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Posts by Caroline Wyatt

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Caroline Wyatt gets candid about life with MS - and why she thinks the BBC will endure A diagnosis of multiple sclerosis disrupted BBC correspondent Caroline Wyatt’s career. But 10 years on she’s unbeaten and still broadcasting.

www.radiotimes.com/audio/radio/...
#MultipleSclerosis @carolinewyatt.bsky.social

6 months ago 6 1 1 0
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Sight of someone potentially infectious causes immune response, research suggests Scientists use VR headsets to see how participants react to faces of people showing signs of viral infections

Incredible

www.theguardian.com/science/2025...

8 months ago 17 3 0 0

Oooh that’s v exciting! 😊

8 months ago 2 0 1 0

You’re far too kind! Am still enjoying Saturday PM. We have a really lovely team of journalists and they make it a joy to work there!

11 months ago 4 0 0 0
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Fish Consumption Could Slow Disability Progression in MS Eating more fish could help slow disability progression in MS, with data showing a risk reduction in patients who include it in their diet.

www.psychiatrist.com/news/fish-co...

#MultipleSclerosis

1 year ago 4 1 0 0

On dreich days like these it might cheer you up to know that in 19th-century slang an umbrella was a ‘bumbershoot’.

1 year ago 2076 239 100 25
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'Lighted Houses, Amsterdam.' A critic, writing in 1921 (the year of this work) commented, Cees Bolding 'gives us out of very simple elements a perfect nocturne constructed from the domesticity of our back streets... he has complete hold of a subject and has made it his own.'

1 year ago 108 13 1 0
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Study Illuminates Impact of Menopause on MS Progression Menopause appears to accelerate neurodegeneration and functional decline in women with multiple sclerosis.

www.psychiatrist.com/news/study-i...

#MultipleSclerosis

1 year ago 4 2 1 0
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Harry Kernoff's vivid depiction shows Ringsend, Dublin in 1935. Located on the south bank of the River Liffey, it was named from the Gaelic Roinn Aun or Sea Point and in the 17thC took over from Dalkey as Dublin's main port before going into commercial decline in the 20thC.

1 year ago 95 17 4 1
'Reading by Candlelight.' (1912) Carl Holsøe frequently used his wife Emilie as a model; she is often depicted as though she is being observed unaware. It is her presence which gives this work its tension, making the viewer feel as though we are intruding on a personal, meditative moment.

'Reading by Candlelight.' (1912) Carl Holsøe frequently used his wife Emilie as a model; she is often depicted as though she is being observed unaware. It is her presence which gives this work its tension, making the viewer feel as though we are intruding on a personal, meditative moment.

'Reading by Candlelight.' (1912) Carl Holsøe frequently used his wife Emilie as a model; she is often depicted as though she is being observed unaware. It is her presence which gives this work its tension, making the viewer feel as though we are intruding on a personal, meditative moment.

1 year ago 68 8 1 0
'Evening Falls.' (1917) is a beautiful example of Nikolai Dubovskoy’s mature period when he painted some of his best works. A hugely influential painter, together with Isaac Levitan, he helped create what came to be known as the landscape of mood.

'Evening Falls.' (1917) is a beautiful example of Nikolai Dubovskoy’s mature period when he painted some of his best works. A hugely influential painter, together with Isaac Levitan, he helped create what came to be known as the landscape of mood.

'Evening Falls.' (1917) is a beautiful example of Nikolai Dubovskoy’s mature period when he painted some of his best works. A hugely influential painter, together with Isaac Levitan, he helped create what came to be known as the landscape of mood.

1 year ago 72 8 1 1
Many of John Ruskin's watercolours reflect an interest in the close observation of skies and clouds, studied at dawn, sunset (as here in 1845) and in varying weather conditions. His interest in these themes was a lifelong one, he once observed: 'It is a strange thing how little in general people know about the sky. It is the part of creation in which nature has done more for the sake of pleasing man, more for the sole and evident purpose of talking to him and teaching him, than in any other of her works, and it is just the part in which we least attend to her.'

Many of John Ruskin's watercolours reflect an interest in the close observation of skies and clouds, studied at dawn, sunset (as here in 1845) and in varying weather conditions. His interest in these themes was a lifelong one, he once observed: 'It is a strange thing how little in general people know about the sky. It is the part of creation in which nature has done more for the sake of pleasing man, more for the sole and evident purpose of talking to him and teaching him, than in any other of her works, and it is just the part in which we least attend to her.'

Many of John Ruskin's watercolours reflect an interest in the close observation of skies and clouds, studied at dawn, sunset (as here in 1845) and in varying weather conditions. His interest in these themes was a lifelong one.

1 year ago 81 11 0 1
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'Pink Lustre Mug and Fan.' (1909) William Nicholson’s use of a lustre mug has enabled to display his technical abilities in depicting the reflective nature of its material. In positioning the objects on a reflective table top, he reinforces the mug’s texture.

