Previous Posts: March 2025

Francesco Guarino Annunciation Conserved

March 14 2025

Image of Francesco Guarino Annunciation Conserved

Picture: positanonews.it

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from Italy that Francesco Guarino's Annunciation, which usually hangs in Chiesa di Santa Maria di Costantinopoli in Naples, has been conserved. Painted in 1654, and recently conserved by Gianfranco Zarrillo, the work will be on display in the church for the public from tomorrow onwards.

Upcoming: Renaissance Jewellery at the Fondation Bemberg

March 14 2025

Image of Upcoming: Renaissance Jewellery at the Fondation Bemberg

Picture: fondation-bemberg.fr

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Fondation Bemberg in Toulouse will be opening a new exhibition dedicated to Renaissance Jewellery next month (spotted via @gazettedrouot). The show is the first on the subject in 40 years since the last held at the V&A in London back in the 1980s.

It will run from 4th April until 27th July 2025.

Have you spotted these 8 works by female artists?

March 14 2025

Image of Have you spotted these 8 works by female artists?

Picture: codart.nl

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

CODART (the international network of curators of Dutch and Flemish art) has shared news that The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) in Washington D.C. and the Museum of Fine Arts (MSK) in Ghent are searching for 8 works by female artists which they'd rather like to have in an upcoming exhibition. This includes pictures by Anna Maria Janssens, Anna Francisca de Bruyns, Louise Hollandine von der Pfalz, Maria Theresia van Thielen (pictured) and Catharina Ykens. Click on the link above to find out more.

Lecture on Art and Material Cultures of Britain at UCL

March 14 2025

Image of Lecture on Art and Material Cultures of Britain at UCL

Picture: ucl.ac.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

University College London (UCL) are hiring a Lecturer / Associate Professor in Art and Material Cultures of Britain, c.1650-1900.

According to the job description:

UCL History of Art is seeking to appoint a full-time Lecturer (Grade 8) or Associate Professor (Grade 9) specialising in British art and material culture in its global and colonial contexts, c. 1650-1900. UCL History of Art has a long, distinguished engagement with the politics and aesthetics of British art and empire, as well as histories and theories of material culture, broadly understood. The successful appointee will have a relevant PhD and a track record of publications and research excellence in their field. The position will begin on 1 September 2025.

The job comes with an annual salary between £66,711 – £72,370 and applications must be in by 22nd April 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

Château de Versailles's Recently Acquired Louis XV Pastel Redisplayed

March 14 2025

Image of Château de Versailles's Recently Acquired Louis XV Pastel Redisplayed

Picture: Château de Versailles

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Château de Versailles have announced their redisplay of their recently acquired pastel portrait of Louix XV by Rosalba Carriera. The work was acquired in 2024, thanks to the patronage of Hubert and Mireille Goldschmidt, and is now featured in a special display in the former apartments of Madame de Maintenon.

FRATELLO SOLE, SORELLA LUNA: Nature in Art, from Fra Angelico to Corot

March 14 2025

Image of FRATELLO SOLE, SORELLA LUNA: Nature in Art, from Fra Angelico to Corot

Picture: gallerianazionaledellumbria.it

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The National Gallery of Umbria will be opening their latest exhibition tomorrow entitled FRATELLO SOLE, SORELLA LUNA: Nature in Art, from Fra Angelico to Corot.

According to the gallery's website:

From 15 March to 15 June 2025, the National Gallery of Umbria in Perugia will be hosting the exhibition Fratello Sole, Sorella Luna. Nature in Art, from Fra Beato Angelico to Corot, on the occasion of the eighth centennial of the composition of the Canticle of the Sun by Saint Francis of Assisi. Not only one of the very first works of poetry in old Italian, it was also the first expression of a new relationship with Nature, to which the saint spoke for the first time in terms of intimacy, in an ecological ideal, in the etymological sense of the term, that was to exert an incredible influence on art from the thirteenth century onwards. [...]

[...] the exhibition will present more than eighty works, comprising paintings, drawings, etchings, sculptures and printed volumes by some of the most famous artists from Italian and European art history, such as Pisanello, Stefano da Verona, Paolo Uccello, Jan van Eyck, Fra Angelico, Piero della Francesca, Antonello da Messina, Leonardo da Vinci, Leon Battista Alberti, Albrecht Dürer, Lorenzo Lotto, Dosso Dossi, Giambologna, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Domenichino, Annibale Carracci, Nicolas Poussin, Salvator Rosa, Giambattista Piranesi, Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot and many more [...]

Curate British Art at Tate!

March 14 2025

Image of Curate British Art at Tate!

Picture: tate.org.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Tate are currently hiring a Curator British Art, 1730-1830 (fixed 7-month contract).

According to the job description:

We are looking for an experienced curator with a focus on the long eighteenth century. This temporary role will see you will work within the Historic British Art team at Tate Britain, reporting to the Manton Senior Curator. This varied role will see you use and share your expertise of the period and project management skills to develop and oversee programmed exhibitions and collection displays. The role will also entail researching and writing texts for Tate's website and supporting the activities of the Historic British team more widely.

