Unos cuadros con "cierta polemica".

Napoleon on Board the Bellerophon exhibited 1880 by Sir William Quiller Orchardson
La tate gallery nos dice:
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Orchardson was trained in Edinburgh, and moved to London in 1862 where he made his name as a painter of historical genre scenes. His admirers included Whistler, Sickert and Degas. He is now best known for his modern moral subjects such as The First Cloud, in the Tate Collection. This painting shows Napoleon on board HMS Bellerophon bound for St Helena, where he remained in exile until his death in 1821. The deposed Emperor stands on the deck, isolated from the group of ['naval' out] officers on the left, who watch him with curiosity as he looks out to sea, contemplating his fate.
September 2004
Pero luego tenemos este otro:

Napoleon being transferred from H.M.S. Bellerophon to H.M.S. Northumberland off Plymouth, on 7th August 1815, for his final voyage to St. Helena by Thomas Buttersworth
Si sólo hemos visto el primer cuadro es fácil creer que Napoleón viajó a Santa Elena en el Bellerophon. Por culpa de la Tate gallery tenemos a Feraud subiendose por las paredes.
Money is a sign of poverty. Iain M. Banks.
It is a black Samsonite suitcase. Do you think maybe it’s possible that the Samsonite people, in some crazy scheme to actually turn a profit, made more than one? - Greg (Gaylord) Focker.