My Favourite Paintings - Rubens' 'Rainbow Landscape'

Wednesday 13th May at 2pm

Looking at art is a wonderful way in which to focus the mind and lift the spirits, so would you like to spend a little time with me each week considering works of art? If so, please join me on Zoom every Wednesday at 2pm, when I am giving a series of Gallery Talks called ‘My Favourite Paintings' to concentrate your thoughts on Art History for half an hour.

Each talk is on one painting and I'll share insights, discussing aspects such as the subject matter, historical and social context of the painting, the life of the artist and the techniques and materials they empIoyed. I welcome questions in the chat box and attempt to answer as many as possible.

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The next painting I'll be discussing is Rubens' 'Rainbow Landscape' in the Wallace Collection, London.

If you would like to join the next talk of the 'My Favourite Paintings' series, on Wednesday 13th May at 2pm, please message me via the Contact form, and I'll send you the payment details and, on receipt of payment, the Zoom meeting link. The fee for each talk is £10 per person.

I very much look forward to talking to you about Rubens' 'Rainbow Landscape' on Wednesday afternoon

Gallery Talks Quiz 2 - The Answers

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Many of you enjoyed the distraction of spending a little time completing the second Gallery Talks Quiz. Please see the answers below.

Congratulations to Barbara Visy, the winner of Quiz 2, who will be receiving a special prize!

I will be posting another in the series of art quizes soon.


Gallery Talks Quiz 2 - National Gallery ‘Animals’

  1. Which animal stands in front of the couple in the ‘Arnolfini Portrait’ painted by Jan van Eyck in 1434?
    A Dog
  2. Uccello painted the ‘Battle of San Romano’ in 1438-40 and filled the scene with many images of which type of animal?
    Horses
  3. Which two animals are believed to have been painted by Leonardo da Vinci in ‘Tobias and the Angel’ c.1470-5 by Verrocchio and his workshop?
    The fish and the dog
  4. In Antonello da Messina’s painting ‘St Jerome in his Study’ c.1475 what animal walks along the aisle on the right side of the picture?
    A lion
  5. What does the peacock symbolise in ‘The Adoration of the Kings’ of c.1470-5 by Botticelli?
    Resurrection and eternal life
  6. A pair of which type of animal pull Bacchus’ chariot in Titian’s ‘Bacchus and Ariadne’ of 1520-23?
    Cheetahs
  7. In ‘Flowers in a Vase with Shells and Insects’ painted by Balthasar van der Ast c.1630 what type of insect is depicted on the ledge?
    A cricket
  8. Two dogs are chained together as a reference to the arranged marriage in Scene 1 of the series of 6 pictures named ‘Marriage a la Mode’ painted c.1743 by which artist?
    Hogarth
  9. ‘The Infant St John with the Lamb’ was painted in 1660-5 by which artist?
    Murillo
  10. What type of animal was Whistlejacket, who was painted by Stubbs c.1762?
    A horse
  11. What type of bird did Joseph Wright of Derby include in his painting ‘An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump’ dated 1768?
    A white cockatoo
  12. What breed of dog was depicted by Gainsborough in his portrait of Mr and Mrs William Hallett ‘The Morning Walk’ of 1785?
    A Pomeranian sheepdog
  13. Which animal lies in the left foreground of Seurat’s ‘Bathers at Arnieres’ painted in 1884?
    A dog
  14. Who painted a pair of crabs in 1889 inspired by the Japanese artist Hokusai?
    Van Gogh
  15. Who painted a tiger in 1891 in the painting entitled ‘Surprised!’?
    Henri Rousseau

My Favourite Paintings - Manet's 'A Bar at the Folies-Bergere'

Wednesday 6th May at 2pm

Looking at art is a wonderful way in which to focus the mind and lift the spirits, so would you like to spend a little time with me each week considering works of art? If so, please join me on Zoom every Wednesday at 2pm, when I am giving a series of Gallery Talks called ‘My Favourite Paintings' to concentrate your thoughts on Art History for half an hour.

