Fri, Jan 31, 11:46 AM CST

At the meeting Point - Who was Hamlet?

Prime Members Gallery Historical posted on May 05, 2016
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Description


To be, or not to be: that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing end them? Many thank's for looking & comments! PS. I used here the DM's Meeting Point Set

Comments (43)


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art-ella

8:31AM | Fri, 06 May 2016

Stimmt! Ute hat recht, der feiert Vatertag. Ich meine ich habe ihn gesehen. Oder etwa nicht?

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MagikUnicorn

6:00PM | Fri, 06 May 2016
BEAUTIFUL.jpg
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RodS

7:48PM | Fri, 06 May 2016

Very beautiful scene, Ute! Love the Victorian feel of this.

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nickcarter

10:19AM | Sat, 07 May 2016

Excellent , as your usual!!!

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Wolfenshire Online Now!

11:18PM | Sat, 07 May 2016

A wonderful question that can lead to a lifetime of love for the arts.

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Radar_rad-dude

2:01AM | Sun, 08 May 2016

A very wonderful setting and excellent old clothes! Very well put together! Marvelous work!

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flavia49

12:59PM | Sun, 08 May 2016

very lovely

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Glendaw

4:05AM | Mon, 09 May 2016

Amazing characters, the details are outstanding. Fantastic job and wonderful quote.

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Rock69

12:07PM | Mon, 09 May 2016

WOW! Shakespear ... mit so viel Anspruch kann ich gar nicht umgehen!! ;-)

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drittervon5

1:46PM | Mon, 16 May 2016

Beautiful scene! Elegant Ladys! Well done!

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anahata.c

8:17PM | Sun, 05 June 2016

What an absolutely fascinating image! (When I studied Deutsch, we read Hamlet in translation---into Deutsch. And I'll never forget it: The famous "To be or not to be" speech was translated: "Sein, oder nicht sein: Das ist hier die Frage." It just showed how difficult translation is. "To be" becomes one word, and it just has such a different feeling. I'm sure there are other translations, of course. But I had the same experience when I read Mann or Goethe or RIlke or Grass in English: There were so many phrases that didn't 'translate'. Imagine having to translate great works into another language: You have to answer to people on both sides!) Anyway, you don't have Hamlet actually standing here, but the woman on the left seems to be questioning something big, and she has a Hamlet-like way about her. (If you gave her a skull, she'd be perfect, lol.) And the other woman is asking something of her---the image has a question mark in it, something is being sought, something is being questioned.

Of course you have the poster for an old Hamlet production (with old American actors, E.H. Sothern and Virginia Harned), so Hamlet is lurking in the scene. And you have perfect Hamlet fog, and perfect Hamlet light, and a night scene where two people meet---maybe the woman on the right is asking the other woman to join her in the theater. (Or maybe she's asking her to take a much deeper journey---like the one Hamlet takes.) The two children are beautifully dressed and posed and lit. And---here I go again---your attention to detail on the two women is consummate. You're so good at dressing your models---you should've been a fashion designer. You also did a beautiful job with the car too. A real period piece; and to me the whole image asks a question...which is perfect for Hamlet, who grapples with questions throughout the whole play. Terrific, Ute.

(Btw, as I've said before, I stopped faving images, only because I had so many problems with it. It was some kind of corruption which the site couldn't solve. So forgive my not faving---but all your images are fav's. Please know that.)

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K_T_Ong

2:43AM | Wed, 12 October 2016

A finely detailed render. Feels historically authentic. The forest background adds a sense of uneasiness to the scene, though -- as befits that play of Shakespeare's, I suppose, a performance of which the ladies are no doubt on their way to watch. (Could it be too intense for the children, though?...)

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jancas

11:17PM | Tue, 18 June 2019

Nice work

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