Tag: Renaissance art

Famous works by Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael come to London

Florence art

On 25 January 1504, the most prominent artists of Florence convened to deliberate on a fitting location for Michelangelo’s nearly finished masterpiece, David. Among this illustrious assembly was Leonardo da Vinci, who, like Michelangelo, had recently returned to his native city. The upcoming exhibition, “Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael: Florence, c. 1504,” aims to delve into the rivalry between these two titans of the Renaissance and examine the significant influence they exerted on the young Raphael. This exhibition will showcase over 40 remarkable works, including Michelangelo’s Taddei Tondo, Leonardo’s Burlington House Cartoon, and Raphael’s Bridgewater Madonna, as well as some of the most exquisite drawings from the Italian Renaissance. Opening with Michelangelo’s only marble sculpture in the UK, the celebrated Taddei Tondo, c. 1504-05 (Royal Academy of Arts, London), attendees will witness the related preparatory drawings that illuminate the creation of this iconic relief. Created amid the vibrant atmosphere of Republican Florence, when Michelangelo, Leonardo, and Raphael intersected in their artistic pursuits, the Taddei Tondo profoundly influenced Raphael’s work, evident in pieces like the Bridgewater Madonna, c. 1507-08 (Bridgewater Collection Loan, National Galleries of Scotland), and the Esterházy Madonna, c. 1508 (Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest), both of which will be displayed prominently. The central gallery of the exhibition will be dedicated to Leonardo’s Burlington House Cartoon, c. 1506-08 (The National Gallery, London), marking its return to the Royal Academy for the first time in over six decades. The display, along with the accompanying catalogue, will unveil new research into the original context of this significant work…. Read More

What to see at the National Gallery of London this English summer

National Gallery London

If there’s one place you visit in London for any injection of art, timeless history and culture that has influence so much of what we around the world consider influential art, then the National Gallery in London is it. And this summer the gallery that sits at the pinnacle of art in the English capital is putting on exhibitions that celebrate the life, time and work or artists Gaugin in The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gaugin and Bartolome Bermejo in Master of the Spanish Renaissance. Until 26 January 2020 for Gaugin (which opens in October!) and 29 September 2019 for Bermejo, the Gallery is celebrating the life and times of both artists through their works, a testament to post-impressionist and Flemish renaissance art respectively. The Gaugin exhibition makes the first ever exhibition for the gallery, devoted to the portraits of Paul Gaugin spanning a whopping period from the mid-1880s to 1903, when he died. The exhibition features a collection of portraits of a sitter, which Gaugin had placed into suggestive contexts to help express meaning beyond their personalities. By bringing together a number of works of the same sitter for different collections, the exhibition lets you see how Gaugin interpreted a specific model in different media over time. Meanwhile for a shorter period, The National Gallery London will show works by Bermejo, the man hailed as the greatest Spanish artist of the second half of the fifteenth century. It’ll include some of his works like Madonna of Montserrat and Pieded Despla from the Barcelona Cathedral. They’ve… Read More