Each talk is on one painting and I'll share insights, discussing aspects such as the subject matter, historical and social context of the painting, the life of the artist and the techniques and materials they empIoyed. I welcome questions in the chat box and attempt to answer as many as possible.

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The next painting I'll be discussing is Manet's 'A Bar at the Folies-Bergere' in the Courtauld Gallery, London.

If you would like to join the next talk of the 'My Favourite Paintings' series, on Wednesday 6th May at 2pm, please message me via the Contact form, and I'll send you the payment details and, on receipt of payment, the Zoom meeting link. The fee for each talk is £10 per person.

I very much look forward to talking to you about Manet's 'A Bar at the Folies-Bergere' on Wednesday afternoon

My Favourite Paintings

Looking at art is a wonderful way in which to focus the mind and lift the spirits, so would you like to spend a little time with me each week considering works of art? If so, please join me on Zoom every Wednesday at 2pm, when I will be giving a series of Gallery Talks called ‘My Favourite Paintings' to concentrate your thoughts on Art History for half an hour.

Each talk will be on one painting and I'll be sharing insights, discussing aspects such as the subject matter, historical and social context of the painting, the life of the artist and the techniques and materials they empIoyed. I’ll welcome questions in the chat box and attempt to answer as many as possible.

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The first painting I'll be discussing is Botticelli's 'Primavera' in the Uffizi, Florence.

If you would like to join the first talk of the 'My Favourite Paintings' series, please message me via the Contact form, and I'll send you the Zoom meeting link. This first talk will be a trial and is free of charge.

I very much look forward to talking to you about Botticelli's 'Primavera' on Wednesday afternoon!

Gallery Talks Quiz 2

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Whilst art galleries and museums in London and Florence are closed, sadly all Gallery Talks have been put on hold. In the meantime, I am posting a series of art quizes, each on a specific theme and based on one museum.

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The second quiz covers paintings in the National Gallery collection and the theme is 'Animals'.

Please send me your answers by email or via the Contact form. A prize will be given to the first person to send me a full set of correct answers.


Gallery Talks Quiz 2 - National Gallery ‘Animals’

  1. Which animal stands in front of the couple in the ‘Arnolfini Portrait’ painted by Jan van Eyck in 1434?
  2. Uccello painted the ‘Battle of San Romano’ in 1438-40 and filled the scene with many images of which type of animal?
  3. Which two animals are believed to have been painted by Leonardo da Vinci in ‘Tobias and the Angel’ c.1470-5 by Verrocchio and his workshop?
  4. In Antonello da Messina’s painting ‘St Jerome in his Study’ c.1475 what animal walks along the aisle on the right side of the picture?
  5. What does the peacock symbolise in ‘The Adoration of the Kings’ of c.1470-5 by Botticelli?
  6. A pair of which type of animal pull Bacchus’ chariot in Titian’s ‘Bacchus and Ariadne’ of 1520-23?
  7. In ‘Flowers in a Vase with Shells and Insects’ painted by Balthasar van der Ast c.1630 what type of insect is depicted on the ledge?
  8. Two dogs are chained together as a reference to the arranged marriage in Scene 1 of the series of 6 pictures named ‘Marriage a la Mode’ painted c.1743 by which artist?
  9. ‘The Infant St John with the Lamb’ was painted in 1660-5 by which artist?
  10. What type of animal was Whistlejacket, who was painted by Stubbs c.1762?
  11. What type of bird did Joseph Wright of Derby include in his painting ‘An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump’ dated 1768?
  12. What breed of dog was depicted by Gainsborough in his portrait of Mr and Mrs William Hallett ‘The Morning Walk’ of 1785?
  13. Which animal lies in the left foreground of Seurat’s ‘Bathers at Arnieres’ painted in 1884?
  14. Who painted a pair of crabs in 1889 inspired by the Japanese artist Hokusai?
  15. Who painted a tiger in 1891 in the painting entitled ‘Surprised!’?