1 year ago 68 5 0 0
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Flowers, still lifes and domestic interiors are the primary subjects of Ethel Sands’s painting; here they are combined with books on a small bookcase at the Château d’Auppegard, a large 17thC house near Dieppe where Sands and her partner, the painter Nan Hudson, spent summers together from the 1920s

1 year ago 90 8 1 0
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It is rare to find Hans Heysen's early work from when he was at Académie Julian and Colarossi’s Academy in Paris in the decade before WW1. This work, painted on a cold Parisian morning, is prosaically titled, 'From the Apartment Window, Paris, 1901.'

1 year ago 147 12 2 2
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Ville d'Avray, some ten miles from Paris, was to provide Corot with an important subject for his paintings throughout his career. His father bought a country home here in 1817, and Corot never tired of painting the place which had meant so much to him as a youth. This work is from 1834.

1 year ago 97 14 2 0
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NHS home bowel-cancer tests to be extended to over-50s in England More than 850,000 extra people will now be able to return a stool sample to be checked for blood.

#BBCNews - Over-50s in England offered home bowel-cancer tests
www.bbc.com/news/article...

1 year ago 10 4 2 1
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Two frame cartoon with a Dalmatian dog in each. The second one has ulti-coloured spots. Caption under the first says 'Dalmatian'. Caption under the second says 'Dalmatian with colour licence'

Two frame cartoon with a Dalmatian dog in each. The second one has ulti-coloured spots. Caption under the first says 'Dalmatian'. Caption under the second says 'Dalmatian with colour licence'

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1 year ago 1777 115 27 2
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'Rouen: les lumières sur la Seine, pris du Pont de Pierre,' is one of several versions of this composition which resulted from John Atkinson Grimshaw's only known trip abroad, when he escorted his children's governess, Mrs Ruhl, back to Germany in 1878.

1 year ago 54 13 2 2
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With its thriving port, picturesque architecture and the beautiful surrounding countryside, the coastal town of Kirkcudbright in Scotland has attracted artists from the 19thC onwards. Samuel Peploe's paintings of the town (this is from around 1917) emphasise the geometry of its buildings.

1 year ago 115 12 4 0
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'Sunday Afternoon, Hyde.' (c1932) Harry Rutherford was described by his teacher Walter Sickert, as: 'my intellectual heir and successor.' Rutherford carried over Sickert's teaching that an initial drawing was about capturing an idea to jog the memory, which was then revisited and developed.

1 year ago 130 11 0 1
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Hercules Brabazon Brabazon made studies after many artists, including Velàzquez and Frans Hals and in particular, such as this sunset, after J.M.W. Turner. These works provide a record of his continual process of study; they are not straight copies but interpretations in his own pictorial language.

1 year ago 54 5 0 0
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Walter Bayes' inspiration for this painting from 1917 will have stemmed partly from his former tutor Walter Sickert, who himself depicted cinema in the early years of the 20thC. Like Sickert's work, the focus here is on the audience, the cinema's interior, and the action on the stage.

1 year ago 87 16 1 0
Philip de László was one of the most famous and cosmopolitan portrait painters of the late 19th and early 20thC, and perhaps the last heir of the grand manner - his ability to transpose glamour and vitality onto a canvas often equalled that of John Singer Sargent.

Here, (1925) he portrays Viscount and Viscountess Lee at their country house Chequers, later donated to the nation as a retreat for the Prime Minister; he also co-founded the Courtauld Institute of Art.

Philip de László was one of the most famous and cosmopolitan portrait painters of the late 19th and early 20thC, and perhaps the last heir of the grand manner - his ability to transpose glamour and vitality onto a canvas often equalled that of John Singer Sargent. Here, (1925) he portrays Viscount and Viscountess Lee at their country house Chequers, later donated to the nation as a retreat for the Prime Minister; he also co-founded the Courtauld Institute of Art.

Philip de László was one of the most cosmopolitan portrait painters of the late 19th and early 20thC, and perhaps the last heir of the grand manner; here (1925) he portrays Viscount and Viscountess Lee at their country house Chequers, later donated to the nation as a retreat for the Prime Minister.

1 year ago 76 6 1 1
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He’s a Security Guard at the Met. Now His Work Is Showing There. (Gift Article) How the dream of a lifetime became reality for a sculptor from Egypt.

What a fantastic story.

www.nytimes.com/2025/01/08/n...

1 year ago 654 90 22 6
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'In the wild north.' (1891) Romantic, uncontrived and unmistakably Ivan Shishkin. His method of working was largely based on meticulous observation and the use of sketches which enabled him to build his own pictorial lexicon of a landscape.

1 year ago 107 9 1 0

CAT ADVISORY: Temperatures in the UK could drop to -10c tonight. All cats should IMMEDIATELY find the warmest spot in the house and stay there. Tell humans to bring you snacks and to keep the second warmest spot free in case you want a change of scenery.

1 year ago 11650 1398 237 66
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Completed in 1903, Monet's windowless silhouette of the Houses of Parliament with its atmospheric array of jewel-like violets and lilacs, cobalt and inky blues, and deep pink tones, appears mystical, as the building dissolves into the expansive, still waters of the River Thames.

1 year ago 186 24 4 2
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'Miss Hussey.' (c1953) Carel Weight is known for his portrayals of daily life in Battersea and Clapham and for his penetrating portraits, of which this is a prime example. Miss Hussey was a near neighbour in Putney and in Weight's words 'formidable at chess.'

1 year ago 67 12 0 1