vimarsana.com

Page 2 - கெட்டி அருங்காட்சியகம் இல் லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Necrophiliacs and dancing bears: meet the wild artists of the Society of Dilettanti

Necrophiliacs and dancing bears: meet the wild artists of the Society of Dilettanti A series of works on show at Sir John Soane’s Museum was funded by an 18th-century group who were truly mad, bad and dangerous to know 20 May 2021 • 5:00am In their cups: various members of the Society of Dilettanti (1778), as painted by Joshua Reynolds Credit: Alamy All the boisterous patrician privilege of the Bullingdon Club crossed with the artistic hunter-gatherer instincts of the Tate trustees: that was, approximately, the Society of Dilettanti, founded in 1734 by some aristocratic courtiers around Frederick, the Prince of Wales who would predecease his father, George II. They had returned reluctantly from their classical tours in Italy “desirous of encouraging at home a taste for those objects which had contributed so much to their entertainment abroad”.

Kasmin exhibits Robert Polidori s photographs of the ancient frescoes found among the ruins of Pompeii

Kasmin exhibits Robert Polidori s photographs of the ancient frescoes found among the ruins of Pompeii Installation view. NEW YORK, NY .- A new exhibition by Robert Polidori presents the artist’s large-scale color photographs of the ancient frescoes found among the ruins of Pompeii, Italy. Taken in 2017 and exhibited in North America for the first time, the works continue Polidori’s lifelong investigation into the spiritual and psychological resonance of architecture and interior spaces. The exhibition is on view at 297 Tenth Avenue in New York from April 22 to May 15, 2021. Depicted in many of the works in the series is the Villa dei Misteri, a well-preserved dwelling on the outskirts of the city famous for its exquisite frescoes clustered in one room. These artworks, originating from 70-60 BC and restored between 2013-15, are among the best known of the relatively rare survivals of Ancient Roman painting and are understood to portray the rites of a young woman as she is ind

Museum of Art welcomes first female director, vision of wider artist diversity

The Daily Universe Janalee Emmer became the first female director of BYU’s Museum of Art on April 26. Emmer hopes to showcase new voices and artists that aren’t normally seen in the museum world while continuing the “rich and wonderful traditions” the Museum of Art already has. Emmer is the fourth director of the Museum of Art, the first female director and the first single director. “I am really pleased to be the first woman to take this role. I hope it gives young girls, young women and BYU students a signal that there are so many possibilities for them in the future,” Emmer said.

Poussin painting copy to hang in main galleries with new label | Art

Last modified on Thu 29 Apr 2021 10.52 EDT It was bought by the National Gallery in the 1820s as a painting by Nicolas Poussin, the 17th-century French master. But The Triumph of Silenus – a bacchanalian revel – has long been relegated to the storerooms, having been repeatedly rejected by some of the 20th-century’s foremost experts as a mere copy. Now doubts about the picture have been dispelled and it will hang in the main galleries with a new label bearing Poussin’s name. It will also receive pride of place in a forthcoming Poussin exhibition organised by the National Gallery in London and the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.

A Bacchanalian Painting Once Thought to Be a Copy of a Poussin Has Been Reattributed to the French Master

A Bacchanalian Painting Once Thought to Be a Copy of a Poussin Has Been Reattributed to the French Master Poussin’s The Triumph of Silenus will go on view at the National Gallery in London this fall. The Triumph of Silenus, (c. 1637). © The National Gallery, London. For decades, a playful painting thought to be a facsimile of a Nicolas Poussin original sat in the storerooms of London’s National Gallery. But this week, the painting was reattributed to the French master himself and will soon make its “triumphant” return to the museum’s walls. Poussin’s The Triumph of Silenus, painted around 1637, depicts the titular Greek god of wine and drunkenness, several drinks deep into a truly wild night. So sloshed is the bald, naked Silenus that he’s held up by two men in the left register of the painting. He’s even using a live tiger as a footrest. A tiger!

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.