Gallery Talks Quiz 1 - The Answers

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Many of you enjoyed the distraction of spending a little time completing the first Gallery Talks Quiz. Please see the answers below.

Congratulations to Sarah Molke, who is the winner of Quiz 1.

I will be posting another in the series of art quizes soon.


Gallery Talks Quiz 1 - National Gallery ‘Royalty’

  1. Which painting by Velàzquez was the first to be purchased for the nation by the Art Fund, with a contribution from King Edward VII, in 1906?
    The Rokeby Venus
  2. Which Venetian artist was commissioned by King Philip II of Spain to paint a series of six large mythological paintings, inspired by Ovid’s ‘Metamorphoses’, during the 1550s & 1560s?
    Titian
  3. The Wilton Diptych was painted around 1395-9 as a portable altarpiece for which King of England, who is depicted in the painting?
    Richard II
  4. King Charles I appointed which Flemish artist as First Painter to the King in 1632?
    Anthony Van Dyck
  5. The Self-Portrait by Elisabeth Vigée le Brun in 1782 was inspired by Rubens’ ‘Le Chapeau de Paille’ (also in the NG). By which Queen of France was Elisabeth Vigée le Brun patronised as portrait painter?
    Marie Antoinette
  6. Which Madonna & Child painting of 1425 is owned by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and is on long term loan to the National Gallery?
    ‘The Quaratasi Madonna’ by Gentile da Fabriano
  7. ‘The Ambassadors’ was painted in 1533 at the Court of King Henry VIII in London by which artist?
    Hans Holbein the Younger
  8. Rubens painted ‘Peace and War’ in 1629-30 as a gift to celebrate successful peace negotiations between England and Spain that he had carried out as envoy to King Philip IV of Spain. To which King of England and Scotland did Rubens give this gift?
    Charles I
  9. King George III purchased the art collection of Joseph Smith, the British Consul at Venice, in 1765, including a large series of views of Venice by which artist?
    Canaletto
  10. Which King of Spain appears in three paintings by Velàzquez in the National Gallery collection?
    Philip IV
  11. The portrait of the official mistress of King Louis XV of France by François-Hubert Drouais in 1763-4, depicts her at her tambour frame in a stunning dress. What was the sitter’s name?
    Madame de Pompadour
  12. Orazio Gentileschi’s huge ‘Finding of Moses’ painting was commissioned to celebrate the birth of which heir to the throne of Great Britain?
    Charles II
  13. Which painting by Guido Reni was commissioned by King Wladislaw of Poland around 1640?
    ‘The Rape of Europa’
  14. The Biblical Queen of Sheba is depicted at a seaport embarking on her journey to visit King Solomon in a painting by which artist?
    Claude Lorrain
  15. Which artist painted a grand scene featuring the Ancient Greek King Alexander the Great, painted in 1565-7 for the Pisani family in Venice? What is the name of the painting?
    Veronese ‘The Family of Darius before Alexander’

Florence ‘Part Two’ Trip 14th-17th March

Plans are well underway for the next Gallery Talks’ Florence Trip, tailored to those who have previously been to Florence and taking in many of the less well-known venues and hidden gems in this beautiful, historical city. Lunches and dinners will be at typical Tuscan restaurants where we will be sampling the delights of Italian food and wine and of course plenty of coffee and gelato breaks will be taken along the way!

Our itinerary starts with the Casa Buonarroti, the home of Michelangelo and a peaceful museum with few tourists. Here we will take in some of Michelangelo’s stunning early works and the frescoes celebrating his life, including one by Artemisia Gentileschi, who is the subject of a one-woman exhibition coming up at the National Gallery this April. The National Gallery filmed the Artemisia fresco at the Casa Buonarroti last month and it will be included in a video as part of the ‘Artemisia’ exhibition, much to the museum’s excitement!

