Wednesday, 31 August 2011
Paolo ucellos "hunt in the forest": Ashmolean Museum
This painting is famous because of perspective and nature.
It was painted in 1470.
It has a nocturnal landscape.
Humans and animals recede coherently to a vanishing to a vanishing point in the centre of the painting.
Bright colours create a mosaic-like surface patterns.
In this painting, hunting is a metaphor for love, the pursuit of beloved and death.
There are also symbols representing Diana (godess of hunt) represented as deer.
(adrian and pablo)
Ashmolean museum.... Musical instruments...
Most of the instruments were several types of bowed and plucked instruments which include the viols that were the ones of common use in the 1500 and other instruments that then became really popular in the 1800 were the violin and the guitar.
(montse y maria)
Ashmolean
Sunday, 28 August 2011
The Court
Last week we went to the court, we witnessed two different cases, both quite interesting.
Being there felt weird, is very different from how it's shown in films or tv shows. I was really impressed about everything, from the clothing to the courtroom; I wasn't expecting to see the jugde dressed with a gawn and a wig and the way they talked to the judge like someone superior, everything seems like we were somehow back in time...
The first case was very confusing about a guy wo smashed the windows of his own car, and then he threw lots of paper into his car, like if he was about to set the car on fire.
The second case was about sexual abusse to a man, it supposedly occurred when this man was a teenager. The problem was that there was any evidence that could prove that the person that made that abuse was guilty.
This experience was very interesting though I think I couldn't be neither part of the jury nor a lawyer or judge, make a desition about the life of someone else is something quite serious.
Wednesday, 24 August 2011
Beautiful Exeter College
Excellent work!
Looking forward to the next instalment!
Robert Swan
Exeter College History
| Coat of arms |
| 18th century photo |
Exeter College in Fiction
Famous Exeter Alumni
J.R.R Tolkien (1862-1973) perhaps one of the most notable of exeter alumni, Tolkien was an English writer, poet, philologist, and university, most famous for writing The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit & The Silmarillion which all have a connected body of tales, poems, fictional histories, invented languages, and literary essays about a fantasy word called Arda, and Middle Earth within it.
When we visited the college we actually saw a sculpture of Mr. Tolkien in the chapel, where it stands today as a monument to this great writer. This sculpture was built by his daughter-in-law in 1977.
Franklin Pierce (1804-1869) was the 14th President of the United States, also entered Exeter College.He was a democrat and he took part in the Mexican-American war (1846- 1848) and then became a brigadier general.
He died in New Hampshire, in 1869 at 64 years old.
Samuel Babson Fuld (1981- ) is another notable Oxonian, and he is an American baseball outfielder with the Tampa Bay Rays of MLB
This incredible man has overcome his diabetes by double batting .600 at the age of 10, ranking 19th in the country at the time.
Since then he has become a great player and has won numerous awards for his excellent games.