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A VERY POLITE PHOTOGRAPHY COMPETITION A smartphone snap of the beach in Brighton. Photo: BBC/Storyboard Studios/Paul Williams. For the first challenge of each episode the contestants are restricted to smartphones, on the principle that a great photographer doesn’t rely on a great camera. In episode one they are sent to Brighton to take photos around the subject of the‘beach’.
THE HEINOUS HEIST AT ARUNDEL CASTLE The display case stands in the castle’s famous Dining Room, and is easily missed by those who don’t know what they’re looking for. No mere canteen, the room was originally a medieval chapel, and beneath the high, vaulted ceiling a table is permanently laid for dessert exactly as it was at the visit of Queen Victoria in 1846, whose coronation homage chair sits there proudly on display.CONTACT US | APOLLO
Contact us for advertising, editorial and subscription enquiries. 22 Old Queen Street, London. Tel: 020 7961 0150 HERCULE POIROT, ART DECO DETECTIVE 5 April 2021. Suchet role – ITV's long-running Poirot series starred David Suchet as the detective. Photo courtesy ITV. Hercule Poirot is now 100 years old, although he never experienced a childhood or an adolescence. Instead he was born by a kind of parthenogenesis, leaping fully formed and middle-aged from the head of Agatha Christie in 1921. COMMERCIAL GALLERIES FOR DUMMIES In a commercial gallery, however, they will be disconcertingly absent. This could very possibly lead to a total free-for-all – national breakdown, Scottish independence, Meghan running for president in 2024, or even the chiselling down of Churchill’s statue into something that resembles Maggi Hambling’s statue for MaryWollstonecraft.
THE WILD LANDSCAPES OF JAMES MORRISON In Eye of the Storm, Anthony Baxter’s documentary portrait of the artist as an old man battling the decline of his eyesight, James Morrison (1932–2020) tells of the occasion when, in the 1950s, the head of the Glasgow Art Club wanted to include one of his austere grisaille depictions of Glasgow tenement buildings in an exhibition.‘The Lord Provost has agreed to open the exhibition THE MAN WHO BROUGHT HOLLYWOOD’S FANTASIES TO LIFE The final rooms explore Harryhausen’s influence on later film-makers. This is perhaps the least fully realised part of the exhibition, relying on a specially produced 15-minute documentary (also available on the exhibition’s website), a clever zoetrope installation by the contemporary artist Eleanor Stewart, which lovingly animates several Harryhausen creatures, and a placard tracingthe
REVIEW: THE BRUEGHEL DYNASTY MEETS CONTEMPORARY ART AT Odd, therefore, that Christie’s should seek to set up a dialogue between Bruegel and the art of today. But the recently opened exhibition at Christie’s Mayfair – ‘The Bad Shepherd: The Brueghel Dynasty in Conversation with Contemporary Art’ – does exactly what it says on the tin. And contrary to my expectations, itis largely a
APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
THE HEINOUS HEIST AT ARUNDEL CASTLE The display case stands in the castle’s famous Dining Room, and is easily missed by those who don’t know what they’re looking for. No mere canteen, the room was originally a medieval chapel, and beneath the high, vaulted ceiling a table is permanently laid for dessert exactly as it was at the visit of Queen Victoria in 1846, whose coronation homage chair sits there proudly on display. A VERY POLITE PHOTOGRAPHY COMPETITION A smartphone snap of the beach in Brighton. Photo: BBC/Storyboard Studios/Paul Williams. For the first challenge of each episode the contestants are restricted to smartphones, on the principle that a great photographer doesn’t rely on a great camera. In episode one they are sent to Brighton to take photos around the subject of the‘beach’.
