.1970 01:00:00 30.06.2022 17:15:21

37:: An Ancient Shri Lakshmi Coin – Viewing Art Mindfully with Dr Shailendra Bhandare

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.03.2022 16:15:34

38:: The Valley Thick with Corn – Viewing Art Mindfully with Dr Caroline Palmer

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.03.2022 14:50:18

39:: Les Rameaux by Élisabeth Sonrel – Viewing Art Mindfully with An Van Camp

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.03.2022 14:49:52

40:: Cranes, Cycads and Wisteria – Viewing Art Mindfully with Dr Clare Pollard

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.03.2022 14:49:31

41:: Yusuf before the women on Memphis – Viewing Art Mindfully with Dr Francesca Leoni

01.01.1970 01:00:00 25.03.2022 14:08:16

42:: Pissarro: Father of Impressionism exhibition trailer (2022 exhibition)

01.01.1970 01:00:00 10.02.2022 12:47:51

43:: Tokyo: Art & Photography – Exhibition Film

01.01.1970 01:00:00 04.11.2021 12:18:59

44:: Bacchus – God Of Wine

01.01.1970 01:00:00 20.08.2019 00:00:00