Art History

  • Mary Cassatt (1844-1926)

    Mary Cassatt (1844-1926)

    Happy 176th birthday Mary Cassatt, a fascinating female artist! I’m celebrating her life and work in today’s post. read more

  • Rosalba Carriera (1673-1757)

    Rosalba Carriera (1673-1757)

    A Muse, Rosalba Carriera, mid-1720s, pastel on laid blue paper (Getty Museum, 2003.17) Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program. On Monday 12th June 1741, Henrietta Fermor, Countess of Pomfret, was exploring Venice with her travel companions. She had been on a Grand Tour with her husband and two of her daughters since read more

  • A Visit to the Pompidou: The Day I Fell in Love with Matisse

    A Visit to the Pompidou: The Day I Fell in Love with Matisse

    Last week I got to banish the January blues and Wednesday “hump day” in one fell swoop with a day trip to Paris with my sister. We got a nice and early Eurostar from London, ate croissants on the way there (to get us in the right mood of course!) and had a whirlwind day read more

  • Cabinets of Curiosity, Salons and the Era of Annual Exhibitions at Montréal Museum of Fine Arts

    Cabinets of Curiosity, Salons and the Era of Annual Exhibitions at Montréal Museum of Fine Arts

    I’ve recently got back from a two-week whirlwind trip to Canada so I think my November and December posts are going to be full of some of my favourite places we visited: starting with my first, which was the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts. We’d been in Montréal approximately half an hour when we arrived read more

  • Lines of Thought

    Lines of Thought

    Things have been really exciting on the University of Hull campus since January 3rd, as City of Culture started with welcoming the Lines of Thought travelling exhibition from the British Museum. read more

  • How to Reimagine Botticelli

    How to Reimagine Botticelli

    Botticelli is an artist whose reputation has been in flux ever since his work became eclipsed by High Renaissance masters, with this exhibition, the biggest of Botticelli in Britain since 1930, aiming to show how his work has permeated popular culture. read more

  • An Afternoon in “the Sistine Chapel of Impessionism”

    An Afternoon in “the Sistine Chapel of Impessionism”

    Few places come close to the romance of Paris, and Monet’s beautiful Nymphéas, or Water Lilies, in the Musée de l’Orangerie are a must visit to see the his genius. read more

  • An Allegory of Love and Time? Bronzino, Venus and Cupid

    An Allegory of Love and Time? Bronzino, Venus and Cupid

    So as it is nearly Valentine’s Day, and I haven’t posted anything in a while, I thought I’d post something about a painting I really love – which just so happens to be about love itself. It is also in my favourite place of all time, the National Gallery, which possibly contributes to why I read more

  • Titian and the Painted Poetry for Philip II

    Titian and the Painted Poetry for Philip II

    The Museo del Prado has some beautiful Renaissance paintings, but for me, the jewel in their crown are the beautiful paintings by Titian for his Poesie series for Philip II of Spain. read more

  • Caravaggio and the God of Wine

    Caravaggio and the God of Wine

    Where does Caravaggio – the original cultural figure who was mad, bad and dangerous to know – fit into the Baroque? read more

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