Category: Research

Dutch and Flemish Painting at The Nivaagaard Collection

November 28 2024

Image of Dutch and Flemish Painting at The Nivaagaard Collection

Picture: rkd.nl

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A new catalogue of the Dutch and Flemish Paintings of the Nivaagaard collection in Denmark has been published today.

According to the RKD's website:

This publication is the result of a collaborative project between The Nivaagaard Collection and the RKD, conducted from 2022 to 2024 by Jørgen Wadum and RKD curator Angela Jager. Using the latest expertise and techniques, they examined the collection of Dutch and Flemish paintings. Their research yielded new attributions, more accurate datings, extensive provenance information, and identifications of subjects. [...]

The 384-page book includes two essays and 57 catalogue entries. In the first essay, Angela Jager and Jesper Svenningsen examine the history of the collection, originally assembled as a private collection by Johannes Hage (1842-1923). Together with his best friend, Hage traveled across Europe acquiring artworks, guided by advice from experts such as Cornelis Hofstede de Groot. In the second essay, Jørgen Wadum discusses the restoration history of the paintings, highlighting Hage’s collaboration with renowned German restorer Alois Hauser, who played a crucial role in preserving the collection. 

Paul Mellon Centre Studentships

November 27 2024

Image of Paul Mellon Centre Studentships

Picture: PMC

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Paul Mellon Centre are receiving applications for their MA/MPhil Studentships for 2025. Having a brief look through the details, these must be amongst some of the most generously paid out there in the world of academia. Their Instagram account explains that they only received five (!) applications last year.

According to the PMC's website:

An annual PMC MA/MPhil Studentship will be awarded to a UK-based student who qualifies for home student status embarking on Masters-level studies in the field of British art or architectural history or British visual culture. The studentship is part of the New Narratives set of funding opportunities designed to increase the diversity of perspectives among scholars within this field.

The studentship is an award of £32,000, and is designed to cover university fees and living costs.

As well as funding, recipients of the studentship will benefit from mentorship and guidance from Centre staff, and from the Doctoral Scholars and Early Careers Fellows elected under the same scheme.

The New Narratives scheme particularly welcomes applications from those who are under-represented within the academic field of the humanities in the UK.

Applications must be in by 31st January 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

New Burlington Prize for Southern Netherlandish Art 1400-1800

November 27 2024

Image of New Burlington Prize for Southern Netherlandish Art 1400-1800

Picture: Burlington

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Burlington Magazine have instituted a new 'Prize for Research on Southern Netherlandish Art 1400-1800' in partnership with the University of Cambridge.

According to the magazine's website:

A new annual prize of £1,000 will be awarded, with publication in The Burlington Magazine’s annual issue dedicated to Northern European Art, plus a subscription to The Burlington Magazine.

We seek previously unpublished essays of 1000–1500 words from early career scholars worldwide. Preference will be given to object-related scholarship such as is published in The Burlington Magazine.

Applications must be in by 1st September 2025.

Blanche Hoschedé-Monet in the Light

November 25 2024

Image of Blanche Hoschedé-Monet in the Light

Picture: gilesltd.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A new exhibition on Claude Monet's step-daughter and later daughter-in-law Blanche Hoschedé-Monet (1865-1947) is set to open at the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art, Indiana University Bloomington, in February next year. The show will be accompanied by a very detailed and scholarly book, the first monographic publication on the artist in English.