After lunch in a tiny piazza, we’ll be visiting the vast Palazzo Pitti where I have planned a manageable route through a selection of the very many of the galleries cram-packed with significant art from the Medici family collections; we will focus on works by Lippi, Botticelli, Raphael, Bronzino, Titian, Giorgione and Artemisia Gentileschi. A short walk to the top of the Boboli Gardens will reward us with stunning views across the River Arno to San Miniato al Monte and the Tuscan hills, hopefully bathed in glorious sunlight. If there’s time, we might fit in a quick visit to the church of Santa Felicita to see Pontormo’s Deposition altarpiece in Brunelleschi’s Capponi Chapel.

Day Two starts with the Medici Chapels followed by the stunning little Capella dei Magi in the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi, frescoed by Benozzo Gozzoli and one of the oldest private chapels to have survived in a Florentine palace. After lunch in the rooftop restaurant of the Spedale degli Innocenti, overlooking the Duomo and rooftops of Florence, we’ll be paying a visit to the Accademia, to see the famous Michelangelo’s David, amongst many other sculptures by him and Giambologna and plenty of significant works of art by Botticelli, Lippi, Ghirlandaio and Perugino, to name but a few. The cloister of the church of Santissima Annunziata will provide some quiet time, whilst we admire Andrea del Sarto’s Madonna of the Basket, in preparation for putting our feet up before meeting for dinner.

Day Three takes in the imposing Palazzo Vecchio which is steeped in history. Built at the turn of the 13th century on the site of a Roman theatre as the seat of government, it has changed its role over the centuries, including as the home of the Medici family during the 16th century, and today is still the town hall of Florence.

A restorative lunch will be taken at our leisure and, after rubbing the nose of the bronze boar ‘Il Porcellino’ in the Mercato Nuovo to ensure our return to Florence, we’ll be visiting Santa Maria Novella. Inside the splendid marble façade, the Church of Santa Maria Novella houses a Crucifix by Giotto and Masaccio’s Trinity, although painted over one hundred years apart it is interesting to confront these two great masters of Italian painting at close range. The ‘Chiostro Verde’ frescoes by Uccello have recently been restored and the complete fresco cycle by Ghirlandaio in the Tournabuoni Chapel includes many portraits of 15th century Florentines. In other words, Santa Maria Novella is a treasure trove of Early Renaissance painting by some of the great masters of the 14th & 15th centuries. And, there are two tranquil cloisters in which to truly relax and absorb!

Our last morning in Florence will be spent visiting the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, or the ‘Duomo’, to admire its interior, followed by brunch at one of the oldest cafés in Florence whilst we watch the world go by in the Piazza della Repubblica, before heading for home.

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New Art History Course at the National Gallery

A new National Gallery course is starting this week, on Friday 7th February at 10.30am and continuing on one Friday morning per month.

This series of Gallery Talks is designed to give an introduction to the History of Western Art through the centuries and aims to be both informative and informal. Works of art are brought to life by placing them in their historical and social context, describing the artistic techniques employed and discussing the lives of the artists and their patrons.

The course of talks begins with the earliest paintings in the National Gallery’s collection and then continues chronologically, studying approximately ten paintings during each session. Each Gallery Talk is coherent in itself, no previous knowledge is required and questions are welcomed.

Details of the series can be found on the Talks page and dates are listed on the Calendar, under ‘Group 6’ with Renoir’s Umbrella as the icon.

Please send me a message if you are interested in joining this Gallery Talks group at the National Gallery, via the contact form on this website.

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Titian & Rubens

I am beyond excited about the news that the Wallace Collection is going to lend its 'Perseus and Andromeda' by Titian to the National Gallery 'Titian; Love, Desire, Death' exhibition, opening on 16th March 2020. This means that, for the first time since the King of Spain, Philip II, commissioned the series of paintings from Titian over 450 years’ ago, all of the six great 'poesie' will be displayed together. Titian named the series of paintings 'poesie' as he regarded them as his equivalents to poetry in painting. He was given unprecedented freedom in his choice of subject matter, albeit all from classical mythology and specifically Ovid’s Metamorphoses, so that his interpretation of the stories was entirely his own. The series is divided between the National Gallery London, Prado Madrid, Isabella Gardner Museum Boston, Wellington Collection London and the Wallace Collection London.

