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The National Gallery: London

Author of The Image of Christ

215+ Works 2,435 Members 26 Reviews

About the Author

Works by The National Gallery: London

The Image of Christ (2000) 196 copies
The National Gallery Collection (1987) 119 copies, 1 review
The First Christmas (1992) 111 copies, 1 review
Dutch Painting (1976) 110 copies
The National Gallery, London (1977) 102 copies, 2 reviews
Bellini and the East (2005) 71 copies
Renaissance Faces: Van Eyck to Titian (2008) 60 copies, 1 review
Architecture in Art (1999) 28 copies, 2 reviews
Dutch Painting (2007) 19 copies
El retrato del Renacimiento (2008) 16 copies
Richard Hamilton: The Late Works (2012) 16 copies, 1 review
The National Gallery – Companion Guide (2024) 13 copies, 1 review
Early Netherlandish school (1968) 10 copies
Dürer war hier: Eine Reise wird Legende (2021) — Host Institute — 4 copies
Animals in Art 3 copies
Edward Cook 2 copies
Great Dutch paintings (1999) 2 copies
Second Sight 2 copies
Catalogue 1 copy

Associated Works

Renaissance (Eyewitness Books) (1994) — Director — 466 copies, 4 reviews
Perspective (Eyewitness Art) (1992) — Director — 246 copies, 4 reviews
Manet (Eyewitness Art) (1994) — Director — 205 copies, 1 review
Goya (Eyewitness Art) (1994) — Director — 125 copies, 1 review
Rembrandt: The Master and His Workshop: Drawings and Etchings (1991) — corporation — 95 copies, 1 review
Rembrandt (Art in the Making) (1988) — venue — 82 copies
Impressionism (Art in the Making) (1990) — venue — 48 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
The National Gallery: London
Birthdate
1824
Gender
n/a
Occupations
art gallery
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
Trafalgar Square, Westminster, London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

27 reviews
(...)

Enter me, 35, seeing Rembrandt Van Rijn’s final self-portrait in the Mauritshuis in The Hague, July 2014. That museum has Vermeer’s The Girl With The Pearl Earing too, but the 1669 self-portrait is the true gem of the collection. I was struck by lightning. I had seen paintings by Rembrandt before, but never one of his late works. The way he painted his hair, topped with a kind of turban or ribbon, is simply stunning. In a way, what I saw was the birth of impressionist and even show more expressionist painting, already in the 17th century. It took me half an hour before I could continue to the next painting, and before leaving the museum, I returned to it again. A profound delight.

(...)

The authors do a great job of putting Rembrandt firmly in his historical context. To our eyes Rembrandt might seem old hat – he’s such a part of our visual collective subconscious – but he’s not. Even today he remains fresh and relevant, and back in the 17th century he simply was in a league of his own. The texts feature quite a lot of quotations of 17th and 18th century art historians, and they succeed in proving the exceptional, revolutionary nature of Rembrandt. And that’s not just because of his technique – his brush strokes, his command of light, etc. – but also his command of composition and emotion, and the specific, singular way he chose to portray subjects and topics that were common at the time. He was a true genius, on multiple accounts. The book also zooms in a bit on Rembrandt eventful, tragic life. It’s not a biography however, the focus is on his art throughout.

(...)

Please read the full review on Weighing A Pig
show less
"A beautiful book of words and music to traditional carols, each illustrated with paintings in the National Gallery, London. A great way to get children to see classical art without ramming it down their throats."
For decades the most continually provocative of British artists, Richard Hamilton (1922–2011, right) was long concerned with the great themes of Western painting. At the time of his death, he was completing plans for an exhibition at the National Gallery, London, to include the first public showing of what turned out to be his final work. Based on Balzac's short story, The Unknown Masterpiece, it depicts three masters of painting—Poussin, Courbet, and Titian—contemplating a reclining show more female nude and reflecting on the meaning of art. As with much of Hamilton's late work, the image was generated by computer but over-painted by hand. Knowing he would not complete it, Hamilton decided to show three preparatory versions simultaneously. In addition, he selected thirty paintings tracing the development of his art, featuring single-point perspective and the depiction of interior spaces, the sacred imagery of the Italian Renaissance, and allusions to the art of Marcel Duchamp. (National Gallery of London) show less
A beautiful book of words and music to traditional carols, each illustrated with paintings in the National Gallery, London. A great way to get children to see classical art without ramming it down their throats.

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Associated Authors

Larry Keith Contributor
Michael Bracewell Contributor
Marla Pratha Contributor
Narisa Chakrabongse Editor and Translator
Sarvenaz Ayooghi Author and Picture Editor
Neil MacGregor Foreword, Introduction
Michael Levey Foreword, Preface
Xavier Bray Contributor
John H. Elliott Contributor
Javier Portus Contributor
Lord Burns Foreword
Philip Lewis Designer
Maria Ranauro Picture Researcher
Sarah Purdy Publishing Manager
Nicholas Penny Director's Preface
Robert Kudielka Chronology
Louise Rice Publishing Director
Tim Harvey Designer
Jan Green Project Editor
Philip Hendy Foreword
James Heard Narrator
Joachim Bautz Contributor
Rachanee Supvichit Contributor
Betty Yao Curator
William Schupbach Contributor
Wibke Birth Picture Editor
Armin Lachet Grußwort
Sibylle Keupen Grußwort
Frank-Walter Steinmeier Schirmherrschaft
Lutz Stirl Proofreader
Susanne H. Karau Translator
Volker Ellerbeck Translator
Jan Jambon Grußwort
Bernadette Ott Translator
Dorothée Baganz Proofreader
Peter Motz Translator

Statistics

Works
215
Also by
8
Members
2,435
Popularity
#10,540
Rating
4.1
Reviews
26
ISBNs
174
Languages
6

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