According to the museum's website:

Recognized for her sophisticated approach to color, composition, and technique, Blanche Hoschedé-Monet (1865–1947) was part of a successful network of artists in Giverny, Rouen, and Paris during the first half of the twentieth century, although she is most often recognized for her relation to Claude Monet, her stepfather and one of France’s most famous painters. Having come of age at the center of the Impressionist movement, Hoschedé-Monet grew up surrounded by the modern masterpieces in the collection of her father, Ernest Hoschedé, who was a patron of such renowned artists as Édouard Manet, Monet, and Auguste Renoir. Her family’s move to Giverny in 1883 prompted her to take up painting in earnest. With Monet as her mentor, she developed a distinct style that favored carefully framed points of view and landscapes painted en plein air. As the first monographic exhibition of her work in the United States, Blanche Hoschedé-Monet in the Light brings together over forty paintings which attest to Hoschedé-Monet’s unique vision and ambitions as an artist in her own right. The exhibition and accompanying catalogue, with contributions by Nicolas Bondenet, Nancy Mowll Mathews, Galina Olmsted, Haley Pierce, and Philippe Piguet, constitute a definitive account of Hoschedé-Monet’s life and art.

The show will run from 14th February until 15th June 2024, and the book is due out in March.

AGO Frames Conference available online

November 22 2024

Image of AGO Frames Conference available online

Picture: ago.ca

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

In case you didn't manage to make it to the Art Gallery of Ontario's (AGO) recent two-day conference entitled Many Lives: Picture Frames in Context, the art gallery has published recordings of all the presentations for free online (click on the link to read more).

Here's the blurb explaining the purpose of the conference:

This online conference on the history and conservation of frames was co-organized by the museum’s curatorial and conservation departments to promote inter- and multi-disciplinary dialogue. The AGO is home to an important collection of historic frames, and a project is currently underway at AGO to catalogue and conserve this collection to make the collection more accessible for study and use. In light of this project, the symposium presented current research that contextualizes frames in their many incarnations, including research on frame makers, framing traditions, frames’ afterlives, frame collections, pairings of frames to paintings, artists’ frames, the commercial history of framing, and related topics.

Dutch / Flemish Witt Pictures Online!

November 20 2024

Image of Dutch / Flemish Witt Pictures Online!

Picture: Courtauld

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Exciting news to report (spotted via CODART) that the Dutch / Flemish paintings (over 351,000 images) of the Witt Library at the Courtauld Institute have been uploaded online! Hundreds of hours of happy research at our finger tips.

Sir William Pope Reidentified

November 19 2024

Image of Sir William Pope Reidentified

Picture: YCBA

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Edward Town, curator at the Yale Center for British Art, has shared some interesting new research undertaken on this very beautiful portrait by William Larkin in the YCBA's collection. Having previously thought to have been a likeness of Grey Brydges, fifth Baron Chandos, and more recently downgraded to 'Portrait of an unknown man', Town has put forward the idea that this is in fact an image of Sir William Pope, later Earl of Downe. Click on the link to read the full story.

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Exciting news too that the YCBA will be reopening to the public on 29th March 2025.

Upcoming Release: Bruegel's Three Soldiers

November 18 2024

Image of Upcoming Release: Bruegel's Three Soldiers

Picture: Frick Collection

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Frick Collection's latest publication as part of their Diptych series is due out in January 2025. This upcoming volume will focus on the collection's (fairly) recently acquired Three Soldiers by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and is written by Anna-Claire Stinebring.

According to the blurb found online:

One of the greatest Netherlandish painters of the sixteenth century, Pieter Bruegel the Elder (ca. 1525−1569) is best known for his landscapes and peasant scenes. One of only three signed works by Bruegel in the United States, The Three Soldiers was once in the celebrated collection of Charles I of England. The small panel in grisaille (shades of gray) represents a trio of Landsknechte, the mercenary foot soldiers whose flamboyant costumes and poses were a popular subject for printmakers of the period. This volume considers the artistic and political environment of the time and investigates how a colorful subject is transformed by its translation into monochrome.

Designed to foster critical engagement and interest specialist and non-specialist alike, each book in this series illuminates a single work in the Frick's rich collection with an essay by an art historian paired with a contribution from a contemporary artist or writer.

Exciting news too, that the newly rennovated Frick Collection will reopen in April 2025!

