![]() Sometimes it's better to get one this way and buy your games or accessories separately if there are any considerable deals. Just make sure you don't pay any more than the US MSRP of $299 and the UK RRP of £259 - even if there's a stock shortage again. The comparison chart below shows all the cheapest prices for a Nintendo Switch console by itself. Today's best Nintendo Switch console deals Whichever Nintendo console you're after, you'll find all of today's best prices and deals below. Check them all out below, including the option to add the likes of Minecraft, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe or Animal Crossing New Horizons for free – or at a fraction of the usual cost. However, there's a strong variety of bundles in the UK that feature many of the best Nintendo Switch games. Apart from that, your best option is to buy a Switch and pick up your extras separately. We've spotted that the $299.99 bundle for Black Friday is back on sale at Amazon - just don't expect it to remain available for long. In the US, there are limited deals or bundles available. Each presentation is accompanied by a Triton ‘cahier’ containing pieces written by several authors.We saw some brilliant Nintendo Switch bundles this Black Friday, so the quality has dropped a little now those end-of-year sales are over. Works from both collections are therefore combined in this series of presentations. The Triton Foundation has built up a private collection featuring masterpieces from the period 1860-1970, which in many ways ties in perfectly with the Gemeentemuseum’s collection. The common element in all the works on display is the sudden switch that occurs in the viewer’s perception as reality proves to be illusion or illusion becomes reality. Each of them explores the dividing line between image and reality in his own way. Alongside these works by Moore and Cézanne, the exhibition also includes work by such major figures as Balthus, Grosz, Klee, Ernst, Fontana, Klein, Kelly, Stella, Baselitz and Van Golden. In this instance, therefore, something initially perceived purely as a visual image proves within a few seconds to be a record of a genuine historical event. Moving closer, you start to distinguish human forms and you gradually realise that the lines represent the walls of the London underground and that the sketch is the artist’s impression of an underground station serving as an air raid shelter during WW II. From a distance, these drawings appear to be no more than a pattern of flowing lines. Henry Moore adopts a very different approach in his rarely exhibited ‘Shelter Drawings’. As you get closer to the drawing, however, it quickly becomes clear that the leaves are simply an illusion created with a few casual lines. For a moment, you really think that you are seeing real leaves. Around this time, Cézanne produced an extraordinary drawing depicting deep green leaves with what appears from a distance to be complete accuracy in every detail. They were amazingly ingenious in the way they confronted viewers with their own capacity to be deceived. In the 1950s and ’60s, it became the fashion among artists to play with this phenomenon. Nevertheless, artists are sometimes able to create so convincing an illusion that the viewer may be misled to the point that – just for a moment – he confuses image and reality. However realistic the representation of – for example – an oak tree, it will never be anything more than a pale reflection of an actual tree. It is the third in the current series of presentations of works from the Triton Collection being organised by the Gemeentemuseum. ![]() This exhibition in the Triton Room reveals the inventive way in which artists like Balthus, Braque, Cézanne, Ernst, Fontana and Klein explored the relationship between illusion and reality in the 1950s and ’60s. ![]()
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