In a reciprocal agreement, the National Gallery’s 'View of Het Steen in the Early Morning' by Rubens will travel to the Wallace Collection to be reunited with its companion picture, Rubens’ 'The Rainbow Landscape'. The two landscapes were painted by Rubens for his own pleasure whilst he was living in retirement at his 'Chateau de Het Steen' in the Brabant countryside between Antwerp and Brussels. He hung them either side of a window in his home, so that the natural light continued that of the sunlight depicted in the paintings. They will be on public display together for the first time in 105 years from May 2020.

The Wallace Collection has recently changed its lending policy in a landmark decision as a result of a re-interpretation by lawyers and art experts of the terms of the will left by Lady Wallace when she bequeathed the collection to the nation. Previously considered a closed collection, the Wallace will now lend works of art on an "exceptional basis".

‘Perseus and Andromeda’ by Titian

‘Perseus and Andromeda’ by Titian

‘View of Het Steen in the Early Morning’ by Rubens

‘View of Het Steen in the Early Morning’ by Rubens

‘The Rainbow Landscape’ by Rubens

‘The Rainbow Landscape’ by Rubens

Wallace Collection Course

A new course of Gallery Talks is starting at the Wallace Collection on Thursday 5th December 2019. This course consists of ten talks and will continue in the New Year on one Thursday morning per month.

I will guide you through the stunning art at the Wallace Collection, which was collected by five generations of one family and bequeathed as a national museum. The sumptuous interior of the Wallace Collection provides a beautiful backdrop to the internationally important artistic treasures such as Hals' 'Laughing Cavalier' and Fragonard's 'The Swing', as well as exquisite furniture, porcelain and sculpture. Hertford House, the charming home of the Wallace Collection, is an intimate haven in the midst of the hustle and bustle of its central London location just north of Oxford Street behind Selfridges and a visit feels like a step back in time to a bygone era when time moved at a more leisurely pace and beautifully crafted objects were greatly admired.

Please contact me via the Contact form if you would be interested in joining the Thursday Gallery Talks course at the Wallace Collection and I will send you further details.

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Gallery Talks Florence Trips

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The February and March Gallery Talks Trip to Florence were truly wonderful! Everyone thoroughly immersed themselves in the unforgettable beauty and culture of this tiny city where the flowering of a new European art took place in the 14th to 16th centuries under the enlightened patronage of the Medici, other wealthy Florentine families and the Church.

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During our four day visits, we visited Masaccio’s ground-breaking frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel, admired Fra Angelico’s brilliant, jewel-like decorations of the peaceful San Marco Monastery, wondered at the innovative engineering of Brunelleschi’s Dome and absorbed the calming atmosphere of his stunningly beautiful churches at San Lorenzo, the Pazzi Chapel and Santo Spirito. Ghiberti’s exquisite bronze doors adorning the ancient Baptistery were a delight to our eyes and the new Duomo museum displaying the originals and other sculptures was well worth visiting. We could have spent hours in Santa Croce admiring Giotto’s frescoes and some of the oldest surviving in paintings in Italy together with the tombs of many eminent Florentines and one of the most tranquil cloisters in the city.

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Of course no visit to Florence is complete without a visit to the Uffizi Art Gallery and there we were overwhelmed by the consummate beauty of Botticelli’s philosophical and sophisticated paintings, the huge altarpieces created by Ciambue and Giotto with technical mastery designed to embellish churches and inspire devotion, Leonardo’s supreme paintings and the remarkably realistic portraits of the Medici family by Bronzino. We studied the superb collection of Renaissance sculpture, by artists such as Donatello and Michelangelo, at the Bargello Museum and very much appreciated the palace’s history and architecture.