Re-discovered portrait of Oliver Cromwell unveiled by Dickinson

November 12 2024

Image of Re-discovered portrait of Oliver Cromwell unveiled by Dickinson

Picture: Dickinson

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The London dealers Simon Dickinson have unveiled a re-discovered portrait of Oliver Cromwell by Robert Walker. Interestingly, recent conservation has revealed the painting was never finished by the artist which raises some very intriguing questions as to its history.

According to their press release:

The restoration process brought a surprise to light: the painting was left unfinished by Walker, raising significant questions. Why would Cromwell’s preferred artist abandon such an important commission? Painted during a period when Cromwell was facing military challenges in Scotland and Ireland and unrest at home, the sudden abandonment of the project by Walker indicates that it fell victim to the changing fates of the period.  

“Seeing this masterpiece come to life through restoration was a revelation,” says Simon Dickinson, Chairman of Dickinson Gallery. “This isn’t just a painting; it’s a statement of Cromwell’s character and ambitions. We are thrilled to invite the public to experience the power and enigma of this unfinished portrait and the historical era it represents.” 

The portrait will be on display in Jermyn Street from 25th November until 10th December. Cromwell and his band did love Christmas, after all.

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As a side note, I've always wondered what happened to this version of Walker's Cromwell which was formerly in the collection of Warwick Castle (one of my unhealthy obsessions, I must confess). The painting is visible on the left-hand side of this old black & white photograph (see below). Do let me know if any reader of AHN spots it out in the wild one day!

Rijksmuseum Fellowship Programme 2025-26

November 12 2024

Image of Rijksmuseum Fellowship Programme 2025-26

Picture: Rijksmuseum

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam are advertising for their upcoming Fellowship Programme for 2025-2026 (spotted via Codart).

According to the museum's website:

We are offering a maximum of six fellowships for the 2025-2026 academic year, across four fields of research. For more information about each of the fellowships, please see below:

-Mellon Fellowship for research in art and cultural history, particularly object-oriented research

-Dr. Anton C. R. Dreesmann Fellowship art history research specifically conducted by PhD candidates from the University of Pennsylvania

-Johan Huizinga Fellowship historical research on objects from the Rijksmuseum collection

-Migelien Gerritzen Fellowship conservation and scientific research on works of art and historical artifacts.

As one might imagine, the perks of the fellowship programme are rather vast, do click on the link above to view all of the details. Applications close on 5th January 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

New Release: Women Pioneers of the Arts & Crafts Movement

November 11 2024

Image of New Release: Women Pioneers of the Arts & Crafts Movement

Picture: Thames & Hudson

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The publishers Thames & Hudson have just this month released Karen Livingstone's new book Women Pioneers of the Arts & Crafts Movement, a publication produced in collaboration with the V&A in London.

According to the publisher's website:

Women Pioneers of the Arts & Crafts Movement is a celebration of the work and ambition of the women who were at the heart of the most influential art and design movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It shines a light on the vital contribution of figures such as May Morris, Gertrude Jekyll, Annie Garnett, and many others, and describes the Arts and Crafts Movement from the perspective of these women who worked against the odds as artists, makers, teachers, authors, and entrepreneurs.

Women of the era took part in, and often led, the founding of exhibitions, societies, art schools, and small craft industries. Some were activists and social disruptors while using their skills and talents to make a living. This book highlights the versatility and range of these talented women, who worked across a host of disciplines, including textile design, embroidery, bookbinding, illustration, painting, enameling, stained glass, metalwork, furniture design, and architecture. It is richly illustrated with a wide array of their work, much of it previously unpublished. Featuring objects from the V&A’s renowned Arts and Crafts collection, the book also includes key pieces from other museums and private collections across the UK.

Recent Release: Campaspe Talks Back - Women Who Made a Difference in Early Modern Art

November 8 2024

Image of Recent Release: Campaspe Talks Back - Women Who Made a Difference in Early Modern Art

Picture: Brepols

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The publishers Brepols have just released a new collection of essays on the themes of Women and Portraiture in honour of the scholar Katlijne Van der Stighelen who has recently retired from the University of Leuven.

