Previous Posts: November 2025

Curate at Chatsworth

November 20 2025

Image of Curate at Chatsworth

Picture: Devonshire Collections

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Devonshire Collections are hiring an Assistant Curator.

According to the job description:

An exceptional opportunity awaits someone keen to develop their curatorial career within our friendly Collections at Chatsworth, working on one of the most significant Collections in this country. In this role, you will support the Curator to achieve agreed curatorial objectives, offering your curatorial expertise across the collections to a diverse audience including colleagues, the Cavendish Family, and other cultural professionals. You will respond to collection-related enquiries and oversee and chaperone collection researchers and visitors as needed. 

Guided by the Curator, you will actively develop and support the creation and delivery of range of access activities. These will include publications, lectures, events, partnerships and more with the aim of raising the profile and maximising the reach of the Devonshire Collections.  A specialism or demonstratable interest in prints, drawings and paintings may be advantageous.    

The job comes with a salary of £28,000 - £30,000 per annum and applications must be in by 7th December 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

Fresco Restored in Bari

November 20 2025

Video: TRMH 24

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from Italy that a fifteenth century fresco of La Madonna del Segno has been restored in the Church of San Martino in Bari. The wall painting had been covered in centuries worth of overpaint, campaigns of restoration which have since been removed.

MET acquires Platzer

November 20 2025

Image of MET acquires Platzer

Picture: MET

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York have shared news that they acquired Johann Georg Platzer's Amusement at the Court in 2025. The work was acquired from Peter Mühlbauer Kunsthandel of Schloss Schönburg, Pocking, with 'several members of The Chairman's Council Gifts'.

Women in Spanish Naples

November 20 2025

Video: Il Sole 24 ORE

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

A new exhibition on Women in Spanish Naples has opened at the Gallerie d'Italia in Naples today. The show focuses on the role of women in the city's cultural history, including the likes of Giovanna Garzoni, Lavinia Fontana, Fede Galizia, and Artemisia Gentileschi. Supported by many loans from Italian and international museums, the exhibition will run until 22 March 2026.

BBC Turner Documentary

November 20 2025

Image of BBC Turner Documentary

Picture: The Guardian

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

I'm late to news that a new BBC Documentary, which aired in the UK yesterday evening, has explored the 'Secret Sketchbooks' of JMW Turner. The Guardian's article on the programme draws attention to claims from officials at the National Autistic Society that Turner may have been neurodivergent. Read more via the link above.

Sotheby's London Day Sale

November 19 2025

Image of Sotheby's London Day Sale

Picture: Sotheby's

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Sotheby's London Old Master Paintings Day Auction has been uploaded online. The sale will take place on 4th December 2025.

As usual with such sales, I won't point out what may or may not be of interest.

Miniatures from the Bearsted Collection at Philip Mould & Co.

November 19 2025

Image of Miniatures from the Bearsted Collection at Philip Mould & Co.

Picture: Philip Mould & Company

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The London dealers Philip Mould & Company are opening a new selling exhibition today of Miniatures from the Bearsted Collection.

According to their website:

This winter, the gallery will present Miniatures from the Bearsted Collection, an intimate exhibition of eight exceptional Elizabethan and Jacobean portrait miniatures. This collection comprises some of the finest and most precious examples by the master miniaturists Nicholas Hilliard and Isaac Oliver that our gallery has handled. Acquired from the descendants of Walter Samuel, 2nd Viscount Bearsted, one of the most distinguished collectors of the early twentieth century in Britain, the collection offers a glimpse into the intricacies of the art of limning and the evolution of miniature painting in England.

The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue produced in collaboration with Dr Elizabeth Goldring, featuring new scholarship and detailed entries on each miniature.

The exhibition will run until 19th December 2025.

2025 Berger Prize Winner

November 19 2025

Image of 2025 Berger Prize Winner

Picture: brepols

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

News from the Walpole Society that the Berger Prize Winner for 2025 is Eleonora Pistis, for her book Architecture of Knowledge: Hawksmoor and Oxford. The winner was announced last week at an event held at the Warburg Institute in London.