Florence is an architectural and artistic unity, a complete expression of the spirit of the Renaissance, with its wealth of architecture, monuments, paintings and sculptures created within the space of 200 years. It is truly astonishing that so many figures of genius came from Florence during the Medieval and Renaissance period, including Giotto, Brunelleschi, Donatello, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Dante, Galileo and Machiavelli.

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Our hotel was perfectly situated overlooking the River Arno (some of us had a “Room with a View”) within walking distance to most of our destinations with comfortable rooms, helpful staff and a good breakfast. We sampled wonderful Tuscan cuisine in beautiful roof-top cafés, traditional restaurants and in piazzas where we soaked up the Florentine atmosphere and watched the world go by!

Planning for further Gallery Talks Florence Trips, including ‘Florence Part 2’, is underway!

Gallery Talks Trip to Florence

Saturday 16th until Tuesday 19th March 2019

Looking forward to the next Gallery Talks Trip to Florence! All bookings for the dome, galleries, museums,churches and restaurants have been made and here's our itinerary :

Saturday 16th March

12.15pmMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
12.30pmLunch at Trattoria Nella
1.30pmDepart restaurant and walk to:
2.00pmChurch of San Lorenzo & Palazzo Medici-Riccardi
3.00pmCathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, Piazza del Duomo
3.30pmDuomo Museum and The Baptistery
4.30pmOpportunity to climb the Dome
5.30pmFree time
7.45pmMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
8.00pmDinner at Le Antiche Carrozze

Sunday 17th March
9.00amMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby and walk to:
9.30amGalleria degli Uffizi
12.00pmLunch at Uffizi café
1.00pmGalleria degli Uffizi
3.30pmFree time or optional visit to Casa Buonarroti Museum
7.45pmMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
8.00pmDinner at Osteria Belle Donne

Monday 18th March
9.00amMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby and taxi to:
9.30amMuseum of San Marco, Piazza San Marco
12.00pmLunch at Spedale degli Innocenti Museum rooftop café
1.00pmDepart café and walk to:
1.30pmChurch of Santa Croce, Piazza Santa Croce
3.15pmTaxi to:
3.30pmBrancacci Chapel, Santa Maria del Carmine
5.00pmChurch of Santo Spirito
6.00pmFree time
7.45pmMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
8.00pmDinner at Angiolino

Tuesday 19th March
9.00amMeet in Hotel Berchielli lobby and walk to:
9.30amBargello Museum
11.30amPiazza della Signoria
12.00pmCoffee or Gelato at Rivoire
12.30pmHotel Berchielli - depart by taxi to airport
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New Gallery Talks Course at the Wallace Collection

A new Gallery Talks course starts this Friday 18th January, at the Wallace Collection and will continue on one Friday morning per month. A small Gallery Talks group will be guided by me through the remarkable treasures of art in the Wallace Collection. The first three dates for this series of talks are Fridays 18th January, 15th February and 29th March 2019.

This sumptuously decorated yet intimate national museum is a haven in central London and a visit feels like taking a step back in time to an elegant and leisured era when time passed at a gentle pace and exquisite objects were enjoyed and admired purely for their beauty. The Wallace Collection includes significant works of art by artists such as Titian, Rubens, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Velàzquez, Canaletto, Fragonard, Gainsborough, Reynolds and Landseer. All the art, sculpture, furniture, porcelain and armour in the Wallace Collection was collected by five generations of one family, the first four marquesses of Hertford and Sir Richard Wallace, the illegitimate son of the 4th Marquess, and is displayed in their former home at Hertford House in Manchester Square.

Please message me if you would like to join this group at the Wallace Collection.