You will undertake these activities in alignment with Tate's priorities, including those concerning our audiences, our environmental impact, and our staff values (to be open, bold, rigorous and kind).

The job comes with a salary of £40,717 and applications must be in by 23rd March 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

TEFAF 2025 Open!

March 14 2025

Video: Chapeau Magazine

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

TEFAF 2025 (The European Fine Art Foundation) in Maastricht officially opens to the public tomorrow. There have already been lots of posts on social media with some of the highlights from the top art dealers in the world. Museums have been buying up quite a lot in the past few years, so let's see if any news emerges soon!

The fair will run until 20th March 2025.

Apologies...

March 13 2025

Image of Apologies...

Picture: AB

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Apologies for the slow service this week. It has been rather busy with various projects, including presenting tours of the Old Masters collection at Burghley House yesterday for the Master's Degree students at the Sotheby's Institute. In fact, I was very lucky that the curators there were kind enough to bring down this rather beautiful Joan Carlile from the family's private quarters for us to look at. I think it is one of her most extravagant portraits, laden with pearls, a copper coloured dress (Joan had a penchant for white ones it appears), an ornamental fountain and other details that aren't present in many of her other known works. It was a real joy to see it in the flesh.

Upcoming Release: Lady Charlotte Schreiber, Extraordinary Art Collector

March 10 2025

Image of Upcoming Release: Lady Charlotte Schreiber, Extraordinary Art Collector

Picture: Lund Humphries

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The publishers Lund Humphries will be releasing a rather interesting new book by Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth on the collector Lady Schreiber in September 2025.

According to the publisher's website:

This book emphasises Lady Charlotte Schreiber (1812-1895) — also known as Lady Charlotte Guest, née Bertie — as one of the most significant women in the history of collecting. An extraordinary collector, historian and philanthropist, Charlotte subverted gendered norms and challenged Victorian conventions. This new study establishes Charlotte’s contribution to ceramic history and cultural education, and demonstrates her influential role in transnational artistic networks.

Charting Charlotte’s eventful life, McCaffrey-Howarth focuses on her identity as a renowned connoisseur, whose donation of thousands of objects to the Victoria & Albert Museum and the British Museum marked a pioneering move for a female benefactor. Lady Charlotte Schreiber, Extraordinary Art Collector presents unique insight into the social and cultural world of Victorian England and the role of women within this.

Clara Peeters to headline Koller sale

March 10 2025

Image of Clara Peeters to headline Koller sale

Picture: Koller

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A still life with fish by Clara Peeters is one of the top lots in the upcoming Koller auction in Zurich later this month. Notably, the National Gallery of Denmark purchased the most recent example the Swiss auction house offered last year. The fish (a slightly trickier subject commercially) will be carrying an estimate of 70,000 - 100,000 CHF on 28th March 2025.

Seville Cathedral loaned Botticelli

March 10 2025

Image of Seville Cathedral loaned Botticelli

Picture: musee-jacquemart-andre.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from Spain that Seville Cathedral has been loaned a Botticelli from the Musée Jacquemart-André in Paris, due to their Artemisia Gentileschi being sent for an exhibition in the French capital. Famously, the attribution of the Paris Flight into Egypt had been doubted for a long time until the painting's condition (as it was transferred from panel to canvas) was fully understood.

The painting will be on loan there until 3rd August 2025.

The Leiden Collection on loan to H'ART Museum

March 10 2025

Image of The Leiden Collection on loan to H'ART Museum

Picture: H'ART Museum

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The H'ART Museum in Amsterdam (formerly known as the Hermitage Amsterdam) will be displaying 75 works on loan from the Leiden Collection from next month onwards.

According to the museum's website:

To celebrate the city’s 750th birthday, eighteen works by Rembrandt – seventeen paintings and one drawing – are shown together in Amsterdam for the first time.

Other renowned artists in the exhibition include Frans Hals, Jan Steen, Ferdinand Bol, Gerard Dou, Frans van Mieris and Maria Schalcken. The cherry on top is a remarkable painting by Johannes Vermeer, restored especially for this occasion. Together, these influential artists paint a vivid picture of daily life in the Netherlands in the 17th century.

Showing off your wealth, strengthening your reputation with a self-portrait, growing old and wrinkled, or indulging in food, drink, literature and music: in 75 artworks, From Rembrandt to Vermeer sketches urban life in all its facets. People are at the heart of these paintings: both young and old, rich and poor, beautiful and ugly.

The show will run from 9th April until 24th August 2025.

Michelangelo's Tomb Conserved

March 8 2025

Video: tianimu on YouTube

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from Florence that Michelangelo's freshly conserved Tomb in the basilica of Santa Croce in Florence has been presented to the public. The 100,000 EUR project, completed to mark the artist's 550th birthday, was conducted by Opificio delle Pietre Dure (Factory of the Hard Stones).