According to the book's blurb:

Portraiture, supposedly a sijd-wegh der consten, was paved into a central avenue of inquiry in Van der Stighelen’s work. Her approach to the genre made it into a pathway for the introduction of women artists. What was a sijd-wegh became a zij-weg. From seminal publications on Anna-Maria van Schurman to revelatory exhibitions on Michaelina Wautier, Van der Stighelen’s particular brand of feminism has impacted scholarship as deeply as it has touched the museum-going public.

Women and portraiture are the core themes of the essays assembled in this book. The resulting group portrait is crowded and rambunctious and reflects the varied subject matter that has attracted Van der Stighelen’s professional attention. It also paints a partial portrait of the community of scholars that she has so generously fostered. In trying to summarize the motivations of authors to contribute to this volume or the gratitude of generations of art historians trained by her, it is best to quote the title of the first exhibition on women artists in Belgium and The Netherlands, which Van der Stighelen curated in 1999: Elck zijn waerom.

Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 74

November 7 2024

Image of Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 74

Picture: Brepols

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The latest Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art / Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek will be published in a few days' time. The 74th volume of the yearbook is entitled Women: Female Roles in Art and Society of the Netherlands, 1500–1950.

Here's the blurb found on the publisher's website:

Long overdue in the history of the Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art, this volume foregrounds women as creators, patrons, buyers, and agents of change in the arts of the Low Countries. Venturing beyond the participation of ‘exceptional’ individuals, chapters investigate how women produced paintings, sculptures, scientific illustrations, and tapestries as well as their role in architectural patronage and personalized art collections. Teasing out a variety of socio-economic, legal, institutional, and art-theoretical dimensions of female agency, the volume highlights the role of visual culture in women’s lived experience and self-representation, asking to what extent women challenged, subverted, or confirmed societal norms in the Netherlands.

November Burlington Magazine

November 7 2024

Image of November Burlington Magazine

Picture: Burlington Magazine

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

November's edition of The Burlington Magazine is focusing on the theme of Sculpture.

Here's a list of the prominent articles featured within:

‘Une pièce fort singulière’: the rediscovery of Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s ‘Andromeda and the sea monster’ - By Maichol Clemente

Michelangelo’s Bruges Madonna: its patron, material and meaning - By Paula Nuttall

Fragments of a Ferrarese sketch by Donatello - By Marco Scansani

The foundation of the Society of Female Artists - By Amy Lim

Collecting modern Italian sculpture in Britain: Charles Meek and Medardo Rosso - By Sharon Hecker

The latest edition also contains no fewer than 19 book reviews, a sure sign of the continued flourishing of publications in our corner of the art world, it seems!

2024 Berger Prize Shortlist

November 7 2024

Image of 2024 Berger Prize Shortlist

Picture: Walpole Society

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Walpole Society, the new home of the Berger Prize for publications on British Art History, have shared news of the short list for the 2024 award.

Here's a list of the publications included in this year's shortlist:

Steven Brindle, Architecture in Britain and Ireland 1530-1830 (Paul Mellon Centre)

Alicia Foster, Gwen John: Art and Life in London and Paris (Thames & Hudson)

Laura Freeman, Ways of Life: Jim Ede and the Kettle’s Yard Artists (Penguin, Jonathan Cape)

Alun Graves, Studio Ceramics (Thames & Hudson / V&A)

Tom Young, Unmaking the East India Company: British Art and Political Reform in Colonial India, c.1813-58 (Paul Mellon Centre)

James Cumberlidge Reidentified

October 1 2024

Image of James Cumberlidge Reidentified

Picture: @edward.town

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Yale Center for British Art's curator Edward Town has shared a fascinating piece of research on his Instagram account. The project relates to the reidentification of a household servant which features in Chatsworth's 'Portrait of Lord Burlington with family' by Baptist van Loo. James Cumberlidge, whose descendants worked for the family into the nineteenth century, was rediscovered after research into payments was conducted (see the link for more details). The painting features in Chatsworth's Picturing Childhood exhibition which closes on 6th October 2024.