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March Florence Trip

I'm really looking forward to the Gallery Talks Trip to Florence in March! Advanced timed tickets and restaurants are now booked for each day and evening of our cultural study tour, so we're all set to go! Here's our itinerary for Saturday 16th until Tuesday 19th March 2019:

Saturday 16th March
12.30pm - Lunch at Trattoria Nella
2.30pm - San Lorenzo & Palazzo Medici-Riccardi
4.00pm - The Duomo & Baptistery
5.00pm - Opportunity to climb the Dome
6.00pm - Free time
8.00pm - Dinner at Trattoria da Benvenuto

Sunday 17th March
9.00am - Meet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
9.30am - Galleria degli Uffizi
12.00pm - Lunch at Uffizi
1.30pm - Galleria degli Uffizi
4.00pm - Free time
8.00pm - Dinner at Ristorante Il Latini

Monday 18th March
9.00am - Meet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
9.30am - The Convent of San Marco
12.00pm - Lunch at Ospedale degli Innocenti rooftop café
1.30pm - Santa Croce & Pazzi Chapel
3.45pm - Brancacci Chapel
5.00pm - Santo Spirito
6.00pm - Free time
8.00pm - Dinner at Angiolino

Tuesday 19th March
9.00am - Meet in Hotel Berchielli lobby
9.30am - Bargello
11.00am - Piazza della Signoria
11.30am - Coffee or Gelato
12.30pm - Hotel Berchielli: depart for airport

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February Florence Trip

There is a new Gallery Talks trip to Florence planned for February 2019, as the March trip is now fully booked. The dates for this trip are ‪Sunday 17th February until Wednesday 20th February 2019‬. There are places available on this cultural study tour and the deadline for booking is ‪Friday 30th November 2018‬.

Please do contact me if you are interested in joining the group on this trip and I will send you further details, including flight and hotel recommendations. The maximum number for each group is ten people, as with all Gallery Talks groups.

This four day visit to Florence will include detailed morning and afternoon tours of the treasure trove of art in the churches and museums of this wonderful city, which still retains an astoundingly dense concentration of great works of art. Florence, the cradle of the Renaissance, is where the foundations for 500 years of Western art were laid and a succession of great artists were nurtured; Giotto, Brunelleschi, Donatello, Masaccio, Botticelli, Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael. Whilst discovering the beauty and history of the art and appreciating the craftsmanship of the architects, sculptors and painters who created this inspirational city, we will also soak up the vibrant Florentine atmosphere and sample the delights of Italian cuisine!

A provisional itinerary can be found on the 'Florence Trip' page of my website, under 'Talks'.

The cost of this trip is £400. This includes all advance timed bookings, £130 of entrance fees and £45 per three hour morning and afternoon detailed guided art tour. All timings allow for coffee and lunch breaks and group evening meals will be organised if wished. Flights, hotels and meals are not included in the price.

Recommendations for flights and hotel will be made; this is most likely to be a British Airways Flight and Hotel deal, flying from London City Airport and staying at the Hotel Berchielli.

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Gallery Talk on Italian Renaissance Art at the National Gallery

Thursday 8th November at 10.30am

Places are available for the Gallery Talk on Italian Renaissance Art on Thursday 8th November at 10.30am at the National Gallery.

Please message me if you would be interested in attending. The fee is £30, including a full set of notes emailed to you afterwards.

The talk will focus on around ten paintings by artists including Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, Botticelli and Leonardo da Vinci. Renaissance art achieved its fullest flowering in Italy, where the remains of classical sculpture and architecture could be studied and newly-rich city states, such as Florence, provided generous and innovative patrons. The beginnings of the Italian Renaissance, literally "rebirth" of interest in classical learning, also brought the discovery of the new technique of perspective and a mastery of naturalism in art, in particular through the study of the human body and the use of oil paint. Subject matter was expanded from being predominantly religious to include classical mythology, portraiture and to reflect contemporary events. Leonardo da Vinci was largely responsible for establishing the idea of the artist as a creative intellectual and not simply a skilled craftsman.

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Gallery Talks at the National Gallery

Would you like to learn about the wonderful art in the National Gallery, the artistic treasure trove on our doorstep here in London?

If so, why not join a new Gallery Talks group, meeting on one ‪Thursday morning‬‬‬ per month?

