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Showing posts with the label Noordbrabants Museum

Very Rich Hours in Chantilly

It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience: the chance to see one of the greatest -- and most fragile -- works of European art before your very eyes. The illustrated manuscript known as the  Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry contains images that have shaped our view of the late Middle Ages, but it's normally kept under lock and key at the Château de Chantilly, north of Paris. It's only been exhibited twice in the past century. Now newly restored, the glowing pages of  Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry are on show to the public for just a few months. "Approche, approche," the Duke of Berry's usher tells the visitors to the great man's table for the feast that will mark the start of the New Year. It's also your invitation to examine closely the illustration for January, one of the 12 months from the calendar in this Book of Hours -- a collection of prayers and other religious texts -- that form the centrepiece of this exhibition in Chantilly.  It's su...

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Opening and Closing in September

Which exhibition are we most looking forward to this month? It has to be Frans Hals at the National Gallery in London, which starts on September 30. It's the first major retrospective of the great portraitist of the Dutch Golden Age in three decades, and it will assemble around 50 of his works, including a couple of his large-scale group portraits of militiamen from the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. A must-see, particularly if you missed the fantastic show focusing on Hals's male portraits at the Wallace Collection a couple of years back. All that swaggering loose -- or even louche -- brushwork is on display at the National Gallery until January 21, before transferring to the Rijksmuseum in February and then the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin in July.  Hals was originally from Antwerp, and it was in the Flemish port city that his close contemporary Peter Paul Rubens spent much of his life and career. The new exhibition at Dulwich Picture Gallery i...

One Van Gogh Exhibition That Doesn't Deliver

Vincent van Gogh wasn't an easy man to get along with.  "Few could put up with him and his fanatic fierceness," recalled Anthon van Rappard, who became friends and started painting with him in 1880 in Brussels. "Our relations lasted five years, and if I hadn't stayed calm during his outbursts, they wouldn't have endured so long."  Van Gogh's Inner Circle , an exhibition at the Noordbrabants Museum in Den Bosch in the southern Netherlands, takes us through a history of Vincent's relationships -- blazing rows and simmering confrontations with his family and with fellow artists, as well as his deepest, most durable friendship with his younger brother Theo.  It's a fascinating topic, but a rather underwhelming show. There are a lot of letters in glass cases, which is perhaps not surprising in an exhibition about friendships and working partnerships. But ultimately, particularly when we get to the late blossoming of van Gogh's car...