Allison MacDuffee
@studiousgal.bsky.social
Art Historian, working on exh. proposal re: Pissarro-Millet-Courbet for 2030. Usually teaching at Univ of Toronto Mississauga. Ph.D., U of Michigan. Live in Toronto. Canadian. Gardening, travel, philately. I block probable bot accts.
Reposted by Allison MacDuffee
2/2 Countess's husband, in his curling-papers, sips his morning chocolate. Possibly the most ridiculous-looking man in 18th-century painting. Or ever. Well done, William Hogarth, & happy birthday!.JPG
November 10, 2025 at 4:38 PM
2/2 Countess's husband, in his curling-papers, sips his morning chocolate. Possibly the most ridiculous-looking man in 18th-century painting. Or ever. Well done, William Hogarth, & happy birthday!.JPG
The colour is heavenly, Lara.
November 10, 2025 at 3:03 PM
The colour is heavenly, Lara.
It is so lovely. Make it last by asking a family member to hide it?
November 8, 2025 at 4:26 PM
It is so lovely. Make it last by asking a family member to hide it?
It's big and seems to out-truculent most of minimalism.
November 6, 2025 at 8:56 PM
It's big and seems to out-truculent most of minimalism.
Je suis en accord avec vous. Prof. J. Douglas Stewart at Queen's Univ. (Baroque portraiture expert), always said "Actually, the face is the least interesting part of a portrait."
November 6, 2025 at 8:55 PM
Je suis en accord avec vous. Prof. J. Douglas Stewart at Queen's Univ. (Baroque portraiture expert), always said "Actually, the face is the least interesting part of a portrait."