
Song in the Twilight, 1931 - Franz Sedlacek (1891 - 1945)



Ruins of the Oybin, 1835 - Caspar David Friedrich (1774 – 1840)



On the banks of the Loire (the artists’ colony at Beaugency) Paris, 1926 - Gerda Wegener (1886 – 1940)



Among the London Searchlights, 1918 - Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson (1889 - 1946)



The Sense of Sight, 1895 - Annie Louisa Swynnerton, ARA (1844 - 1933)



Vision After the Sermon, 1888 - Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin (1848 – 1903)



Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées, c.1880 - Jean Béraud (1849 - 1936)



Kidnap King of the Berlin Wall, cover art for Men Only, July 1965 - Mort Künstler



Silently Steal Away - Jessica Gordon



What we never talk about, 2013 - Eric Bowman


More of the artist's work can be found on his blog.

I agree it's good information to have and I do include it in my posts to this community when I have the information. The problem is that it's not always possible to put a date to a work.

Cityscape with cosmic catastrophe - Michael Hutter



L'arc en ciel (The Rainbow), 2011 - Nazanin Pouyandeh



The Exam Room, 1932 - Cyril E. Power (1872 - 1951)



The Ride of a Warrior Ghost, 1850 - Pierre-Félix Wiesener



A Moonlit Evening, 1880 - John Atkinson Grimshaw (1836 - 1893)



Melancholy Interlude - Francis Criss (1901-1973)



Saint-Séverin No. 3, 1909 - Robert Delaunay (1885 - 1941)



The Absinthe Drinker, 1901 - Viktor Oliva (1861–1928)



Among the Missing – Scene in a Cornish Fishing Village, 1884 - Walter Langley (1852 - 1922)



Definitely goat. Cyber-bison are much bigger.

Thread of Progress, 2022 - Michael Cheval


More of Michael Cheval's work can be found here (some are NSFW).

I've managed to track down a picture of Reefer Girl and her two female room mates in French Alley.

Well, I'm guessing light pollution wasn't a problem in 19th century Poland. That was just what you saw when you looked up on a clear night.

There's a slightly naughtier 'cover version' of this by Sylvie Jones.

Don't kink shame.

There were actually two 'Wigtown Martyrs', Margaret Wilson (18) and Margaret McLachlan (63). I guess Millais picked the young pretty one.

Don't know the exact year. Definitely '70s.

I did wonder whether this post needed a NSFW tag.

Oops.

No, I didn't create it. It's in The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Yes, I love how it invites you to walk through that doorway into the sunlit garden.

I can't resist pointing out this slightly naughty homage by Sylvie Jones.

Yes, like most people I associated him with his wonderful art nouveau posters and only discovered his historical work quite recently.

If you like surrealism it's worth checking out this site. The site is a bit crude and the images mostly low-res, but there is loads of interesting stuff there.

They are one of my favourite birds. I watched a small flock of them descend on the garden bird feeders earlier this morning.

Artists' muses often seem to have at least one titty hanging out. I assume they can only afford really shoddy clothing.

I don't want to make any assumptions about nationality, but there are some surprisingly puritanical people in the Fediverse.