ââ‹the Aim of Much Italian Baroque Art Was to Restore the Predominance of

Conservation & Preservation news

Truthful mettle: restoring Hampton Courtroom Palace'due south glorious but scarred Baroque iron screens

Reviving 17th-century Tijou screens commissioned by Protestant monarchs William and Mary means undoing decades of damage and haphazard repairs

Maev Kennedy

Exhibitions preview

London's National Gallery makes a vocal and trip the light fantastic toe about Nicolas Poussin

New exhibition unearths the French artist's more than blithesome works from the museum's collection, which will be joined by key loans

Andrew Pulver

Museums & Heritage annotate

The cancelling of the Genoese art loan show Superb Bizarre is a sorry day for the National Gallery

Can some other museum with a delivery to broaden Americans' exposure to great art, including pre-contemporary works, have up the evidence?

Judith H. Dobrzynski

Restoration news

Furniture restorer disfigures Murillo'due south 17th-century Virgin Mary—and charges owner €1,200

Spain's fine art conservation community say the country needs to improve regulate the industry

Aimee Dawson

Exhibitions preview

Tate Britain presents the lesser-known British Bizarre stars

The start exhibition to explore the manner associated with mainland Europe will aim to show that it did exist in the UK—even if nearly painters were foreign

Simon Swynfen Jervis

Exhibitions preview

Caravaggio and Bernini evidence promises to exist about more than just its titular #barockstars

Exhibition at the Kunsthistorisches Museum will highlight the multiple trends and rich aesthetics of early Baroque fine art in Rome

Donald Lee

Exhibitions review

This carefully selected exhibition of the Paper Museum of Cassiano dal Pozzo is pocket-sized and perfectly formed

The MA curatorial show at the Barber Institute, Birmingham, challenges many of our assumptions

Donald Lee

Museums & Heritage news

X-ray of Uffizi's Artemisia Gentileschi reveals a tantalising underpainting

The portrait has striking similarities to a recent acquisition by the National Gallery in London

Nancy Kenney

Museums & Heritage news

Greenwich's Painted Hall reopens with twenty-four hour period beds for visitors to admire 'England's Sistine Chapel'

Two-year restoration of James Thornhill'south dizzying Bizarre interior was the largest open-access conservation projection in Europe

Maev Kennedy

Caravaggio news

Attic to sale: a timeline of the 'Lost Caravaggio'

The painting, idea to be the second version of the Baroque artist's Judith Beheading Holofernes will be auctioned this June with an judge of £86m-£129m

Francine Guillou, Gareth Harris, Hannah McGivern and Kabir Jhala

Rijksmuseum interview

Interview: the Rijksmuseum'due south Taco Dibbits on Rembrandt's pulling power

We speak to the full general director of the Dutch museum ahead of its exhibition on "all" of the works past the master in its collection

Martin Bailey

Supported past Rijksmuseum

Exhibitions preview

15 must-see Rembrandt shows during the 350th anniversary of his decease

Two exhibitions to exist held at the Rijksmuseum this year will provide a cohesive overview of Rembrandt's life and piece of work

Ben Luke and José da Silva

Supported past Rijksmuseum

Rembrandt feature

The yr of Rembrandt with Simon Schama

The fine art historian gives a personal view of Rembrandt's extraordinary achievements as the world celebrates the 350th anniversary of the Dutch master's expiry

Simon Schama

Supported by Rijksmuseum

Books review

How to try to empathize Jusepe de Ribera's many scenes of violence

The Spanish artist'southward extraordinary paintings of tortured bodies and tormented souls

Aldo Scardinelli

Books review

Reputations redeemed by art: 2 books examine what made Charles I and 2 great collectors only bad rulers

Despite the failings of the Stuart kings, their art collections stand in their favour, every bit exhibitions in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland this year have shown

Theodore Chiliad. Rabb

Conservation & Preservation news

Turin's Chapel of the Holy Shroud—almost entirely destroyed by burn down—reopens after €30m restoration

State-of-the-art conservation projection that took 21 years brings masterpiece of Baroque architecture back to its former glory

Barbara Antonetto

Art market place news

Sticking the pocketknife into the patriarchy: Artemisia Gentileschi painting to be sold for the first time in Vienna

The female person Italian Baroque artist's depiction of Lucretia is thought to have been in European collection since the 19th century

Anna Brady

Books review

Very much an acquired gustatory modality: how did so many Italian baroque paintings end up in Usa museums?

Book provides a sampling of personalities, conquering strategies and collections that many Europeans may not know

Judith Mann

Discoveries news

Newly discovered Michaelina Wautier painting added to showtime major show on Baroque's forgotten female person master

And experts are convinced that "many more works will pop up"

José da Silva

Art market news

Drawings week hits Paris

The 27th edition of Salon du Dessin at Palais Brongniart assembles 39 dealers from Europe and the United states of america

Anna Sansom

Exhibitions preview

Rubens and the works that inspired him brought together at Städel Museum

Flemish master had access to art from across the ages and assiduously reworked drawings by other artists

Catherine Hickley

Exhibitions review

How the wonders of il Gesù were transported to America

A Connecticut Jesuit university aimed high when planning an exhibition to gloat its 75th anniversary—and more museums should follow its example

Brian Allen

Focus archive

Following the warp and weft of time: Tapestries in all their glory at the Met

Tapestry is as alluring a medium to today'due south artists as Renaissance ones

The Art Newspaper

Museums & Heritage archive

Bringing back the Bizarre—colonial style

Yale prepares for the 2012 installation of its decorative arts galleries past reconstructing a period room

Martha Lufkin

Caravaggio annal

Technology reveals Caravaggio self-portrait

Searching for underdrawings, conservators discover the artist'due south reflection

Emily Sharpe

Victoria & Albert Museum annal

V&A needs £i.1m to proceed Bizarre cabinet in the UK

It was reassembled and sold subsequently role of information technology was discovered in a pizzeria

Martin Bailey

Peter Paul Rubens archive

Tate to go for Rubens Whitehall sketch

Valued at £eleven.5m, the preliminary sketch for The Apotheosis of King James I is now upwards for sale

Martin Bailey

Exhibitions archive

Alessandro Vittoria's first exhibition opens in Castello del Buonconsiglio

The exhibition of this Venetian baroque sculptor explores his life as a sculptor and collector, and documents his friendships with other artists of his time

Fabrizia Lanza

Guido Reni archive

Books: Guido Reni, loved by the Victorians, despised by modernists and purists

Reni is in for a late twentieth-century treatment as political activist and secretly gay

Christopher Moock

Unesco archive

"The Baroque World": A v-volume Atlas of baroque art, published by UNESCO

$ii.5 meg publication covering 50 countries

Martin Bailey

abelallit1940.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.theartnewspaper.com/keywords/baroque

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