Musidora: The Bather 'At the Doubtful Breeze Alarmed'
Musidora: The Bather 'At the Doubtful Breeze Alarmed', also known as The Bather, is a name given to four oil paintings on canvas by English artist William Etty. The paintings illustrate a scene from James Thomson's 1727 poem Summer in which a young man accidentally sees a young woman bathing naked, and is torn between his desire to look and his knowledge that he ought to look away. The scene was popular with English artists as it was one of the few legitimate pretexts to paint nudes at a time when the display and distribution of nude imagery was suppressed.
Other than minor differences in the background landscape, the four paintings are identical in composition. The first version was exhibited in 1843. Two versions are in public collections, one in Tate Britain and one in the Manchester Art Gallery; one of these was painted in 1844 and first exhibited in 1846 and the other was painted at around the same time; it is not known which is the version exhibited in 1846. A fourth version is of poorer quality and may be a later copy by a student.
From nude swim loyalists to first-timers, a record 3,000 people drop their kit and take the plunge into the River Derwent in Hobart to mark the winter solstice ... .
On the eastern side of Bristol, where the Avon winds its way into the city, sits ConhamRiver Park, an idyllic and popular bathing spot on a bend in the river ... I walked the polluted River Avon.
On the eastern side of Bristol, where the Avon winds its way into the city, sits ConhamRiver Park, an idyllic and popular bathing spot on a bend in the river ... I walked the polluted River Avon.
Locals are up in arms in Benidorm over bathers reserving prime frontline beach spots with deck chairs and umbrellas ... Here, the seats and other accessories will stay until sometime the following day, when their owners decide to hit the beach.