Previous Posts: May 2024

National Trust painting turns out to be a print

May 10 2024

Image of National Trust painting turns out to be a print

Picture: nationaltrustcollections.org.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The BBC have reported on news that The National Trust have discovered that a painting, previous catalogued as a work on paper, is in fact a print. The work of art at Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk was previously believed to be a straightforward copy of a Van Dyck executed in oil on paper. This was until it was sent away for conservation and its true identity and author was revealed.

According to the press release:

It was discovered the reproduction of the Three Eldest Children of Charles I was in fact a print by Jacob Christoff Le Blon, who first created the three-colour printing process.

"Only three Le Blon prints of it are known to survive, so to have discovered a fourth is really exciting," said National Trust curator Jane Eade. [...]

He was the first to create a three-colour printing process – the forerunner of the CMYK colour printing used today, external.

The revolutionary method used mezzotint, a monochrome printmaking process, with separate plates inked in blue, yellow and red, and superimposed on one another in order to create variable depth of hue.

New Release: Picturing the Artist’s Studio

May 10 2024

Image of New Release: Picturing the Artist’s Studio

Picture: lundhumphries.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Publishers Lund Humphries released the following book last week. Picturing the Artist's Studio: From Delacroix to Picasso examines the role of the artist's studio during the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and has been written by Heather McPherson.

According to the book's blurb:

This richly diverse study examines the evolving image and contested status of the artist in late nineteenth-century France through the lens of the artist’s studio, which became a central theme in art and literature, stretching from Balzac to Proust and from Corot to Picasso. The studio was a hybrid space that blurred the distinctions between public and private, professional and domestic, artistic production and display. Besides a material space for art making, the studio was a social and commercial nexus and an extension of the artist’s persona. Drawing on paintings, prints, photographs, and primary sources ranging from memoirs to popular journals, this book sheds new light on the modern studio’s heightened significance as a laboratory of creative struggle and a platform for self-expression and the staging of artistic identity. It elucidates how the concept of the studio as a creative space emblematic of artistic identity, first theorized in the Renaissance, was reinvented and popularized after mid-century as debates about the role of art and the status of the artist intensified. Breaking new ground in focusing on the intersecting issues of artistic identity and the evolving role of the studio as creative arena, social and commercial locus, and informal exhibition space, McPherson allows us to participate in the popular ritual of visiting the artist’s studio.

Female Artists Documentary on ARTE

May 10 2024

Video: ARTE.FR

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The European Art broadcaster ARTE have produced the following free documentary on Female Artists. In particular, the program follows the lives of Sofonisba Anguissola, Judith Leyster, Angelica Kauffmann and Marie-Guillemine Benoist. It will be available to watch until 21st May 2024.

Recent Release: Kunsthandel Katz

May 10 2024

Image of Recent Release: Kunsthandel Katz

Picture: bol.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Dutch language readers have been treated to a new book which was released last month entitled Kunsthandel Katz: Een dynastie van joodse kunsthandelaren 1876-1995. Recognised as one of the most prominent art dealers of the twentieth century, this book by Peter Hellema & Joop Marsman charts the history of the family through WWII and beyond. Click on the link above to view a free preview from the publisher.

See Restoration of Masaccio on Scaffold

May 10 2024

Image of See Restoration of Masaccio on Scaffold

Picture: smn.it

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Visitors to the Florentine Church of Santa Maria Novella will be able to glimpse at Masaccio's The Holy Trinity up-close during the next few weeks. This has been made possible due to a special scaffold having been erected for a conservation project on the wall painting. It will cost a mere €1.50 (on top of your entrance ticket) to see the work up close!

The Musée Fabre is Hiring!

May 10 2024

Image of The Musée Fabre is Hiring!

Picture: Musée Fabre

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Musée Fabre in Montpellier is looking for a new Director.

Responsibilities will include looking after its collection of over 10,000 objects which are visited by 250,000 people per year. The new Director will also be presiding over the museum's bicentenaries in 2025 and 2028 respectively.

Applications must be in by 4th August 2024 and no salary has been published online.

Good luck if you're applying!

Courbet's "l'Origine du monde" Tagged in Orange

May 9 2024

Video: France 3 Grand Est

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from France that Gustave Courbet "l'Origine du monde" was target by protestors at the Centre Pompidou-Metz over the weekend and 'tagged' in orange paint with the 'Me Too' slogan.

According to Artnews.com article linked above:

This is not the first feminist protest staged by De Robertis at a museum, or even the first targeting of Courbet. In 2014 the artist exposed her vulva in front of Origin of the World at the Musée d’Orsay, and two years later, she returned there to strip off her clothes—save for a portable video camera tied around her neck—and lie on the floor in front of Edouard Manet’s nude painting Olympia (1863). The latter protest led to a charge of public indecency and nearly two days detained in a jail cell.