CONTACT US | APOLLO
Contact us for advertising, editorial and subscription enquiries. 22 Old Queen Street, London. Tel: 020 7961 0150 HERCULE POIROT, ART DECO DETECTIVE 5 April 2021. Suchet role – ITV's long-running Poirot series starred David Suchet as the detective. Photo courtesy ITV. Hercule Poirot is now 100 years old, although he never experienced a childhood or an adolescence. Instead he was born by a kind of parthenogenesis, leaping fully formed and middle-aged from the head of Agatha Christie in 1921. COMMERCIAL GALLERIES FOR DUMMIES In a commercial gallery, however, they will be disconcertingly absent. This could very possibly lead to a total free-for-all – national breakdown, Scottish independence, Meghan running for president in 2024, or even the chiselling down of Churchill’s statue into something that resembles Maggi Hambling’s statue for MaryWollstonecraft.
THE WILD LANDSCAPES OF JAMES MORRISON In Eye of the Storm, Anthony Baxter’s documentary portrait of the artist as an old man battling the decline of his eyesight, James Morrison (1932–2020) tells of the occasion when, in the 1950s, the head of the Glasgow Art Club wanted to include one of his austere grisaille depictions of Glasgow tenement buildings in an exhibition.‘The Lord Provost has agreed to open the exhibition THE MAN WHO BROUGHT HOLLYWOOD’S FANTASIES TO LIFE The final rooms explore Harryhausen’s influence on later film-makers. This is perhaps the least fully realised part of the exhibition, relying on a specially produced 15-minute documentary (also available on the exhibition’s website), a clever zoetrope installation by the contemporary artist Eleanor Stewart, which lovingly animates several Harryhausen creatures, and a placard tracingthe
REVIEW: THE BRUEGHEL DYNASTY MEETS CONTEMPORARY ART AT Odd, therefore, that Christie’s should seek to set up a dialogue between Bruegel and the art of today. But the recently opened exhibition at Christie’s Mayfair – ‘The Bad Shepherd: The Brueghel Dynasty in Conversation with Contemporary Art’ – does exactly what it says on the tin. And contrary to my expectations, itis largely a
APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
PICASSO IN PIXELS
1 day ago · From the June 2021 issue of Apollo.Preview and subscribe here. ‘Rethinking Guernica’, a digital initiative from the Reina Sofía, is the result of a monumental research effort by the museum’s curators and conservators. This ambitious undertaking has resulted in a comprehensive view of Picasso’s Guernica from historical, art-historical and conservation perspectives. THE FINE ART (OF SORTS) OF EURO 2020 FOOTBALL KITS 1 day ago · The Italians have opted for a ‘Renaissance design’ – although the floral patterning looks more William Morris thanMichelangelo
GUSTAVE MOREAU: THE FABLES The French Symbolist Gustave Moreau’s series of 64 illustrations for La Fontaine’s Fables, rendered in his distinctive jewel-like tones, were much praised when exhibited in the 1880s – one critic suggested that Moreau was ‘drunk on colour’. Nearly half were lost from a Rothschild collection during the Nazi era but the remainder, on loan from a private collection, will go on public THE CLAY’S THE THING ‘Just look at the pots on the surrounding pages.’ This sentence, or close variations, begins three of the nine chapters in Paul Greenhalgh’s new magnum opus, Ceramic: Art and Civilisation.I imagine he’d have liked to use it in the other six, too. PETER BLAKE, KING OF COLLAGE 16 hours ago · From the June 2021 issue of Apollo.Preview and subscribe here.. P eter Blake has been on the British Art Scene for almost 70 years but has always followed a path of his own. Once when I asked him if he was a Pop artist he unexpectedly answered, ‘Oh yes’. But he was a Pop artist in a way that no others quite were. NIKOLAI ASTRUP: VISIONS OF NORWAY Working from the farmstead he built for his family in western Norway, Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928) painted vivid landscapes that wereinspired as
THE WEEK IN ART NEWS 1 day ago · Current and former staff at the Barbican Centre in London have published an account of alleged incidents of discrimination, ‘written anonymously by employees who have experienced racism’, ranging from interactions with other, often more senior members of staff to abuse from members of the public. Copies of the book, titled Barbican Stories, have been sent to theinstitution’s
