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During class, third-grader Charles needs to use the bathroom. His teacher, Miss Bird, humiliates him by publicly clarifying whether he needs to urinate, and allows him to leave. Entering the bathroom and looking around the corner, Charles sees a tiger lying on the floor. He stands at the door, too afraid to enter.
On a branch of a green pine tree sits a magpie and the tiger (or leopard), with a humorous expression, looks up at the bird. The tiger in "Jakhodo" does not look anything like a strong creature with power and authority. Kkachi horangi, paintings depicting magpies and tigers, was a prominent motif in the minhwa folk art of the Joseon period.
Tiger bone glue is the prevailing tiger product purchased for medicinal purposes in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. [188] "Tiger farm" facilities in China and Southeast Asia breed tigers for their parts, but these appear to make the threat to wild populations worse by increasing the demand for tiger products. [189]
Thornton Dial (28 September 1928 – 25 January 2016) was a pioneering American artist who came to prominence in the late 1980s. Dial's body of work exhibits formal variety through expressive, densely composed assemblages of found materials, often executed on a monumental scale.
The centerpiece is the tiger, with an arc-shaped body from the eyes, the torso, the hind limbs and tail that corresponds to the Dragon Fusuma on the opposite side of the room. [3] Depicted as fierce, the tiger is also anthropomorphized and also softened with more kitten-like features. It is likely that Rosetsu modelled his tiger on those on ...
Tigger is a fictional character in A. A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh books and their adaptations. An anthropomorphic toy tiger, he was originally introduced in the 1928-story collection The House at Pooh Corner, the sequel to the 1926 book Winnie-the-Pooh.
Tiger in a Tropical Storm or Surprised! is an 1891 oil-on-canvas painting by Henri Rousseau. It was the first of the jungle paintings for which the artist is chiefly known. It shows a tiger, illuminated by a flash of lightning, preparing to pounce on its prey in the midst of a raging gale.
The tiger's expression has been variously described as a smile or a snarl, the tiger himself appears joyful, amused, [2] and "royally pleased with himself". [ 3 ] The signed inscription reads: "Month of the Tiger, Year of the Cock, old Manji, the old man mad about painting, at the age of ninety".