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V&A brings Raphael Cartoons to life at home, ahead of gallery reopening

V&A brings Raphael Cartoons to life at home, ahead of gallery reopening Raphael Cartoon, The Healing of the Lame Man. Photo © V&A. Courtesy Royal Collection Trust Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. LONDON .-The V&A unveiled a host of new digital content about the Raphael Cartoons for everyone to enjoy from home, ahead of the reopening of the transformed Raphael Court to the public after the latest national lockdown lifts. Available on the V&A website, the new online offering provides those based both in the UK and abroad an unprecedented level of access to the Raphael Cartoons from afar, which are lent to the V&A from the Royal Collection by Her Majesty The Queen. Through interactive features and in-depth stories, audiences will be able to learn about the extraordinary design and making of the Cartoons and their long 500-year history, exploring the monumental works of art as never before by zooming into ultra-high-resolution photography, infrared imagery, and 3D scans. This

Edward Colston Jury Trial Raphael Cartoons Edmund de Waal Mosul Gift

Edward Colston Four Opt For Trial By Jury The four people charged with criminal damage for pulling down a bronze statue of slave trader Edward Colston and dumping it in Bristol harbour have pleaded not guilty. Jake Skuse, 36, Rhiannon Graham, 29, Milo Ponsford, 25, and Sage Willoughby, 21, appeared at Bristol Magistrates’ Court earlier today to deny the charges. They have opted to be tried before a judge and jury. They were bailed and are due to appear at Bristol Crown Court on 8 February. Arrests were made outside the courtroom when protesters ignored warnings not to gather outside the court.  The offending bronze statue of slave merchant Edward Colston was pulled off its pedestal during a Black Lives Matter protest on 7 June. On Friday it was announced that two other statues of men involved in the slave trade would be removed from the Guildhall in London. The statues honoured former Lord Mayor of London William Beckford and 17th-century merchant Sir John Cass, who also had a

The lure of the lakes: Writer Tamara Hinson finds Windermere as spellbinding as ever

Advertisement When I was aged eight, my parents took me on holiday to Windermere. Minutes after arriving at our lakeside campsite, I scrambled on to my lilo and set sail. Unfortunately, a gusty breeze immediately buffeted me towards a row of fishermen. I remember crashing backwards through their fishing lines, staring up at angry anglers wondering how they’d hooked a rainbow-coloured lilo instead of a trout. Nonetheless, I fell in love with Windermere, and decades later it’s another boat – albeit a more seaworthy one – that has lured me back. The new MV Swift takes passengers from Bowness-on-Windermere to Ambleside, halfway along England’s largest lake

Francis Galton pioneered scientific advances in many fields – but also founded the racist pseudoscience of eugenics

Smart people can have really bad ideas – like selectively breeding human beings to improve the species. Put into practice, Galton's concept proved discriminatory, damaging, even deadly.

15 Paintings to See at the Victoria and Albert Museum

©pio3/Shutterstock.com The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has its origins in the Great Exhibition of 1851. The works of decorative arts displayed there moved to the Museum of Manufacturers and then to the South Kensington Museum, which, in 1899, was renamed the Victoria and Albert Museum. Today the V&A’s collection includes more than 2 million objects from across several millennia. This list highlights 15 notable paintings worth seeing at the V&A. Earlier versions of the descriptions of these paintings first appeared in 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die , edited by Stephen Farthing (2018). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.

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