2 TONE WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT THE MUSIC If the term ‘2 Tone’ is not immediately familiar to you, the music it’s associated with almost certainly will be. None more so perhaps than ‘Ghost Town’, released by The Specials 40 years ago this month: a lament for a Britain that, at the dawn of the 1980s, was haunted by recession, unemployment and inflation, and seemingly without any hope for the future. OVID METAMORPHOSES ARTISTIC INFLUENCE The direction of flow reverses at last in Melchior Meier’s startling depiction of the Metamorphoses scene – an etching that returns all the anatomical detailing of Vesalius and Valverde’s manuals to the world of the myth. Apollo, in the same statue pose, shows the satyr’s hirsute hide to a terrified king Midas – equipped with the asses ears of his own punishment. APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathed APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathedTHE SMELL OF ART
This article was published in the May 2021 issue of Apollo.Preview and subscribe here.. A t first glance Jacob van Ruisdael’s View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds (c. 1670–75) depicts a pleasant pastoral scene.Half of the painting – one of a series of popular Haerlempjes, or ‘Haarlem views’, for which Ruisdael was well known – is filled with sky, the billowing clouds emphasisingCONTACT US | APOLLO
Contact us for advertising, editorial and subscription enquiries. 22 Old Queen Street, London. Tel: 020 7961 0150 IN THE STUDIO WITH… CHANTAL JOFFE 1 day ago · In her paintings and pastels, Chantal Joffe explores the lives and experiences of women. Whether drawn from life, from photographs or from other sources such as magazines, Joffe’s figures are all rendered in the same distinctive gestural style, highlighting the physical process of their creation. FOR KURDISH ARTISTS IN TURKEY, SIMPLY MAKING WORK IS A 15 hours ago · The pressures are not always so blatant. ‘I found myself doing self-censorship with my dissertation, to the point where it was undermining the research itself,’ says artist Rojda Tugrul, whose work deals with the ecological impact of the conflict and displacement suffered in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish south-eastin the 1990s.
THE GENIUS OF ERIC CARLE The genius of Eric Carle, who died in May at the age of 91 with more than 70 books under his belt, lay in his ability, through both words and pictures, to speak to children in a way that didn’t pander, patronise or moralise. JOAN EARDLEY & CATTERLINE DACS 2021. The Scottish painter Joan Eardley (1921–63) first visited the small Aberdeenshire fishing village of Catterline in 1950, shortly after graduating from art school; for the rest of her life, she divided her time between Glasgow and the North East. She was entranced both by the village and by the ‘vast seas, vast areas of cliff A TOUR OF TITANIA’S PALACE Thomas Marks. 13 September 2019. The Throne Room of Titania’s Palace. Funen is a fairy-tale island. It was here, in Odense, that Hans Christian Andersen was born in 1805, which is why the streets of the city are punctuated with bronze statues that depict, among other characters from fable, a girl perched on a flower and a tin soldierwith one
THE TRIALS AND TRIUMPHS OF ARTEMISIA GENTILESCHI Now 45 years of age, Artemisia had worked for the great and the good from Naples to Paris, and her patrons included the Medici in Florence, and the papal court in Rome. Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria (c. 1615–17), Artemisia Gentileschi. National Gallery, London. It was Orazio who had taught her to paint. LIFE AS A CABARET IN 1920S IN CAIRO After coming to Cairo in 1905 she had made a living singing in the city’s seedy nightclubs. The Egyptian singer and actress Mounira al-Mahdiyya (1885–1965), photographed in the 1920s. Courtesy the Abushady Archive. Less than two years before Ashbee saw her performance in that village, she had left behind the life of anightclub singer to
JOAN MITCHELL AND JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE The rest of the exhibition is arranged chronologically, tracking the places where they created their work: rue Frémicourt in the 15th arrondissement, where they first lived together; Vétheuil, Mitchell’s house on the banks of the Seine where they moved in 1967, not far from Riopelle’s later studio in an airplane hangar in Saint-Cyr-en-Arthies. APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathed APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathedCONTACT US | APOLLO
Contact us for advertising, editorial and subscription enquiries. 22 Old Queen Street, London. Tel: 020 7961 0150MUSEUM OF THE HOME
