EditorialBoys playing tug-of-war with batons (covet baston) and dancing to music (danse), after an engraving by Claudine Bouzonnet Stella, 17th century. Lithograph from Henry Rene Allemagne's Sports and Games of Skill (Sports et Jeux d'Adresse), Librairie Hache...
EditorialProtesters outside the Whitney Museum demanding that Warren Kanders be removed from the museum’s board of trustees, in New York, May 18, 2019. (Andrew White/The New York Times)
EditorialThe sloth is crushed by Poverty and Deficiency Story of the sloth (series title) Thesaurus sacrarum historiaru [m] veteris testame [n] ti, elega [n] tissimis imaginibus expressu [m] excelle [n] tissimoru [m] in hac arte viroru [m] opera: now [n] c prim...
EditorialNegative - Fairfield, Victoria, circa 1920, A group of girls exercise with batons at the Fairfield State School. The photograph is formally posed with the girls arranged in rows. They are all in uniform and their batons are decorated with paper tassels.
EditorialPerforated baton with horse and fish engravings, Late Magdalenian, about 12,500 years old. Antler batons first appeared in the early Upper Palaeolithic of western Europe about 35,000 years ago. By the Late Upper Palaeolithic Magdalenian period, about 1...
EditorialThe funeral procession. The batons of Spain - Russia - Prussia - Portugal - The Netherlands - Hanover - England - The coronet borne by Clareanceux King of Arms - 8 coaches. The funeral procession. [sic] of Arthur Duke of Wellington. London : published ...
EditorialPalace of the Duque de Abrantes, 16th century. Detail of the cover. Gothic style with an ogee arch framed by thin lateral batons. Granada, Andalusia, Spain.
EditorialPalace of the Duque de Abrantes, 16th century. Cover. Gothic style with an ogee arch framed by thin lateral batons. Granada, Andalusia, Spain.
EditorialPerforated baton with horse and fish engravings, Late Magdalenian, about 12,500 years old. Antler batons first appeared in the early Upper Palaeolithic of western Europe about 35,000 years ago. By the Late Upper Palaeolithic Magdalenian period, about 1...
EditorialPalace of the Duque de Abrantes, 16th century. Detail of the cover. Gothic style with an ogee arch framed by thin lateral batons. Granada, Andalusia, Spain.
EditorialPalace of the Duque de Abrantes, 16th century. Cover. Gothic style with an ogee arch framed by thin lateral batons. Granada, Andalusia, Spain.
EditorialThe Chinese merry-go-round (Bague Chinoise) in Tivoli gardens, Paris. Riders with batons try to spear a ring held by the woman in pink. Taken from Mesangere's Bon Genre circa 1815. Handcoloured lithograph from Henry Rene Allemagne's Sports and Games of...
EditorialBoys playing tug-of-war with batons (covet baston) and dancing to music (danse), after an engraving by Claudine Bouzonnet Stella, 17th century. Lithograph from Henry Rene Allemagne's Sports and Games of Skill (Sports et Jeux d'Adresse), Librairie Hache...
EditorialPerforated baton with horse and fish engravings, Late Magdalenian, about 12,500 years old. Antler batons first appeared in the early Upper Palaeolithic of western Europe about 35,000 years ago. By the Late Upper Palaeolithic Magdalenian period, about 1...