The Making of an Artist: The Great Tradition | Suspended
開店時刻: 2020/08/05
閉店時刻: 2020/12/31
スケジュール: Wed - Sun 11 am - 5 pm
チケット: Free admission | Booking required
Eメール:
ロケーション: Royal Academy of Arts
住所: Burlington House, Piccadilly, Mayfair, London W1J 0BD
What makes art great? The direct observation of nature or the study of the masterpieces of the past? We find out at the Royal Academy of Arts in company of the most illustrious painters and sculptors in history. In the 1700s, when the prestigious institution was founded, male nudes were considered essential to an artist’s portfolio. And the tradition was the principal inspiring muse of a colossus like Sir Joshua Reynolds, the Royal Academy’s first president. Yet, just a few years later, John Constable and William Turner would change everything, giving landscape painting the same dignity as historic painting. A breath of fresh air blew into the Academy - natural phenomenon, like clouds, wind and tempests became the subjects of sublime paintings, while a new way of treating light would set the foundations for the impressionist revolution. Artistic milestones offer a look at these transformations in this exhibition recently inaugurated at the Royal Academy, moving through time to the very origins of the great art of the West. In fact, on display are jewels of the Renaissance like Tondo Taddei by Michelangelo and an almost-full-sized copy of The Last Supper by Leonardo, as well as the moulds of masterpieces of classical sculpture, such as the Belvedere Torso.
Protest and Tenderness - Zanele Muholi at the Tate Modern
Over 260 photos retrace the entire career of the South African activist, documenting their multifaceted life as an outspoken part of South Africa’s gay, lesbian, trans, queer and intersexual community.
At the British Museum, a Journey through the History of the Tantra
From India in the Middle Ages to contemporary feminism, tantric philosophy revolutionised both East and West. But what do we really know about it? A gallery of precious objects reveals its secrets across cultures and time.