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Gallery

Explorable Archive of Art from the Romantic Era

Section Editors: Theresa M. Kelley
, Jacob Leveton
Page Title

Explore All Images

No image available

The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins

No image available

The Macklin Bible

A woman tries on bangles given to her by a craftsman

Unknown

Art historian Pramod Chandra describes this scene:

The Maker of Bangles

No image available

The Monastic Annals of Teviotdale: or, the History and Antiquities of the Abbeys of Jedburgh, Kelso, Melros, and Dryburgh

A spring garden party

Charles Williams

In the early nineteenth century, the term "moving panorama" could refer to an optical entertainment (both the apparatus itself and the sequence of virtual prospects that it conjured); an unfolding view of an actual scene, whether of landscape, pageant, or streetscape; and "a series of images

The Moving Panorama or Spring Garden Rout

No image available

The New Dover Guide, Including a Concise Sketch of the Ancient and Modern History of the Town and Castle and such Other General Information as may be Useful to Visitors; and a Short Description of the Neighboring Villages

Man in Bed Having Nightmare

Unknown

This political caricature satirizes Fuseli's The Nightmare, utilizing the latter's Gothic theme to combine a fear of the unknown with a critique of government exploitation.John Bull (indicated by the name on the chamber pot under his bed) sleeps under a grey blanket, su

The Night Mare

Britannia rests in a crib with several attendants at her side

James Gillray

Dressed as nursemaids with patriotic ribbons, Prime Minister Henry Addington, Lord Hawkesbury, and Charles Fox gather around Britannia as an oversized baby squeezed into a crib, the top of which reads “Requiescat in Peace.” In the crib, Britannia sucks her thumb and rests her head on her arm

The Nursery; —with, Britannia reposing in Peace

A diagram of an ear

The series of plates given in this gallery depicts the ear and how it works. This image, Plate 13 of Bell's illustrations, depicts the ear without the skin. The numbers and their labels are given below: A: the helix B: the unnamed cavity

The Organs of the Senses Familiarly Described, Plate 13

A diagram of the inner ear

The series of plates given in this gallery depicts the ear and how it works. This image, Plate 16 of Bell's illustrations, depicts the inner ear. Bell describes it as such: "These are the mastoid cells.

The Organs of the Senses Familiarly Described, Plate 16

A diagram of the small bones of the ear

The series of plates given in this gallery depicts the ear and how it works. This image, Plate 17 of Bell's illustrations, depicts the three small bones of the ear. Bell describes it as such:

The Organs of the Senses Familiarly Described, Plate 17

A diagram of the canals of the ear

The series of plates given in this gallery depicts the ear and how it works. This image, Plate 18 of Bell's illustrations, depicts the semicircular canals of the ear. Bell further describes the image: "The cochlea is named by its similitude to the shell of a snail.

The Organs of the Senses Familiarly Described, Plate 18

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