Here's a summary of the book from the publisher Brepols:

Nicholas Hawksmoor’s dream of a new Oxford, though only partially realized between 1708 and 1736, remains one of the most striking examples of the architecture of knowledge from the early modern period. This was a time of erudite experimentation on paper and in stone. Academics and Hawksmoor as their chosen architect, alongside a range of other figures, envisaged a network of streets, paths, gates, and squares connecting newly designed colleges and libraries, as well as the university press. Complementing the feverish activity on the multiple construction sites, the study, collection, and dissemination of architecture was profoundly reshaped by a variety of types of knowledge and practical expertise. Building, thinking, and learning were more tightly intertwined in early eighteenth-century Oxford than ever before at a renowned university as it pivoted from medieval to modern. The graphic legacy of this intense activity remains with us in an abundance of drawings, prints, and treatises, many of which are published here for the first time.

Klimt breaks Record in Lauder Sale

November 19 2025

Video: Sotheby's

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Sotheby's New York set a new record last night for the most expensive work of 'modern art' sold at auction. Gustav Klimt's Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer (Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer) realised $236.4m (inc. commission) over its $150m+ estimate. The Leonard A. Lauder, Collector Evening Auction realised a total of $527.5m with all lots being sold.

Equally impressive prices were achieved down the road, with the Christie's 20th Century Evening Sale realising a total of $471,728,400. The separate The Collection of Robert F. and Patricia G. Ross Weis sale realised an additional $218,066,600 with the highlight being Rothko's No. 31 (Yellow Stripe) which realised $62,160,000 over its 'estimate on request' price tag.

Michelangelo and Bologna

November 18 2025

Video: Siena News

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Palazzo Fava in Bologna have just opened a new exhibition examining the relationships between Michelangelo and the city of Bologna. In particular, the show draws a great deal of attention of his early years and training, and features works such as Madonna della Scala (on loan from Florence) and several drawings by the master.

The exhibition will run until 15th February 2026.

Caravaggio in Florida

November 18 2025

Video: Tampa Bay's Morning Blend

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

I'm slow to news that the Museum of Fine Art in St. Petersburg, Florida, opened a new exhibition at the end of last month In Caravaggio’s Light | Baroque Masterpieces from the Fondazione Roberto Longhi.

The show will run until 22nd March 2026.

Expedition Drawing: Masters from the Low Countries in Close-Up

November 18 2025

Video: KunstfreundeSalon

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Here's a video produced by KunstfreundeSalon on the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne's recently opened exhibition entitled Expedition Drawing: Masters from the Low Countries in Close-Up.

According to the museum's website:

What secrets lie hidden in centuries-old drawings? How can we make these silent masterpieces speak? And how can we distinguish between originals and copies? These and other exciting questions will be answered in Cologne from 14 November 2025 in the exhibition ‘Expedition Drawing – Dutch Masters under the Magnifying Glass’. With this exhibition, the Wallraf-Richartz Museum is presenting the astonishing results of a research project lasting several years for the first time. Experts examined almost 850 drawings from the 15th to 18th centuries under the magnifying glass and microscope.

With a total of 90 works by masters such as Rembrandt, Rubens and Goltzius, visitors can journey through the fascinating world of Dutch drawing until 15 March 2026.

France to Tax the Possession of Art?

November 18 2025

Image of France to Tax the Possession of Art?

Picture: artnews.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Artnews.com have reported on proposals the French government are drawing up to tax the possession of works of art in their 2026 budget. The French art world has rightly drawn attention to the absurdity of the idea, questioning how owners would 'declare' their collections alongside the inconsistency with other EU nations which would put those doing business in the country at a disadvantage. Click on the link to read more.

Scharf Collection on Display in Berlin

November 17 2025

Image of Scharf Collection on Display in Berlin

Picture: Alte Nationalgalerie

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin opened a new exhibition at the end of last month dedicated to works on loan from the Scharf Collection.

According to their website:

The Scharf Collection, one of the most significant private art collections in Germany, is being showcased in a large-scale exhibition for the very first time. The collection primarily consists of French art from the 19th and 20th centuries, as well as international contemporary artworks.

The exhibition in the Alte Nationalgalerie presents a selection of some 150 items, including prominent artworks by the likes of Auguste Renoir, Pierre Bonnard, Edgar Degas and Claude Monet, and takes visitors on a journey through the collection: from Goya and French Realism to the French Impressionists and Cubists to contemporary art. One special highlight is a selection of prints by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, which have been fully preserved in the collection.

The show will run until 15th February 2026.

Recent Release: Portrait Miniatures - Artists, Functions, Manufacturing Aspects, and Collections

November 17 2025

Image of Recent Release: Portrait Miniatures - Artists, Functions, Manufacturing Aspects, and Collections

Picture: Tansey Miniatures Foundation

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The following interesting sounding volume entitled Portrait Miniatures - Artists, Functions, Manufacturing Aspects, and Collections has just been released (spotted via @karins42). The book is a collection of papers presented at a conference for the Tansey Miniatures Foundation in 2024.

