Weโre unleashing some pawsome pups from our collection for #InternationalDogDay!
๐ถ Mycenaean dog's head rhyton, late Helladic Period (c. 1300โ1200 BCE), Greece. Painted ceramic. .298 AN1896-1908.AE
Throughout history and across cultures, dogs have been considered symbols of loyalty, companionship and protection.
๐ถ A Dog Lying on a Ledge, 1630โ1720, by an anonymous artist. Oil on canvas. WA1957.59.2
Their image has been captured in all forms of artistic expression, from early cave paintings to contemporary street art.ย
๐ถ Greenware burial figure of a dog, 900 CE, Yue kiln sites, China. Stoneware with green glaze. EA1956.370
Dogs and humans have shared a connection for a very long time โ evidence suggests that the domestication of dogs by hunter-gatherers took place as early as 30,000 years ago.
๐ถ Two puppies at play, 1910, designed by Kลga Iijima (1829โ1900). Nishiki-e (full colour) woodblock print, with bokashi (tonal gradation). EA1989.172
Today, the global dog population is estimated to be around 900 million, 13 million of which are pets here in the UK.
๐ถ The left Foot of the second Shepherd from the left in the Adoration of the Shepherds Tapestry, and the Forelegs and Paws of the Dog, c. 1520โ30, by Workshop of Tommaso Vincidor di Andrea (1493โ1536). Brush in opaque watercolour, over black chalk, on laid paper. WA1846.239
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