June 9, 2019

Here’s a help post by NT colleague Larry Hurtado. See what you think……. BW3 Text-Collections and an Emergent NT Canon A recent survey of the contents of Christian manuscripts from the first three centuries focuses on identifying which texts were combined in the same manuscript: Michael Dormandy, “How the Books Became the Bible: The Evidence for Canon Formation From Work-Combination in Manuscripts,” TC: A Journal of Biblical Textual Criticism 23 (2018): 1-39. (TC is an open-access and online journal: available... Read more

June 8, 2019

One of my favorite early Manet paintings is ‘the old musician’ (1862) above. But Manet was also already pursuing some still life paintings, for instance here—- Oysters on the half shell. There is something incongruous about that gorgeous gold frame, around mundane oysters. Compare that to the 1879 painting of George Moore in Manet’s garden…. More like the later Impressionistic work is this study of a watering can. As is the haystacks painting below from 1882… Read more

June 7, 2019

Now that’s a million dollar smile! BW3 Read more

June 7, 2019

Some of the lesser known Impressionists are some of the most interesting, for example Seurat and Pissarro. In general they tend to be more abstract in their renderings, and in the case of Pissaro he’s using a pointillistic technique. This is a seascape from Port-en-Bessin in Normandy done in 1888. Contrast that with this seascape by Pissarro in 1890. But Pissarro was also quite capable of being more ‘representational’ as this painting of the Fence from 1872 shows. Read more

June 6, 2019

It’s a summer of sequels and reboots— more Men (and Women) in Black, more Spiderman, more Jurassic Park…. err Godzilla, a redo of Aladdin, Toy Story 4 and yes— the Secret Life of Pets 2. Sequels are rarely equal to the original, much less surpassing them. And this sequel is only 86 minutes long, even counting the hilarious real scenes of animals and humans doing crazy things trailer at the end. On the one hand, this sequel is weak in... Read more

June 6, 2019

Ann and I both love the Impressionists, and I will devote several posts to the Gallery’s fine collection. These painters almost never do religious paintings, and even when for example they paint a cathedral, what they are really interested in is the effect of changing light on the cathedral. Impressionism in general is all about the light and lighting. It is meant to create an ‘impression’ on the viewer of the color and light that they see reflected off all... Read more

June 5, 2019

Here is an interesting painting of David and Goliath by Andrea del Castagno in about 1450. Italian painters who lived on commissions by churches and the Vatican often sought to paint pictures that were a bit out of the ordinary, as they got bored with painting the same olde Madonna and child pictures. Here’s an example. But a painting of Jonah and the whale— well even the most jaundiced of painters would be licking his chops with all the expansive... Read more

June 4, 2019

Ann and I are celebrating 42 years of marriage today…. though we are on separate continents! We’ve had a good innings, as the cricketers would say, and we’re still at bat!! Read more

June 3, 2019

Elliot is now five months old and lookin’ good….. but then I’m a little biased as his granddaddy! BW3 Read more

June 3, 2019

There are many paintings of the Adoration of the Magi but this is a very famous one by Fra Angelico and Fra Fillipo Lippi dating to about 1450. Some triptyches are just too large to get into a single shot. So here are three pictures of the one triptych. All I can say is— those are some mean looking Gospel writers, and saints, or saints and saints. The painting below would have made St. Paul hopping mad. It is entitled... Read more


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