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Elizabeth Countess of Toering-Jettenbach, pastel painting by Vera Stanley-Alder. Vera had a successful career as a portrait painter using both oil paints and pastels. [7] In 1923, for example, she exhibited portraits of Lady Douglas, Lady Poynter, and Princess Tatiana Wiazemsky (granddaughter of Harry Gordon Selfridge [8]) at the Lyceum club in Paris where she had a studio. [9]
CollateralMurder.ogv (Ogg multiplexed audio/video file, Theora/Vorbis, length 13 min 29 s, 480 × 384 pixels, 969 kbps overall, file size: 93.52 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Vera Stanley Alder; Vicente Aleixandre; Alexander Williams (colonial administrator) Frederick Alexander (cricketer) Jack Alexander; Winona Cargile Alexander; Jean Alfonsetti; Hector Allard; Chet Allen; Edwin Allen; Ernest Allen (Australian politician) Keith Allen (politician) Nicky Allen; Dudley Allenby, 2nd Viscount Allenby; Martín Almagro Basch
A Washington, D.C. man has been charged with murder after police say he stabbed his grandmother to death and then texted a photograph of her dead body to other family members last Friday.
Thomas Alder (1932–68), German actor; Vera Stanley Alder (1898–1984), English portrait painter and mystic; Viviana Alder (born 1957), Argentine researcher; Other people named Alder. George Alder Blumer (1857–1940), British-born American physician, mental hospital administrator and journal editor; Rhondda Alder Kelly (1926–2014 ...
Post-mortem photograph of Emperor Frederick III of Germany, 1888. Post-mortem photograph of Brazil's deposed emperor Pedro II, taken by Nadar, 1891.. The invention of the daguerreotype in 1839 made portraiture commonplace, as many of those who were unable to afford the commission of a painted portrait could afford to sit for a photography session.
Pope John Paul II was the subject of three premature obituaries.. A prematurely reported obituary is an obituary of someone who was still alive at the time of publication. . Examples include that of inventor and philanthropist Alfred Nobel, whose premature obituary condemning him as a "merchant of death" for creating military explosives may have prompted him to create the Nobel Prize; [1 ...
Overlooked No More is a recurring feature in the obituary section of The New York Times, which honors "remarkable people" whose deaths had been overlooked by editors of that section since its creation in 1851.