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Tag: Seventeenth-century art

Review of Dane Hurst Company’s Animalis at Dulwich Picture Gallery

6th January 20196th January 2019  Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou

Unbridled passions are laid bare in Dane Hurst’s Animalis, a theatrical response to the paintings in Dulwich Picture Gallery’s current exhibition, Ribera: Art of Violence.

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Posted in Art and design, Arts, DanceTagged: Apollo, Baroque, Contemporary dance, Dance, Dane Hurst, Dane Hurst Company, Joseph de Ribera, Marsyas, Ovid, Ribera, Ribera: Art of Violence, Seventeenth-century art, St Bartholomew

Review of Ribera: Art of Violence at the Dulwich Picture Gallery

6th January 20196th January 2019  Anna Galkina

Our arts contributor Anna Galkina appreciates the cinematic realism of Jusepe de Ribera’s paintings and prints in Dulwich Picture Gallery’s current exhibition.

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Posted in Art and design, ArtsTagged: Apollo, Caravaggio, Jusepe de Ribera, Marsyas, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarrantino, Realism, Ribera, Seventeenth-century art, St Bartholomew, the Inquisition

Artemisia Gentileschi Portrait revealed at the National Gallery, London

2nd January 20192nd January 2019  Miriam Al Jamil

The National Gallery reveals its latest acquisition, Artemisia Gentileschi’s Self-portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria. Miriam Al Jamil reflects on its importance in Gentileschi’s oeuvre.

Read More “Artemisia Gentileschi Portrait revealed at the National Gallery, London”
Posted in Art and design, ArtsTagged: Artemisia Gentileschi, Baroque, Caravaggio, Charles I, Medusa, National Gallery, Orazio Gentileschi, portraiture, Royal Collection, Saint Catherine, self-portrait, Seventeenth-century art
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