After an £18.1m makeover courtesy of Wright & Wright Architects, the 18th-century almshouses that formerly housed the Geffrye Museum are reopening on 12 June under a new name. THE NATIONAL 2021, REVIEWED It’s the work at the Museum of Contemporary Art that makes the biggest visual impression. Betty Kuntiwa Pumani’s huge Antara, representing her mother’s country in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Lands, is spectacular in its limited palette of red, blue and white.Maree Clarke’s necklaces made of echidna quills, river reeds and kangaroo teeth lift the spirits.THE SMELL OF ART
This article was published in the May 2021 issue of Apollo.Preview and subscribe here.. A t first glance Jacob van Ruisdael’s View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds (c. 1670–75) depicts a pleasant pastoral scene.Half of the painting – one of a series of popular Haerlempjes, or ‘Haarlem views’, for which Ruisdael was well known – is filled with sky, the billowing clouds emphasising IN THE STUDIO WITH… CHANTAL JOFFE 1 day ago · In her paintings and pastels, Chantal Joffe explores the lives and experiences of women. Whether drawn from life, from photographs or from other sources such as magazines, Joffe’s figures are all rendered in the same distinctive gestural style, highlighting the physical process of their creation.GIOVANNI DA UDINE
Held at the Castello di Udine, this is the first exhibition devoted to the Renaissance master Giovanni da Udine (12 June–12 September). After making his name in Rome, where he was an assistant to Raphael and was knighted for his work on several papal commissions, the artist returned to his hometown in 1522. FOR KURDISH ARTISTS IN TURKEY, SIMPLY MAKING WORK IS A 8 hours ago · The pressures are not always so blatant. ‘I found myself doing self-censorship with my dissertation, to the point where it was undermining the research itself,’ says artist Rojda Tugrul, whose work deals with the ecological impact of the conflict and displacement suffered in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish south-eastin the 1990s.
THE GENIUS OF ERIC CARLE The genius of Eric Carle, who died in May at the age of 91 with more than 70 books under his belt, lay in his ability, through both words and pictures, to speak to children in a way that didn’t pander, patronise or moralise. JOSEPH E. YOAKUM: WHAT I SAW It was at the age of 71, while living as a retired veteran in Chicago, that Joseph E. Yoakum reported having the dream that inspired him tobecome an artist.
THE WEEK IN ART NEWS On 2 June, an independent panel of experts published a report calling for the government to fund a comprehensive survey of colonial collections in Belgium and – pointing to official efforts in Germany and the Netherlands – recommending the setting up of a commission to evaluate requests for restitution. It also cites the need for new legislation to make returns possible. APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathed APOLLO – THE INTERNATIONAL ART MAGAZINECURRENT ISSUEAPOLLO AWARDS 201940 UNDER 40WHAT’S ONRAKEWELLDIRECTORY Art news, comment and reviews from one of the world’s most respected art magazines. Exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators and collectors. Covering everything from antiquities to contemporary art. APOLLO MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Call +44 (0)330 333 0180. Apollo brings you the most elegant and incisive art writing that’s out there. Published continuously since 1925 – but with a fresh take every month – it covers everything from classical to contemporary art. With your subscription you will receive monthly home delivery of the magazine, full app access andaccess
RAPHAEL’S TAPESTRIES IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL Imagine walking into the Sistine Chapel and not looking up. It seems inconceivable that the eye could fail to be drawn heavenward to Michelangelo’s epic ceiling frescoes representing scenes from the Book of Genesis and those eloquent, near-touching fingers of God giving life to Man in The Creation of Adam.Yet that was the effect of the Vatican Museums returning to their original setting the TIGRAY’S PEOPLE AND THEIR HERITAGE URGENTLY NEED There are several online petitions including a call for immediate and full humanitarian access and stop starvation in war-affected Tigray and an appeal for the salvation of the cultural heritage of Tigray. The people of Tigray and their precious heritage are urgently in