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  2. Skull of a Skeleton with Burning Cigarette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skull_of_a_Skeleton_with...

    In 1887–88, van Gogh painted two more paintings with skulls, the only other works of his (besides a drawing from the same period) to use skulls as a motif. [2] The work measures 32 by 24.5 centimetres (12.6 in × 9.6 in). It is considered a vanitas or memento mori, at a time when van Gogh himself was in poor health.

  3. Tobacco and art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobacco_and_art

    Depictions of tobacco smoking in art date back at least to the pre-Columbian Maya civilization, where smoking had religious significance. The motif occurred frequently in painting of the 17th-century Dutch Golden Age, in which people of lower social class were often shown smoking pipes. In European art of the 18th and 19th centuries, the social ...

  4. File : Vincent van Gogh - Head of a skeleton with a burning ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vincent_van_Gogh...

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  5. History of smoking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_smoking

    Gentlemen Smoking and Playing Backgammon in a Tavern by Dirck Hals, 1627. A Frenchman named Jean Nicot (from whose name the word nicotine derives) introduced tobacco to France in 1560 from Portugal. From there, it spread to England. The first report of a smoking Englishman is of a sailor in Bristol in 1556, seen "emitting smoke from his ...

  6. Magdalene with the Smoking Flame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magdalene_with_the_Smoking...

    Conisbee, Philip. “An Introduction to the Life and Art of Georges de La Tour,” in Philip Conisbee (ed.), Georges de La Tour and His World, exh. cat. Washington, DC, National Gallery of Art; Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum 1996, pp. 13–147. David, Jasper. "The Work of Art as Religious Enactment: Georges de La Tour's The Repentant Magdalene".

  7. Drug paraphernalia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_paraphernalia

    The term describes both a bucket bong and a waterfall bong, since both use air pressure and water to draw smoke. A lung uses similar equipment but instead of water draws the smoke by removing a compacted plastic bag or similar from the chamber. The bucket bong is made out of two containers, with the larger, open top container filled with water.

  8. Fumage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fumage

    Fumage is a surrealist art technique popularized by Wolfgang Paalen in which impressions are made by the smoke of a candle or kerosene lamp on a piece of paper or canvas. [1] The earliest documented practitioner of the technique was American clockmaker Silas Hoadley whose circa 1810-1820 fumage decorated clock is in the permanent collection of ...

  9. Blunt (cannabis) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blunt_(cannabis)

    A blunt is a cigar that has been hollowed out and filled with cannabis. It is rolled with the tobacco-leaf "wrap", usually from an inexpensive cigar, or any other wrap that is not a joint paper that has glue. A blunt is different from a joint, which uses rolling papers. Tobacco-free "blunt wraps" are available.