Archives Scrapbooks

Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V. Rinse, repeat.

Fogg Art Museum Scrapbooks, October 1943-May 1947

ARCH.2003.29, Rendition: 803741

Google Vision, unknown

AMAZON

Google Vision, unknown

Amazon

AWS Rekognition, 3.0

AMAZON

AWS Rekognition, 3.0

AMAZON

Meta, us.meta.llama4-scout-17b-instruct-v1:0

The image presents a vintage newspaper clipping from the Boston Post, dated Friday, November 1, 1946, which is affixed to an open book. The clipping features a prominent headline that reads "Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today" and includes a photograph of a sculpture titled "Amazon Ryton."

  • Newspaper Clipping:
    • Date: Friday, November 1, 1946
    • Source: Boston Post
    • Headline: Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today
    • Photograph: A sculpture titled "Amazon Ryton"
  • Book:
    • Pages: Open pages with a green cover
    • Content: The clipping is attached to the left page, while the right page remains blank
  • Additional Elements:
    • Sticker: A small sticker on the top-left corner of the clipping with the text "BOSTON NEWS CLIP" and an address
    • Tape: A piece of tape at the bottom of the clipping, holding it in place

In summary, the image showcases a vintage newspaper clipping from the Boston Post, dated November 1, 1946, which announces an exhibit at the Fine Arts Museum and features a photograph of the sculpture "Amazon Ryton." The clipping is attached to an open book with a green cover, accompanied by a sticker and tape.

Mistral, us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0

The image shows a newspaper clipping from the Boston Post, dated Friday, November 1, 1966. The headline reads "Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today." The article is written by Alice Lawton and features a photograph of an ancient Greek pottery piece titled "Amazon Rider." The article discusses an exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which includes a variety of ancient Greek pottery and sculptures. The exhibition is noted for its educational value and the rarity of some of the pieces on display.

The clipping is pasted into a scrapbook or album, with a label at the top indicating it is a "BOSTON NEWS CLIP" from the Boston Post, dated November 1, 1966. The article provides details about the exhibition, highlighting specific items such as the Amazon Rider urn and other significant pieces. It mentions that the exhibition will run daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and includes a diverse range of artifacts from different periods of Greek art.

The text also notes that the exhibition is organized by Perry T. Rathbone, the director of the Museum of Fine Arts, and includes pieces from the museum's own collection as well as loans from other institutions. The article emphasizes the historical and cultural significance of the items on display.

Anthropic, anthropic.claude-3-haiku-20240307-v1:0

The image shows a newspaper article from the Boston Post dated November 1, 1946, with the headline "Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today". The article discusses an exhibition at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts featuring a sculpture of an Amazon Ryton, described as "a cup modeled by the Greek potter Sotades, included in the exhibition, 'Animals in the Arts', opening today at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, whose courtesy it is reproduced." The article provides details about the exhibition, including that it features sculptures and other artworks depicting animals from various eras and cultures.

Anthropic, global.anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929-v1:0

This image shows a page from what appears to be a scrapbook or archive containing a newspaper clipping. The clipping is from the Boston Post, dated Friday, November 1, 1946, as indicated by both a header stamp and the newspaper's date line.

The main headline reads "Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today" and features a photograph of what's labeled as an "AMAZON RHYTON" - a cup or vessel modeled by the Greek potter Sotades, depicting a figure (likely an Amazon warrior) with a vessel or jug. The artifact is part of an exhibition called "Animals of the Arts" opening at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.

The article is written by Alice Lawton and discusses the exhibition, which appears to focus on animal representations in art across various cultures and time periods. The text is laid out in newspaper column format and continues below the image.

At the top of the page is a label reading "BOSTON NEWS CLIP" with the address "130 Tremont Street, Boston 8, Mass." and identifies the source as "Post, Boston, Mass."

The clipping is mounted on what appears to be aged, cream-colored paper within a bound volume with visible page edges on the right side.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-5-nano-2025-08-07

  • The image shows a scrapbook page with old newspaper clippings taped to it.
  • A small top clipping label at the upper left reads “BOSTON NEWS CLIP … NOV 1 1946.”
  • The main clipping has a headline: “Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today,” with a black-and-white photo of a ceramic sculpture (a horse figure in front of a tall pitcher/jug).
  • The caption under the photo mentions a piece described as “Amazon Ryton … Greek potter” and notes it’s included in the exhibition.
  • A block of text beneath the image is an article by Alice Lawton about the exhibit.
  • The page also shows several vertical tan strips of paper on the right, and the page is part of a green-covered scrapbook.

Qwen, Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-72B-Instruct

This image appears to be a newspaper clipping from the Boston Post, dated Friday, November 1, 1946. The clipping is part of a scrapbook or a collection of papers, as indicated by the surrounding pages and binding. The clipping is titled "Open Exhibit at Fine Arts Museum Today" and is written by Alice Lawton. It announces an exhibition at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts titled "Animals of the Arts."

The article describes the exhibition, which features a wide range of artworks depicting animals from prehistoric times to the 18th century. It includes sculptures, pottery, and other art objects from various cultures such as Asiatic, Egyptian, and classical. Notable pieces mentioned include two Egyptian sculptures of the goddess Sekhmet and a colossal statue of the god Amen, as well as a Greek pottery cup known as an Amazon ryton.

The article also mentions that the exhibition is complemented by carefully selected loans from other institutions, including the Fogg and Peabody Museums of Harvard and the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut. The display includes animals in various materials such as gold, silver, stone, wood, and bronze, as well as in textiles, enamels, and coins.

The clipping includes a photograph of the Amazon ryton, a cup modeled by the Greek potter Sotades. The photograph shows a detailed image of the cup, which features a figure of a woman holding a cup.

The clipping is affixed to a page with a green binding, and there are some annotations and markings on the page, including a date stamp reading "NOV 1 1946" and some handwritten notes. The overall condition of the clipping and the page suggests that it is an older document, likely from a personal collection or archive.