need of support and protection. The fee for this piece has been donated to THE SENSUOUS LINES OF HUGUETTE CALAND The following year Caland again relocated, this time to California, where she stayed until 2013, when news of her first husband’s declining health brought her back to Beirut. A certain susceptibility to people appears to have brought Caland full circle. But now, 43 years after leaving, she returned on her own terms. THE ENIGMATIC VISIONS OF ODILON REDON Face-Germination (1888), Odilon Redon. For Huysmans, Redon’s indefinability resulted in an ‘uneasiness’ best pinpointed when Redon’s pictures were imagined in line with other arts. ‘Redon’s forebears,’ Huysmans suggests, ‘are only to be found among musicians, and undoubtedly among poets. It is indeed a true transposition of one AUTHOR: LAURA GASCOIGNE See the full span of his dizzyingly diverse practice in Copenhagen this winter. Laura Gascoigne. 16 Nov 2016. Reviews. ‘I buy! I buy! I can’t stop myself’: Artists as collectors at the National Gallery. Artist collectors, it emerges, are driven by a mix of motives fromcompulsion to
EMBROIDERY IN THE MIDDLE AGES The art of embroidery was considered among the most luxurious of the medieval period; sumptuous fabrics in silk, gold and silver thread, often depicting religious or secular narrative scenes, adorned altars and vestibules in churches, and the clothing and homes of the wealthy. This exhibition ranges across the main production centres of REJECTED RICHES: SIR ALBERT RICHARDSON’S COLLECTION AT Avenue House was lovingly maintained for half a century after Richardson’s death by his grandson, Simon Houfe, who was anxious to secure its future in the public realm. He offered both house and collection to the National Trust on advantageous terms. Negotiations dragged on for seven years, only to end with his offer being rejected. JOHN LURIE IS A VERY GRUMPY PAINTER If Painting with John is a kind of well-deserved victory lap that features Lurie, his home, his paintings, and a greatest hits soundtrack of his music, it has none of the smug self-congratulation someone else might bring to it. Lurie has always been lugubrious to a degree unachievable by most ordinary human beings – something aided in part by the remarkable droop of his lower lip, bequeathedCONTACT US | APOLLO
Contact us for advertising, editorial and subscription enquiries. 22 Old Queen Street, London. Tel: 020 7961 0150MUSEUM OF THE HOME
After an £18.1m makeover courtesy of Wright & Wright Architects, the 18th-century almshouses that formerly housed the Geffrye Museum are reopening on 12 June under a new name. THE NATIONAL 2021, REVIEWED It’s the work at the Museum of Contemporary Art that makes the biggest visual impression. Betty Kuntiwa Pumani’s huge Antara, representing her mother’s country in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Lands, is spectacular in its limited palette of red, blue and white.Maree Clarke’s necklaces made of echidna quills, river reeds and kangaroo teeth lift the spirits.THE SMELL OF ART
This article was published in the May 2021 issue of Apollo.Preview and subscribe here.. A t first glance Jacob van Ruisdael’s View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds (c. 1670–75) depicts a pleasant pastoral scene.Half of the painting – one of a series of popular Haerlempjes, or ‘Haarlem views’, for which Ruisdael was well known – is filled with sky, the billowing clouds emphasising IN THE STUDIO WITH… CHANTAL JOFFE 21 hours ago · In her paintings and pastels, Chantal Joffe explores the lives and experiences of women. Whether drawn from life, from photographs or from other sources such as magazines, Joffe’s figures are all rendered in the same distinctive gestural style, highlighting the physical process of their creation.GIOVANNI DA UDINE
Held at the Castello di Udine, this is the first exhibition devoted to the Renaissance master Giovanni da Udine (12 June–12 September). After making his name in Rome, where he was an assistant to Raphael and was knighted for his work on several papal commissions, the artist returned to his hometown in 1522. FOR KURDISH ARTISTS IN TURKEY, SIMPLY MAKING WORK IS A 2 hours ago · The pressures are not always so blatant. ‘I found myself doing self-censorship with my dissertation, to the point where it was undermining the research itself,’ says artist Rojda Tugrul, whose work deals with the ecological impact of the conflict and displacement suffered in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish south-eastin the 1990s.