Painting with Bacteria

May 9 2024

Video: The University of St. Thomas, Minnesota

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

It seems that the future of scientific painting has arrived. The Art History and Biology departments at The University of St. Thomas, Minnesota, have teamed up to allow students to create artworks using bacteria. The process involves pigmented bacteria being painted onto petri dishes.

According to the University's website:

“We want to make sure that people don’t just think about art as decoration,” [Dr. Heather] Shirey explained. “It can create conversations between our disciplines, microbiology and art history, and engage people to think about art and science from interdisciplinary perspectives.”

Furthermore, Shirey wanted to collaborate with [Dr. Joanna] Klein to encourage students with an art history background to better embrace science, in addition, to enlighten students in STEM who may lack an appreciation for art history. By bringing the two disciplines together, Shirey wanted to make it accessible for students of both backgrounds.

AI can Identify Fakes on Ebay, says Scientists!

May 9 2024

Image of AI can Identify Fakes on Ebay, says Scientists!

Picture: The Guardian

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

An intriguing article came out this week explaining that 'authentication specialists' using AI technology have been able to sniff out 40 counterfeit paintings on Ebay. This include a Forest With a Stream, purportedly by Monet, being offered on the website for $599,000.

According to the article in The Guardian:

Dr Carina Popovici, a specialist in authenticating artwork, said she applied cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) technology to pictures advertised on the online platform and was shocked to discover that many had a “high probability” of being “not authentic”. [...]

“We looked today and we downloaded some images, and there were fakes all over the place. Everything that we have analysed turns out to be not real art, a negative probability with 95% or so. I’m sure that this is just the tip of the iceberg.”

____________

I'm yet to hear of any serious collector of Monet buying pictures from Ebay, so I'm not quite sure what the point is of training a computer telling us things that any reasonable person can judge using their eyes. But, as the saying goes, caveat emptor.

Historic Royal Palaces are Hiring!

May 9 2024

Image of Historic Royal Palaces are Hiring!

Picture: HRP

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Historical Royal Palaces in the UK are hiring an Archivist and Curator of the Architectural Drawings Collection.

According to the job description:

We are seeking a full time Archivist and Curator of the Architectural Drawings Collection to join a team of curators and archivists to deliver and develop first class architectural drawings and archives care, research and services both externally and internally at Historic Royal Palaces. This role works collaboratively with colleagues across Historic Royal Palaces, to help research and share the story of our six palaces and the people whose lives helped shape them. The role's two focuses are the collection of 30,000 architectural drawing based at Tower of London, and the archives and records of the Curators team and other departments.

The job comes with an annual salary of £45,835 and applications must be in by 19th May 2024.

Good luck if you're applying!

Sotheby's New York May Sale

May 9 2024

Image of Sotheby's New York May Sale

Picture: Sotheby's

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Sotheby's New York upcoming May Master Paintings Sale has been published online. The auction will take place on 22nd May 2024.

Among the top lots are a Pieter Brueghel the Younger Wedding Dance, a set of four Sebastien Vrancx paintings depicting the Parable of the Prodigal Son, a View of the Doge's Place by Michele Marieschi, a View of the Colosseum by Panini, and a fine portrait by George Romney (pictured).

Rediscovered Caravaggio Conserved and Hung in Prado

May 9 2024

Image of Rediscovered Caravaggio Conserved and Hung in Prado

Picture: apnews

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Exciting news broke earlier this week that the rediscovered Caravaggio that reappeared back in 2021 has been conserved and hung in the Prado Museum in Madrid. The loan of the painting has been handled by Colnaghi, whilst the restoration was undertaken by Andrea Cipriani 'and his team in collaboration with two London dealers, Filippo Benappi of Benappi Fine Art and Andrea Lullo of Lullo Pampoulides gallery.'

The painting, alongside a special new study by several academics on the artist and period, will be on display until October 2024.

Getty Acquire 17 Drawings

May 3 2024

Image of Getty Acquire 17 Drawings

Picture: Getty Museum

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The J. Paul Getty Muesum in Los Angeles has announced its acquisition of 17 drawings, including works by Eva Gonzalès, Edgar Degas, Guercino (pictured), Joseph Wright of Derby, Luca Cambiaso, Giovanni Boldini, and Odilon Redon.

According to the museum's press release announcing the news:

"The addition of these 17 highly important sheets by major artists of the 16th to 20th centuries will greatly enrich the status and quality of our already renowned collection of drawings,” says Timothy Potts, Maria Hummer-Tuttle and Robert Tuttle Director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “To comment on just one of these outstanding works, the pastel by the French Impressionist Eva Gonzalès, The Maid of Honor (La Demoiselle d’honneur), is her most celebrated work and a major addition to our holdings by women artists. This drawing received rave reviews at the 1880 Paris Salon where her mentor, Edouard Manet, praised her for this success. Sadly, her career was short-lived, as she passed away just three years later."