The National Gallery houses one of the most significant art collections in the world.

Focusing on around ten paintings each morning, Gallery Talks are given chronologically, century by century, artist by artist, so as to give an understanding of the history of Western art. Talks cover aspects such as the social and historical context of the paintings, the stories of the artists’ lives and the techniques they used.

No previous knowledge is required, just a curiosity about art and its history.

For further details, please send me a message via the Contact form on the Gallery Talks website.

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Gallery Talks Trips to Florence

Here are a few photos from last month's wonderful Gallery Talks Trip to Florence. The next Florence Trip is from Monday 15th until Thursday 18th October 2018. There are places available on this cultural study tour and the deadline for booking is Friday 17th August.

There will be another Florence Trip from Saturday 16th until Tuesday 19th March 2019.

Please do contact me if you are interested in joining the group on either of these study tours and I will send you further details, including flight and hotel recommendations. The maximum number for each group is ten people, as with all Gallery Talks groups. Each of these four day visits to Florence will include detailed morning and afternoon tours of the treasure trove of art in the churches and museums of this wonderful city, which still retains an astoundingly dense concentration of great works of art. Florence, the cradle of the Renaissance, is where the foundations for 500 years of Western art were laid and a succession of great artists were nurtured; Giotto, Brunelleschi, Donatello, Masaccio, Botticelli, Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael. Whilst discovering the beauty and history of the art and appreciating the craftsmanship of the architects, sculptors and painters who created this inspirational city, we will also soak up the vibrant Florentine atmosphere and sample the delights of Italian cuisine!

A provisional itinerary can be found on the 'Florence Trip' page of the website, listed under 'Talks'.

The cost of this trip is £400. This includes all advance timed bookings, £130 of entrance fees and £45 per three hour morning and afternoon detailed guided art tour. All timings allow for coffee and lunch breaks and group evening meals will be organised if wished. Flights, hotels and meals are not included in the price.

Gallery Talks Forence Trip

Last week's Gallery Talks Trip to Florence was wonderful! We thoroughly enjoyed being immersed in the unforgettable beauty of this tiny city where the flowering of a new European art took place in the 14th & 15th centuries. Florence is an architectural and artistic unity, a complete expression of the spirit of the Renaissance, with its wealth of architecture, monuments, paintings and sculptures created in the space of 200 years. It is truly astonishing that so many figures of genius came from Florence during the Renaissance period, including Giotto, Brunelleschi, Donatello, Machiavelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Galileo and Michelangelo.

During our three day visit, we visited Masaccio’s ground-breaking frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel, admired Fra Angelico’s brilliant, jewel-like decorations of the peaceful San Marco Monastery, wondered at the innovative engineering of Brunelleschi’s Dome and absorbed the calming atmosphere of his stunningly beautiful churches at San Lorenzo and Santo Spirito. Of course no visit to Florence is complete without visiting the Uffizi Art Gallery and there we were overwhelmed by the consummate beauty of Botticelli’s philosophical and sophisticated paintings, the huge altarpieces created by Ciambue and Giotto with technical mastery designed to embellish churches and inspire devotion, Leonardo’s supreme paintings and the remarkably realistic portraits of the Medici family by Bronzino. We studied the superb collection of Renaissance sculpture, by artists such as Donatello and Michelangelo, at the Bargello Museum and very much appreciated the palace’s Gothic architecture and courtyard.

Our hotel was perfectly situated overlooking the River Arno (yes, some of us had a 'Room with a View') within walking distance to most of our destinations with very helpful staff and a good breakfast. We sampled wonderful Tuscan cuisine in beautiful roof-top cafes, traditional restaurants and in piazzas where we soaked up the Florentine atmosphere and watched the world go by!

Upcoming Gallery Talks Trips to Florence:

  • Monday 15th October – Thursday 18th October 2018
  • Saturday 18th March – Tuesday 19th March 2019

Please send me a message me via the Contact form on the Gallery Talks website if you would like further information.

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