1935: Renaissance Man

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Leonardo da Vinci spent the last years of his life (1513-1519) in central France, in the town of Amboise, where he was supported by King Francis I. Although likely ailing from a stroke, Leonardo continued working, constructing  a mechanical lion that walked and opened its breast to reveal a bouquet of lilies and possibly completing his last paininghis strikingly androgynous portrait of St. John the Baptist. He lived in a manor house of the king’s, Clos Lucé, accompanied by his devoted apprentice and companion Francesco Melzi, to whom he left the bulk of his estate when he died.

This bronze statue of da Vinci in Amboise was made by the Italian sculptor Amleto Cataldi (1882-1930) and rests on a small island near Clos Lucé.

Amleto Cataldi: Leonardo Da Vinci (1935)
Photo by Spencer Means (here)

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1871: A Sound Like the Humming of Bees

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In order to prove that almost any kind of dream can, with tolerable certainty, be excited by special classes of stimulants, M. Maury caused a series of experiments to be performed on himself when asleep, which afforded very satisfactory results.

First experiment : He caused him-self to be tickled with a feather, on the lips and inside of the nostrils. He dreamed that he was subjected to a horrible punishment. A mask of pitch was applied to his face, and then torn roughly off, taking with it the skin of his lips, nose, and face.

Second experiment : A pair of tweezers was held at a little distance from his ear, and struck with a pair of scissors. He dreamed that he heard the ringing of bells. This was soon converted into the tocsin, and this suggested the days of June, 1848.

Third experiment : A bottle of eau de Cologne was held to his nose. He dreamed that he was in a perfumer’s shop. This excited visions of the East; and he dreamed that he was in Cairo, in the shop of Jean Marie Farina. Many surprising adventures occurred to him there, the details of which were forgotten.

Fourth experiment : A burning lucifer match was held close to his nostrils. He dreamed that He was at sea (the wind was blowing in through the windows), and that the magazine of the vessel blew up.

Fifth experiment : He was slightly pinched on the nape of the neck. He dreamed that a blister was applied. And this recalled the recollection of a physician who had treated him in his infancy.

Sixth experiment : A piece of red-hot iron was held close enough to him to communicate a slight sensation of heat. He dreamed that robbers had got into the house, and were forcing the inmates, by putting their feet to the fire, to reveal where their money was. The idea of the robber suggested that of Madame D’Abrantes, who, he supposed, bad taken him for her secretary, and in whose memoirs he had read some account of bandits.

Seventh experiment : The word parafagaramus was pronounced in his ear. He understood nothing, and awoke with the recollection of a very vague dream. The word maman was next used many times. He dreamed of different subjects, but heard a sound like the humming of bees. Several days after, the experiment was repeated with the words Azor, Castor, Léonore. On awaking, he recollected that he had heard the last two words, and had attributed them to one of the persons ‘ who had conversed with him in his dream.

Eighth experiment: A drop of water was allowed to fall on his forehead. He dreamed that he was in Italy, that he was very warm, and that he was drinking the wine of Orvieto.

Ninth experiment : A light, surrounded by a piece of red paper, was repeatedly placed before his eyes. He dreamed of a tempest and lightning, which suggested the remembrance of a storm he had encountered in the English Channel in going from Merlaix to Havre.

—from an article signed “An Old Physician”: “Dreams and their Causes,”  Good Health: A Popular Journal, Vol. 2 (1871)

Image: Straits of Dover by JMW Turner engraved by William Miller (c1827) (source)

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2040: Better Get Ready

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Jack Kirby: 2001, A Space Odyssey Vol 1, No. 5 (April, 1977) (detail). From this gallery.

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1937: Mother and Child

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Dorothea Lange: Wife and child of tractor driver. Aldridge Plantation (1937) (source)

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300 mya: Before the Breakup

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The primordial supercontinent Pangaea (~300 – 175 mya) with current political boundaries. Map by Massimo Pietrobon. (source)

 

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12th Century: Release from All Sorrows

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Detail of the Manjushri Mandala at the Temple of the Great Translator, Nako, late eleventh to early twelfth century.

The monumental paintings that have survived in the Guge caves and temple-monasteries guide the meditating monk, also the casual visitor, through overlapping universes. They follow an iconographic program set out in detail in Sanskrit texts known as the Tantras of Practice. At the center of many of the artistic sequences (in Guge as in the famous monastery of Tabo in the Spiti Valley in the Indian Himalayas) is the Buddha of Intense Light, Vairocana, one of a series of three, or five, or thirty-seven, or even a thousand Buddhas and other divine beings who, worshiped together, can release the disciplined seeker from all sorrow. (source)

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2016: Skeleton of Color

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Butch Locsin aka The Skeleton of Color
Gallery here.

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2011: Looks Easy Enough

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Zarchary Abel: Impenetraball (source — with instructions!)

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1892: How to Deal with Scabs

Switchmen's JournalCLEVERLY CAPTURED

A very clever piece of work was recently done by Thomas I. Kidd in preventing the bosses putting an end to the strike of the St. Louis machine woodworkers for a shorter working day. Mr. Kidd is the general secretary of the national organization of the woodworkers and is the executive head of the order. Having learned that a large number of non-union men were being gathered up in Chicago to be shipped to St. Louis Mr. Kidd sauntered into the headquarters and giving a fictitious name was promptly enrolled by the bosses eager for all the skilled woodworkers who could be found. Then Mr. Kidd casually enquired if they were meeting with success and was told that everything was going all right to break the backbone of the strike into small fragments. Growing confidential as he warmed up to the subject the boss asserted that the strike was as good as lost and gleefully informed Mr. Kidd that the proprietors had raised a large sum of money to smash the wood worker’s organization into smithereens.

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1922: Setting Sun

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Leon Spilliaert: Seascape with Setting Sun (1922)

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