Update - Here's the full article which you can read on Chatsworth's website regarding Town's research on the painting.

Upcoming Release: Turner and Constable - Art, Life, Landscape

September 26 2024

Image of Upcoming Release:  Turner and Constable - Art, Life, Landscape

Picture: Yalebooks.co.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Yale University Press will be releasing Nicola Moorby's latest book entitled Turner and Constable: Art, Life, Landscape in March 2025.

According to the blurb:

Born just fourteen months apart, one in London and the other in rural Suffolk, J.M.W. Turner and John Constable went on to change the face of British art.

The two men have routinely been seen as polar opposites, not least by their peers. Differing in temperament, background, beliefs and vision, they created images as dissimilar as their personalities.

Yet in many ways they were fellow travellers. As children of the late 18 th century, both faced the same challenges and opportunities. Above all, they shared common cause as champions of a distinctively British art. Through their work, they fought for the recognition and appreciation of landscape painting – and in doing so ensured their reputations were forever intertwined and interlinked.

Nicola Moorby offers us a fresh perspective on two extraordinary artists, uncovering the layers of fiction that have embellished and disguised their greatest achievements. For Turner & Constable is not just a tale of two artists; it is also the story of the triumph of landscape painting.

New Carlo Maratta Catalogue Raisonné

September 26 2024

Image of New Carlo Maratta Catalogue Raisonné

Picture: Ugo Bozzi Editore

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Exciting news from Italy that a new catalogue raisonné dedicated to Carlo Maratta has been published this month. The two-volume edition penned by Stella Rudolph and Simonetta Prosperi Valenti Rodinò contains over 1,000 paintings and drawings, including frescos and other studies for related works of art.

As is the ancient custom, the publication of this new catalogue will earn Stella Rudolph and Simonetta Prosperi Valenti Rodinò a place in the much-coveted 'Heroes of Art History' section of this blog.

Upcoming Release: Women Artists & Designers of the National Trust

September 24 2024

Image of Upcoming Release: Women Artists & Designers of the National Trust

Picture: amazon.co.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The National Trust will be releasing a new book on Women Artists & Designers in February 2025.

Here's the blurb (according to Amazon):

From the magnificent gardens created by Vita Sackville-West at Sissinghurst to a striking self-portrait by Angelica Kauffman; from elegant, mass-produced ceramics by Susie Cooper, to a model of a Palmyran temple by lady’s maid Betty Ratcliffe – this beautifully illustrated book takes a closer look at the women whose creativity has shaped the National Trust’s collections and, often, the experience of visitors to its places.

Spanning six centuries, the book explores the lives and work of women artists and designers across a range of disciplines, including garden and interior design, photography, illustration, industrial design, fine art, studio pottery and textiles. The selection features both talented amateur artists and professionals who have shaped the art-historical canon (such as Eileen Agar, Élisabeth Vigée le Brun, Rosalba Carriera and Barbara Hepworth), focussing on their unique contributions and achievements.

Leonard A. Lauder Research Center Publication Grants

September 23 2024

Image of  Leonard A. Lauder Research Center Publication Grants

Picture: MET

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Leonard A. Lauder Research Center, based at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, are providing grants for publications in the sphere of modern and visual culture.

According to their website:

The Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art invites applications for grants supporting publications in the field of modern art and theory, and modern visual culture.

We use the term ‘modern art’ inclusively to refer to architecture, drawing, design (including exhibition, graphic, interior and stage design), film, painting, performance, photography, printmaking, sculpture, and textiles in the period from the last third of the nineteenth century through to the 1960s, from any country region or culture.

On how much money might be available:

Up to six grants per year typically between $4,000 and $7,000, with no single grant more than $12,000 to be awarded.

Applications must be in by 30th September 2024.

Good luck if you're applying!

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