Le tableau volé

May 2 2024

Video: PyramideDistrib

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A new French film was released yesterday entitled Le tableau volé. The film concerns the art specialist André Masson, an employee of the amusingly named auction house Scottie’s, who rediscovers a lost work by Egon Schiele.

Mary Beale on Pall Mall

May 2 2024

Image of Mary Beale on Pall Mall

Picture: AB

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A brief post to express enthusiasm for Philip Mould & Co.'s recently opened exhibition Fruit of Friendship: Portraits by Mary Beale. I had the chance to visit yesterday and was mightily inspired by the pictures on display. This is an unrivalled experience to get up close to view some very beautiful works, alongside several very intriguing rediscoveries and surprises.

This free show will run until 19th July 2024, here are some free audio guides for those unable to make it!

The University of Glasgow are Hiring!

May 2 2024

Image of The University of Glasgow are Hiring!

Picture: University of Glasgow

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The University of Glasgow are hiring a Lecturer in History of Art.

According to the job description:

The University of Glasgow is seeking to appoint a Lecturer in History Art (LTS track) within the School of School of Culture & Creative Arts. The successful candidate will contribute to the delivery of an excellent student experience by contributing to teaching, assessment and administration processes associated with undergraduate and postgraduate programmes and to undertake scholarship to enhance learning and teaching in the School of Culture & Creative Arts – History of Art.

The job comes with an annual salary of £39,347 to £44,263 and applications must be in by 3rd May 2024 (tomorrow!).

Good luck if you're applying!

Michelangelo at The British Museum

May 2 2024

Video: The British Museum

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The British Museum's latest drawings exhibition Michelangelo: The Last Decades opens today. Here's a new video by curator Sarah Vowles explaining why the artist's final years are amongst the most interesting of his career.

Lavinia Fontana acquired by the Legion of Honor Museum

May 1 2024

Image of Lavinia Fontana acquired by the Legion of Honor Museum

Picture: news.artnet.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News has broken that the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco has acquired Lavinia Fontana's Portrait of Bianca degli Utili Maselli and Her Children. Regular auction watchers will remember that this painting sold at Sotheby's New York back in 2012 for $602,500. It would be fair to suggest that the value of works by female artists on this scale, and with this much swagger, has skyrocketed since 2012.

According to the article linked above:

For the first time four centuries, the work will be on public view, according to Legion of Honor director and CEO Thomas P. Campbell. The work will hang “alongside masterpieces by El Greco, Titian, Moroni, and Bronzino,” he noted over email, and “significantly expand the narrative that visitors encounter in our Renaissance galleries.” The portrait is now the museum’s oldest work by a female artist, second only to Marie-Guillemine Benoist’s famed painting Psyche Bidding Her Family Farewell (1791).

The museum has sought to add exceptional paintings by women to their collection for some time now. “When you bring works of art attributed to women into a collection where the level of quality is already very high,” curator Emily Beeny mused over the phone, “it’s important that those works be of commensurate quality so that you don’t invite invidious comparison.”

The Holburne Museum are Hiring!

May 1 2024

Image of The Holburne Museum are Hiring!

Picture: Holburne Museum

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Holburne Museum in Bath are hiring an Assistant Curator.

According to the job description:

We are looking for an Assistant Curator to join our small curatorial team to help develop and deliver our busy programme of exhibitions encompassing historic, modern and contemporary fine and decorative arts, to care for and develop our expanding collection, and to contribute to all other aspects of the Holburne’s life. With our programme, collection and site expanding into new areas, this is an exciting time to join Holburne.

The job comes with a salary of £24,750 per annum and applications must be in by 27th May 2024.

Good luck if you're applying!

Paul Signac Swimming Shorts for €260

May 1 2024

Image of Paul Signac Swimming Shorts for €260

Picture: VILEBREQUIN

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

As AHN likes to keep its readers up to date with the latest art history paraphernalia, here's an article from Women's Wear Daily regarding a new collaboration between the luxury brand Vilebrequin and Charlotte Hellman Cachin, the great-granddaughter of French Neo-Impressionist painter Paul Signac. The article concerns the release of a new set of swimming shorts featuring Signac paintings of Saint-Tropez from the Signac Archives.

According to the article:

Signac was a keen sailor, arriving in Saint-Tropez on his boat Olympia. “It made total sense to have a swimwear line for a man who was as sporty as he was, because he loved sailing as much as he loved painting,” Cachin said.

Roland Herlory, chief executive officer of Vilebrequin, said the brand’s printers in Como, Italy, took great pains to match the colors used by Signac, whose technique consists of breaking down single hues into multicolored dots. The print runs along the front and back of the trunks, which are meticulously matched to ensure continuity, while tonal stitching further contributes to the seamless effect.

“When you work with a painter, an artist, you have such a responsibility toward the work that you always push your know-how and your standards a step further,” Herlory said. “You see in the eyes of the printers the excitement of the challenge.”

The shorts are on sale for €260 per pair.

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