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Judge magazine, March 26, 1927
A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ
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Judge magazine, March 26, 1927
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The Daily News,
Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, October 19, 1909
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The Daily Republican,
Monongahela, Pennsylvania, February 14, 1910
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Alain’s Steeplechase, Daniel Brustlein, 1957
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Actress Billie Dove, 1932
Two paintings of Hyde Park by Japanese artist
Yoshio Markino, 1929
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Painting by
William Albert Ablett, 1923
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An Evening at St Moritz by A. Vallee, 1921
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Ginger Rogers painted by George Cattermole, 1937
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Eileen Bennett (tennis star) watches her husband Edmund Fearnley-Whittingstall (portrait artist) paint, England, 1930
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Showers in Westminster by Chinese artist Chiu Teng-hiok, 1930
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Jackson County Banner, Brownstown, Indiana, August 17, 1871
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The Leavenworth Weekly Times, Kansas, March 22, 1888
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Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, Pennsylvania, March 9, 1901
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The Times,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 9, 1879
During the Regency, Victorian and Edwardian eras it was considered a very big slight if a recognized artist’s paintings were “skied” (placed above the line of vision) or “floored” (placed below the line of vision) in a gallery exhibit. While usually there was a practical reason for skying a painting, it was also a common way for the committee to show favoritism.
One man, in 1910, who had seen his painting placed in a favorable spot and was content, returned the next day - varnishing day - and found it skyed in another room. He left in a huff and came back with a fishing pole and attempted to knock the painting down and destroy it. When security kicked him out, he came back in disguise and shot the painting four times.
Here are a couple illustrations showing what flooring and skying looked like:


Flooring could be much worse if the room or the painting were smaller, with people having to bend and crane to view. Here’s a modern example of “floored” paintings:
