National Gallery
Yuletide Scenes: Piero della Francesca's NativityMonday, 21 December 2015![]() At first sight Piero della Francesca’s The Nativity appears to be a simple picture, especially when compared with more flamboyant depictions of the scene by artists such as Gentile de Fabriano, Botticelli and Rubens. Like a director staging a play... Read more... |
Goya: Visions of Flesh and BloodMonday, 30 November 2015![]() "Exhibition on Screen" is a logical extension of the recent phenomenon of screenings of live performances of opera and theatre. Initiated with the Leonardo exhibition of 2012 at London’s National Gallery, this is its third season, and the format... Read more... |
Visions of Paradise: Botticini's Palmieri Altarpiece, National GalleryTuesday, 24 November 2015![]() The strikingly architectural space that forms the upper portion of Botticini’s Palmieri altarpiece is well-suited to an entrance, forming as it does a sort of triumphal arch heralding great things beyond. And so it is that for years this painting... Read more... |
DVD: National GalleryThursday, 14 May 2015![]() A heretical thought. Films released on the big screen are designed to be devoured in one swallow. But if ever a three-hour epic was made for consumption in bite-sized chunks, it is National Gallery, Frederick Wiseman’s discreet profile of the much-... Read more... |
Inventing Impressionism, National GalleryWednesday, 04 March 2015![]() Here is an exhibition that tells us how something we now take totally for granted actually came about: how our love affair with the Impressionists was masterminded by an art dealer, Paul Durand-Ruel (1831-1922). He was a prime mover in inventing the... Read more... |
National GalleryMonday, 05 January 2015![]() The octogenarian Frederick Wiseman is a cult documentary film maker, with his own idiosyncratic and recognisable idiom. He has both vast experience and extraordinary independence. Characteristically, he makes long, prize-winning, fly-on-the-wall... Read more... |
Maggi Hambling, National GalleryFriday, 05 December 2014![]() I must admit to feeling, briefly, just a little disappointed on first sight of Maggi Hambling’s Walls of Water, nine new paintings on show at the National Gallery. Perhaps it was the evocative title, which promises high drama and instant... Read more... |
Rembrandt: The Late Works, National GalleryTuesday, 14 October 2014![]() All human life, as they say, is here: we witness displays of warmth and tenderness in virtuous matrimony; reflection and contemplation in quiet solitude. We respond to the soft seductions of the flesh in its yielding ripeness, and we feel the pathos... Read more... |
DVD: Goltzius and the Pelican CompanyMonday, 29 September 2014![]() In his director’s interview for Goltzius and the Pelican Company Peter Greenaway describes the public profiles that his films have achieved over the years, dividing them into an effective A and B list. He counts his 1982 The Draughtsman's Contract... Read more... |
Making Colour, National GalleryMonday, 30 June 2014![]() The National Gallery has a range of personas it adopts for its exhibitions, and for this one, about colour, it has deployed the po-faced, teachy one. The pompous tone is because it’s not just about art this time, there’s science in it, which makes... Read more... |
Building the Picture, National GalleryWednesday, 07 May 2014![]() Viewed through an arch designed to evoke a dimly lit chapel, Lorenzo Costa and Gianfrancesco Maineri’s The Virgin and Child with Saints, 1498-1500, is strikingly legible (pictured below right). The Virgin sits on a marble throne beneath a richly... Read more... |
Veronese: Magnificence in Renaissance Venice, National GalleryThursday, 20 March 2014![]() The National Gallery has produced a revelatory and unprecedented exhibition which shows us an array of paintings from cabinet size to mammoth by a long acknowledged star: Veronese, probably the most flamboyantly exciting artist at the heart of... Read more... |
