Glenn Brown - The Great Masturbator (2006)
Glenn Brown - Life on the Moon (2016)
Glenn Brown - Searched Hard for You and Your Special Ways
Glenn Brown - Almond Blossom (2010)
Glenn Brown - Spearmint Rhino (2009)
Glenn Brown - Sex (2003)
Glenn Brown - Architecture and Morality (2004)
Glenn Brown - Poor Art (2016)
Glenn Brown - Die Mutter des Künstlers (2016)
Old Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard,
To get her poor Dog a bone;
But when she came there the cupboard was bare.
And so the poor Dog had none.
Wife, bring to me my old bent bow,
That I may shoot yon carrion crow.
The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts.
All on a summer's day;
The Knave of Hearts, he stole the tarts,
And took them clean away.
When the pie was opened,
The birds began to sing;
Was not this a dainty dish
To set before the king?
There was a little man,
And he had a little gun,
And his bullets were made of lead, lead, lead.
Turn again Whittington,
Lord Mayor of London!
There was an old woman who lived in a shoe;
She had so many children, she didn't know what to do.
"Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been?"
"I've been up to London to look at the queen."
I had a little husband,
No bigger than my thumb;
I put him in a pint pot,
And there I bid him drum.
See-saw, Margery Daw,
Johnny shall have a new master;
He shall have but a penny a day,
Because he won't work any faster.
Canterbury Cathedral Interior: Main nave
Canterbury Cathedral Interior: Bell Harry Tower (1503), by Jeffery C. Johnson
Canterbury Cathedral Interiors: Pylons of the Central Nave
Canterbury Cathedral Interiors: St. Michael's Chapel
Canterbury Cathedral: Gallery of the inner yard
Habit of a Crim tartar in 1700. J. Roberts sculp. Engraved for the Geographical Dictionary printed by the King's Authority.
Вид города Симферополяю 1855 г. Литография из "Художественного листка" В. Тимма
View Of The Harbour Of Balaclava, the Portus Symbolorum With remains of the fortress and part of the town. From an original drawing by the Reverend Reginald Heber M.A. Published Nov. 25th 1809 by T.Cadell and W.Davies, London.
Steel engraving of Balaklava engraved by H Bibby from an original painting E Dore. The picture comes from England's Battles published around 1860 by the London Printing and Publishing Company.
Steel engraving of Sebastopol, drawn and engraved by H Bibby. The picture comes from England's Battles published around 1860 by the London Printing and Publishing Company.
The River Alma.
As seen on the road from Simferopol to Bakchi-Sarai. In the foreground rises the Tchatyr Dagh, the highest mountain of the peninsula.
Remains of the Ancient Chersonese, near Sebastopol.
In the foreground are the ruins and Chersonese Bay; in the background, Fort Constantine and the entrance to Sebastopol Harbour.
Eupatoria.
This view is taken from the sea-shore. On the left is the Custom-house; in the centre are the Caravan-Sarai and the great Mosque, and further on the new Russian Church. This town, one of the most populous in the Crimea, contained before the
General View of Sebastopol,
Taken from a Watch Tower in the centre of town. The highest building in front is the Library: on the right are the Cathedral and the Admiralty Tower, the Military Fort, Fort St. Paul, the Dockyard, and part of the Marine Sub
Interior of an Early Christian Church.
Excavated in the Rock of lnkerman.
Mouth of the Chernaya River,
At the bottom of Inkerman Bay, end of Sebastopol Harbour. lnkerman Cliffs, are seen on the left; in the background are the mountains at the entrance to the Baidar Valley.
Entrance to Sebastopol, from the Sea.
On the left lies Fort Constantine; on the right are seen Fort Alexander and Fort St. Nicholas ; in the centre and background the lnkerman Lighthouses.
The Arsenal Harbour, or Military Port, Sebastopol.
In the foreground are the old ships of the line, now used as prisons; on the right, the Marine Barracks; and on the left, part of the town of Sebastopol.
The River Katcha
View taken in the neighbourhood of the village of Bia Sala near Sevastopol.
View of Fort St. Nicholas.
One of the largest, mustering about 300 guns, and protecting both the entrance to the great Gulf of Sebastopol and to the Military Harbour.
Remains of Genoese Forts at Inkerman.
In the background is seen the Harbour of Sebastopol.
A General View of the Coast, extending from Cape Fiolente to Sebastopol.
In the middle are seen Cape Chersonese and Kamiesch Bay.
A Tartar House in the Village of Alupka.
Such houses are generally constructed abutting on a large rock, the side of which is used to a wall. The roof its flat, and upon it, when the weather is fair, the inhabitants commonly assemble, working or enjoyi
Balaklava, seen from the shore.
Cape and Lighthouse of St. Theodore.
Between Alupka and Yalta.