According to the publisher's blurb:

A total of 22 internationally renowned experts from nine countries present the miniature portrait from different perspectives, discussing the private use of miniatures, special depictions, and messages conveyed by miniatures. Significant but little-known museum collections are introduced alongside insightful information about the living conditions of the artists active at the time. Lastly, aspects regarding the production techniques for miniatures are examined.

This fourth volume publishes the presentations given at the 2024 conference held by the Tansey Miniatures Foundation. Interested individuals from all over the world come together in Celle every two to three years at these conventions on the portrait miniature to discuss this special genre of portrait painting.

Latest Edition of The British Art Journal

November 17 2025

Image of Latest Edition of The British Art Journal

Picture: britishartjournal.co.uk

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The latest edition of The British Art Journal has been published online.

Here's an impressive list of the articles contained within this free online publication:

Not Lady Jane Grey but Mary Nevill Fiennes, Lady Dacre

An attribution for the portrait of Sir Arthur Hopton and his secretary

Hogarth’s house at the Golden Head, Leicester Fields: Robert LS Cowley

The Welshman in A Rake’s Progress by William Hogarth (1697–1764)

Canaletto, the Sandby brothers and ‘Mr Crowle’: Philip Steadman

The life of Charles Philips (1703–1747) with a checklist of his works

Lorenz Natter (1705–1763)

Sketches Taken at Print Sales by Paul Sandby (1731–1809)

Identifying a mystery portrait by Arthur Devis (1712–1787)

The Flight Out of Egypt by Richard Dadd (1817–1886)

An undocumented portrait of Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst

Did Ben Nicholson and Jim Ede take advantage of Alfred Wallis?

Carel Weight during the Allied occupation after the Second World War

Framing Sheila Fell (1931–1979) as a social realist

‘Impressions in Watercolour: JMW Turner and his Contemporaries’

Neo-Impressionists at the National Gallery, London

Sir Francis Carruthers Gould, pioneering cartoonist

Viennese Prosecutors Order TEFAF Klimt to be Seized

November 17 2025

Image of Viennese Prosecutors Order TEFAF Klimt to be Seized

Picture: artnet.com

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

It emerged last week that public prosecutors in Vienna have ordered the seizure of Gustav Klimt's Portrait of Prince William Nii Nortey Dowuona. The painting, which had appeared that this year's edition of TEFAF (The European Fine Art Foundation), is alleged to have been improperly released from Hungary (a claim which the Wienerroither and Kohlbacher Gallery deny). Click on the link for the full story.

Constable 250 in Ipswich

November 16 2025

Image of Constable 250 in Ipswich

Picture: Ipswich Museums

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

Ipswich Museums in Suffolk will be celebrating the 250th Anniversary of the birth of John Constable with a series of special exhibitions at Christchurch Mansion in 2026.

According to their website:

To commemorate his life and work Colchester and Ipswich Museums present Constable 250, a programme of exhibitions and activities at the heart of which will be three landmark exhibitions at Ipswich’s Christchurch Mansion, featuring works from CIMS own collections alongside major loans from across the UK.

Here are the three main exhibitions that will be on display alongside their respective dates:

Constable: A Cast of Characters
28 March – 14 June 2026

Constable: Walking the Landscape
11 July – 4 October 2026

Constable to Contemporary
24 October 2026 – 28 February 2027

Bonhams December Sale

November 15 2025

Image of Bonhams December Sale

Picture: Bonhams

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Bonhams London Old Master Paintings sale has been uploaded online. The auction will take place on 3rd December 2025. The top lot of the sale is this rather glorious Venetian picture by Guardi which carries an estimate of £200,000 - £300,000.

Clean the King's Pictures

November 14 2025

Image of Clean the King's Pictures

Picture: Royal Collection Trust

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Royal Collection Trust are hiring a Senior Paintings Conservator.

According to the job description:

The Royal Collection contains an unparalleled collection of nearly 8,000 paintings and 3,000 miniatures. Our team of talented Paintings Conservators are responsible for all conservation activities relating to the paintings displayed within the Royal residences, as well for loans from the Paintings collection.

As a Senior Conservator you will deputise for the Head of Paintings Conservation and support the overall management of the conservation studio as well as assessing and conserving paintings using the most appropriate methods and materials.

The job comes with a salary of £42,000 - £45,000 per annum and applications must be in by 22nd December 2025.

Good luck if you're applying!

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