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ny140721162104 Hansken?s skull and other items on display in the exhibition ?Hansken, Rembrandt?s Elephant? at the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on July 1, 2021. An exhibition in Amsterdam explores the wandering life and untimely death of Hansken, an Asian elephant who became a spectacle in 17th-century Europe. (Julia Gunther/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140721162205 A black chalk drawing by Rembrandt, most likely from 1641, at the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on July 1, 2021. An exhibition in Amsterdam explores the wandering life and untimely death of Hansken, an Asian elephant who became a spectacle in 17th-century Europe. (Julia Gunther/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140721162305 Hansken?s skull and other items on display in the exhibition ?Hansken, Rembrandt?s Elephant? at the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on July 1, 2021. An exhibition in Amsterdam explores the wandering life and untimely death of Hansken, an Asian elephant who became a spectacle in 17th-century Europe. (Julia Gunther/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny140721162405 A detail from Rembrandt?s etching ?Adam and Eve in Paradise,? at the Rembrandt House in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on July 1, 2021. Seventeenth-century viewers would have understood the elephant as a symbol of chastity and grace.(Julia Gunther/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny280621163704 ?A Dutch Courtyard? by Pieter de Hooch, a contemporary of Vermeer?s, is scanned at the National Gallery of Art in Washington on June 18, 2021. High-tech scanning techniques used by geologists, planetary scientists, drug companies and the military are revealing secrets of how artists created their masterpieces. (T.J. Kirkpatrick/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny280621163905 John Delaney prepares a hyperspectral visible wavelength camera to scan ?A Dutch Courtyard,? by Pieter de Hooch, at the National Gallery of Art in Washington on June 18, 2021. High-tech scanning techniques used by geologists, planetary scientists, drug companies and the military are revealing secrets of how artists created their masterpieces. (T.J. Kirkpatrick/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny280621163405 A museum guest photographs Johannes Vermeer?s ?Woman Holding a Balance? in the National Gallery of Art in Washington on June 18, 2021. High-tech scanning techniques used by geologists, planetary scientists, drug companies and the military are revealing secrets of how artists created their masterpieces. (T.J. Kirkpatrick/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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Total de Resultados: 7

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