THE GENIUS OF ERIC CARLE The genius of Eric Carle, who died in May at the age of 91 with more than 70 books under his belt, lay in his ability, through both words and pictures, to speak to children in a way that didn’t pander, patronise or moralise. JOSEPH E. YOAKUM: WHAT I SAW It was at the age of 71, while living as a retired veteran in Chicago, that Joseph E. Yoakum reported having the dream that inspired him tobecome an artist.
THE WEEK IN ART NEWS On 2 June, an independent panel of experts published a report calling for the government to fund a comprehensive survey of colonial collections in Belgium and – pointing to official efforts in Germany and the Netherlands – recommending the setting up of a commission to evaluate requests for restitution. It also cites the need for new legislation to make returns possible.Cookie Notice
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PEAK PRACTICE – THE ART OF BUILDING PYRAMIDS IN ANCIENT EGYPT Looking beyond the pyramids at Giza, royal tomb design was a more varied affair than we sometimes realiseGarry Shaw
9 Aug 2019
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AI WEIWEI SENDS RESEARCHERS TO DOCUMENT HONG KONG PROTESTSArt news daily
9 Aug 2019
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SECOND COMING – A STONE ROSES GUITARIST TURNS TO PAINTINGRakewell
9 Aug 2019
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8 Aug 2019
THE TITANIC TINA TURNER THAT’S HEADING FOR MARGATERakewell
2 Aug 2019
EUROPOL STING RECOVERS 18,000 STOLEN ARTEFACTSArt news daily
7 Aug 2019
MICK JAGGER HEADS UP AN ART HEISTRakewell
25 Jul 2019
Features
‘ALL VIEWERS ARE EQUAL – NO ONE IS TOLD HOW TO SEE’ – AT THE MENIL DRAWING INSTITUTE The latest addition to the Menil’s ‘neighbourhood of art’ in Houston offers an expanded vision of what drawing meansLinda Wolk-Simon
10 Aug 2019
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ACQUISITIONS OF THE MONTH: JULY 2019 One of Peter Lanyon’s last works and a rare print by Rembrandt are among this month’s highlightsApollo
9 Aug 2019
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OUT OF THE ORDINARY – LOIS DODD’S KEEN EYE FOR THE EVERYDAY From seaside Maine to the streets of Manhattan, Dodd’s paintings depict the world around herChloë Ashby
7 Aug 2019
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AN UNLIKELY COUPLE? LUCIAN FREUD AND JACK B. YEATS, REVIEWED It may sound like an implausible pairing – but this exhibition on the two painters succeeds by not making forced connectionsTom Walker
6 Aug 2019
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HEAVENLY BODIES – A MONUMENTAL STUDY OF AN EARLY BYZANTINEMASTERPIECE
The mosaics of the Rotunda at Thessaloniki can be seen more clearly than ever before in this essential book about the buildingAnthony Cutler
6 Aug 2019
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JULY/AUGUST 2019
• Félix Fénéon: anarchist and champion of African art • An interview with the sculptor David Nash • Art after the lunar landings • The artists who have tried to capture Moby Dick Plus: Tal R at the seaside, a preview of Parcours des Mondes, and reviews of Leonardo in London, Maria Lassnig in Amsterdam, and the unsung art of Milein CosmanView Issue
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IN DEFENCE OF THE CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ With the art market crying out for definitive catalogues, a new international association has been launched to support theirproduction
Jo Lawson-Tancred
5 Aug 2019
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THE APOLLO 40 UNDER 40 PODCAST: SIMON DENNY The Berlin-based artist talks to Gabrielle Schwarz about his latest project exploring data and resource miningApollo
5 Aug 2019
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‘WOOD SUITS ME, I’M A SAXON!’ – AN INTERVIEW WITH DAVID NASH The British sculptor has spent decades producing work from his sylvan surroundings. He discusses how it all beganMartin Gayford
3 Aug 2019
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IT’S AN ENCHANTING THOUGHT – BUT DID TITIAN HAVE A HAND IN THEWELLINGTON ORPHEUS?
