Paintings by Yuka Hiiragi for the cozyca products 2023 ‘day and night’ calendar
Masao Yamamoto, Bonsai Trees
Agnes Giberne
1898
Tadanori Yokoo, drawings for Genka (“Illusory Flowers”), by Harumi Setouchi, 1974
Seiichi Hayashi
The British monarchy was central to the establishment, expansion, and maintenance of the British empire and the transatlantic slave trade. The declaration of English empire was first made by Henry VIII in 1532. Elizabeth I granted a royal charter (an instrument of incorporation) to Sir John Hawkins, widely considered one of the first English traders to profit from the slave trade. She also granted a charter to the British East India Company in 1600.
After Elizabeth’s death, Charles II formed the Royal African Company in 1660, led by the Duke of York (later James II), which extracted goods such as gold and ivory from the Gold Coast, and transported over 3,000 Africans to Barbados. Many of these people had the initials “DY” burned into their skin to signify their belonging to the Duke of York. Both men invested private funds in the company.
Queen Victoria assumed the title of Empress of India in 1877, and by 1920 the empire was 13.71 million square miles. The British monarch’s global significance and power stemmed directly from the enslavement of people of colour.
Josef Albers
Mark Rothko, Untitled, 1968, Acrylic on paper mounted on hardboard.
© Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko_DACS 2016
G. MacKenzie Bacon, On the writing of the insane, 1870
Adolf Böhm, Cloud and Landscape illustrations for Ver Sacrum Magazine, 1998-1902
Vienna
Moichi Umemura, from JCA Annual 6 (1985)

































































