Notre Dame, Paris, Édouard Baldus, 1852-1853, Cleveland Museum of Art: Photography
This extraordinary photograph clearly demonstrates Baldus’s genius both as an architectural photographer and as a printer. Centrally placed and filling the entire composition, this great architectural monument is clearly depicted, seemingly removed from time, as there are no interfering elements such as figures or clouds to distract from the building’s majesty. This large, ambitious view captures, almost without rival, the physical and symbolic essence of Notre-Dame. Instead of the traditional frontal view, Baldus photographed the building at an oblique angle in order to articulate the volume of the structure, and he was most conscious of the negative space created by the cathedral’s contour against the unmodulated sky. His salt prints of architectural views, with their breathtaking warm gray tones, are among the most striking achievements of 19th-century photography. Size: Image: 29.5 x 44.7 cm (11 5/8 x 17 5/8 in.); Matted: 50.8 x 61 cm (20 x 24 in.) Medium: salted paper print from wet collodion negative
https://clevelandart.org/art/1991.35
The kidnapping and murder
32-year-old Dorothy Jane Scott and her family became extremely worried when Dorothy started receiving anonymous phone calls from a man saying that he wanted to kill her. The calls were short, and his demeanor sometimes changed to instead being affectionate and professing his love for Dorothy. At one point, the man instructed Dorothy to go outside and look for a gift he had left for her by her car. Outside, Dorothy found a single dead rose laying on her car. Perhaps the most frightening call Dorothy ever received was one where the man told her that he wanted to dismember her into small pieces and that he would make sure no one would ever find her remains.
Dorothy left her home on the evening of 28th May 1980 for a meeting. She noticed that one of her co-workers had small red marks on his arm. Dorothy, a female co-worker, and the male co-worker decided to go to the ER after suspecting that he had been bitten by a spider. Dorothy drove her car to the hospital and waited with her female co-worker while the man was being treated by medical staff. After about two hours, the male co-worker was allowed to go home and Dorothy offered to drive her car up to the exit. She left her co-workers, and they waited for her outside. They saw her car driving up to them after a few minutes but suddenly sped off. They reported Dorothy missing after a couple of hours, and her burning car was found the next day, but Dorothy was nowhere to be found.
Dorothy’s parents started receiving phone calls shortly after she disappeared from an unknown man claiming he had killed her. The police concluded that the caller was most likely Dorothy’s killer.
The disappearance and probable kidnapping of Dorothy remained a mystery for four years until her remains were found beside Santa Ana Canyon Road. Dental records confirmed the remains as being Dorothy, but a cause of death could not be established because of the decomposition.
Aftermath
On June 12th, 1980, almost a month after Dorothy disappeared, an unknown man called the front desk of Orange County Register. The newspaper had published an article regarding Dorothy’s disappearance the previous day, and the man claimed to be Dorothy’s kidnapper and killer. He said that he had caught Dorothy cheating on him with another man and therefore decided to kill her. The man also gave some interesting details about what Dorothy had been wearing when she went missing, which had not been exposed to the media. The police believe that the man was the murderer, but they have never been able to trace him. The murder of Dorothy Jane Scott remains unsolved.
Phases of the ring of Saturn. A new astronomy for beginners. 1898.
Internet Archive
Nattramn
巴别塔 (Tower of Babel). Minoru Nomata (b.1955 Meguro-ku, Tokyo) • via Bibliothèque Infernale on FB
Thanx sisterreisaid.tumblr.com
This Steyr Hahn pistol, originally made for use in World War I, was converted to fire 9 mm Luger ammunition to serve in World War II.
An article from 2001 discussing the impact of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold on people (especially teenagers).