The newly restored painting at Apsley House was probably executed by an artist on the margins of the master’s workshopMatthias Wivel
2 Aug 2019
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SEEING IS NOT BELIEVING IN THE ART OF JACQUELINE HUMPHRIES The artist’s mysterious glowing sculptures invite viewers to wonder what they actually areFrani O’Toole
1 Aug 2019
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FOG, LIGHTS AND LEGO – OLAFUR ELIASSON AT TATE MODERN, REVIEWED The artist and climate activist’s installations have changed our perceptions of what art can beGabrielle Schwarz
1 Aug 2019
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YOUR DAILY DIGEST OF ART NEWS STORIES FROM AROUND THE WORLD AI WEIWEI SENDS RESEARCHERS TO DOCUMENT HONG KONG PROTESTS9 Aug 2019
VENICE WILL REROUTE CRUISE SHIPS AWAY FROM CITY CENTRE8 Aug 2019
EUROPOL STING RECOVERS 18,000 STOLEN ARTEFACTS7 Aug 2019
ORGANISERS CLOSE EXHIBITION IN AICHI TRIENNALE, CITING TERRORISTTHREATS
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UK GOVERNMENT PLACES EXPORT BAR ON TURNER’S ‘DARK RIGI’5 Aug 2019
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‘I’M TRYING TO ERASE MYSELF’ – AN INTERVIEW WITH CINDY SHERMAN The artist has been taking photographs of herself for more than 40 years – but we mustn’t think of the results as self-portraitsRachel Wetzler
27 Jun 2019
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WHO’S GOING TO SHELL OUT FOR THIS MONUMENTAL CRAB? ‘Truly grotesque’ it may be, but the export bar placed on this characterful Victorian ceramic reflects its importance as a work ofart
Isabella Smith
27 Jun 2019
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THE APOLLO 40 UNDER 40 PODCAST: RUSSELL TOVEY The actor talks to Gabrielle Schwarz about his ‘addiction’ to collecting art – from Tintin to Tracey EminApollo
22 Mar 2019
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BEHIND THE CURTAIN – IT’S TIME WILLIAM LARKIN FINALLY GOT HIS DUE This year marks the 400th anniversary of the death of the great English court painter, long known only as the ‘Curtain Master’Breeze Barrington
9 May 2019
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APOLLO'S WANDERING EYE ON THE ART WORLD, TAKING A RAKISH PERSPECTIVE ON ART AND MUSEUM STORIES SECOND COMING – A STONE ROSES GUITARIST TURNS TO PAINTING9 Aug 2019
THE TITANIC TINA TURNER THAT’S HEADING FOR MARGATE2 Aug 2019
MICK JAGGER HEADS UP AN ART HEIST25 Jul 2019
BART SIMPSON IN THE MUSEUM25 Jul 2019
IN PRAISE OF PELICANS20 Jul 2019
Art diary
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PERFORMA 19 BIENNIALNew York
The performance art festival returns with a series of new commissions1 - 24 Nov 2019
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TORONTO BIENNIAL OF ARTToronto
Sites across the city’s waterfront play host to its inauguralbiennial
21 Sep - 1 Dec 2019
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WHERE WATER COMES TOGETHER WITH OTHER WATERLyon Biennale
This year’s edition of the leading French biennial takes its name from a book by Raymond Carver 18 Sep 2019 - 5 Jan 2020Uncategorized
THE SEVENTH CONTINENTIstanbul Biennial
Curator Nicolas Bourriaud invites artists to reflect on life in theAnthropocene age
14 Sep - 10 Nov 2019 SUBSCRIBE TO APOLLO NEWSLETTERSAND SPECIAL OFFERS
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