As I'm unable to share photos (click on the link above to see more), instead I thought I would share the late Brian Sewell's reflection on the monument from one of his television series.

Possible Lady Jane Grey Portrait on loan to Wrest Park

March 7 2025

Image of Possible Lady Jane Grey Portrait on loan to Wrest Park

Picture: English Heritage via news.artnet.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A sixteenth century portrait which may depict the famous 'nine days Queen' Lady Jane Grey has been loaned to Wrest Park, an historic property in Bedfordshire run by English Heritage. The loan, from a private collection, is accompanied by interpretation regarding a recent research and conservation project on the picture.

Although the articles linked above make claims that the painting, and its dating, is a new discovery of sort, Bendor has published his catalogue entry on 'X' for the picture from a 2007 exhibition which contained the same arguments backed up with dendrochronology undertaken all those years ago.

The painting will be on display from today.

Upcoming: Artemisia - Heroine of Art

March 7 2025

Image of Upcoming: Artemisia - Heroine of Art

Picture: Musée Jacquemart-André

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Musée Jacquemart-André in Paris will be opening their latest temporary exhibition on the 19th March 2025 entitled Artemisia - Heroine of Art.

According to their website:

The Musée Jacquemart-André will be honouring the Roman artist Artemisia Gentileschi (1593 - circa 1656). As one of the rare female artists of the modern era to have achieved international fame during her lifetime and to have been able to make a living from her painting, this Caravaggesque painter had an extraordinary destiny. Featuring some forty paintings, ranging from the artist’s recognised masterpieces to canvases of recent attribution, as well as paintings rarely shown outside their usual place of conservation, this exhibition highlights Artemisia Gentileschi’s role in the history of 17th century art.

The exhibition aims to demonstrate the profound originality of her work, career and identity, which remain a source of inspiration and fascination to this day. Artemisia’s story spans the centuries, and the reading we can make of her work – a reflection of her experience and resilience – is timeless and universal.

Rediscovered Mathieu Le Nain Coming Up in France

March 7 2025

Image of Rediscovered Mathieu Le Nain Coming Up in France

Picture: Euvrard & Fabre

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

La Gazette Drouot has drawn attention to this rather curious and rare rediscovered Madonna and Child by Mathieu Le Nain (1607- 1677) which is coming up at Euvrard & Fabre later this month. The picture has been compared to other such rare examples that survive in various museums and even appears to have been painted over a portrait by the artist (for images click here).

Leonardo – Dürer: Renaissance Master Drawings on Colored Ground

March 7 2025

Image of Leonardo – Dürer: Renaissance Master Drawings on Colored Ground

Picture: albertina.at

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Albertina in Vienna will be opened their latest exhibition today entitled Leonardo – Dürer: Renaissance Master Drawings on Colored Ground.

According to their website:

In this exhibition 26 drawings by Albrecht Dürer meet as many works by Leonardo da Vinci. In addition to works by Leonardo and Dürer, the exhibition presents top-class works by Raphael, Titian, Albrecht Altdorfer, Hans Baldung Grien, Hans Holbein the Elder and other outstanding Renaissance masters. The starting point for the extensive show is the museum's own collection: around two thirds of the masterpieces on display come from the ALBERTINA Museum. [...]

The exhibition offers a unique opportunity to discover this virtuoso technique with top-class works from the museum's own collection as well as important international loans from the Royal Collection Trust Windsor Castle, the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum New York, the Uffizi in Florence, the Kupferstichkabinett Berlin, the British Museum and numerous other international collections.

The show will run until 9th June 2025.

Rubens' Martyrdom of St Andrew on Display at the Prado

March 7 2025

Video: Fundación Carlos de Amberes

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Rubens' monumental Martyrdom of St Andrew has been loaned to the Prado in Madrid whilst the Fundación Carlos de Amberes, its usual home, is undergoing renovation works. Here's a video of the art handlers preparing the work to be shipped (including the painting's enormous crate).

Tudor Portrait rediscovered on 'X' to be redisplayed in Museum

March 7 2025

Image of Tudor Portrait rediscovered on 'X' to be redisplayed in Museum

Picture: Warwickshire County Council

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A small plug that I'm helping the Warwickshire Museum Services fundraise for the conservation and redisplay of Ralph Sheldon's Lost Portrait of Henry VIII, which I accidentally rediscovered on social media last summer. Alongside repairs to the oak panel, frame, followed by reglazing, the painting will have its rather clumsy and discoloured retouchings removed and replaced to allow the obvious quality of the picture to shine through.

Due to the fact that funds are being raised through the Warwickshire County Council, it is not possible to set up a 'go-fund-me' style page alas (more details of how to get in touch to donate via the link above). Any donations are gratefully received as ever!

____________

As an aside, do get in touch if you ever hear of any similar fundraising projects that are worth posting here on AHN.

Update - Here's the BBC's article on the fundraising campaign.

Update 2 - Here's an interview I gave for BBC Midlands Today on the painting, including pointing out some interesting pentimenti etc.

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