Heavy Industry Publications | National Gallery of Art https://www.nga.gov/artists/38169-heavy-industry-publications/artworks
lanolin on wove paper Accession ID 2013.60.1.28 Not on view Artwork Stains: Beer
lanolin on wove paper Accession ID 2013.60.1.28 Not on view Artwork Stains: Beer
Refuel with five unique dining experiences across our campus, from lattes in the Garden Café to homemade flatbreads in the Sculpture Garden’s Pavilion Café.
and pickles, potato roll Bavarian pretzel (V) $7 Rye flavored Bavarian pretzel, beer
District of Columbia Public Schools social worker Rhoda Matthews explores beauty and persistence in Motley’s intimate portrait of his grandmother.
I am a school social worker at Anne Beers Elementary School in Washington, D.C.
Lausanne, 1945: repro. 148. 1947 Beer, François-Joachim. Pierre Bonnard.
Howardena Pindell is recognized for writings, research, and artwork that shed light on racism in the art world. She explored the disparities Black woman artists faced in Free, White and 21 (1980).
At an Ohio food stand, she saw red circles on the bottoms of root beer mugs reserved
including Arthur Schnitzler, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Jacob Wassermann, and Richard Beer-Hofman
The political strength of Henry VIII’s regime lay in his ability to choose advisors who were both wise and learned. One of these men was Sir Brian Tuke.
version, although this is sometimes given as part of the provenance; see E.S. de Beer
In the Low Countries, the Feast of Epiphany, or Twelfth Night, is known as Driekoningen (Three Kings). The Christian holiday is traditionally celebrated on January 6th with a festive meal at which friends and relatives gathered to eat, drink, and be merry.
Flanders, depicting the moment when the evening’s newly crowned „King“ raises his beer
The salt we see in 17th-century still lifes was central to the Dutch economy—and Dutch colonialism.
all its own, rising above plates of partially eaten foods, half-drunk glasses of beer
Venus, as if filled with foreboding about Adonis’s fate, desperately clings to her lover, while he pulls himself free of her embrace, impatient for the hunt and with his hounds straining at the leash. The goddess’s gesture is echoed by that of Cupid, who anxiously watches the lovers’ leave-taking while clutching a dove—a creature sacred to Venus.
Esmond S. de Beer, 6 vols., Oxford, 1955: 4:162).