//=time() ?>
A reminder that the deadline for the @AestheticaMag annual Art Prize is soon approaching! The competition offers £5000 prize money as well as group exhibition and publication in Aesthetica Magazine.
Submit by 31 August: https://t.co/6GJijfy89F
In 1804 the outstanding collection of paintings and objets d’art owned by the late Antoine Jean-Baptiste Dutartre was sold in Paris. A newly discovered inventory reveals that the core of the collection had been assembled by his older brother.
Read p. 388: https://t.co/XSjwiKaESd
One of Maria Cosway’s most unusual works, a depiction of a woman praying to the sun, painted in 1784 and now in @SoaneMuseum, was probably inspired by a Mughal miniature of a sun worshipper, which was itself derived from a European prototype. Read in full: https://t.co/n0FfJjl93D
Happy New Year from all the Burlington Magazine team.
We wish you a wonderful year full of new discovery and creativity.
Don't forget to subscribe to our newsletter to explore the monthly free article and keep up to date with the very latest discoveries: https://t.co/F94fGCplJq
The watercolours with which Manet decorated letters in 1880 have long been admired for their freshness and spontaneity. Close examination reveals, however, that many of these vignettes were carefully traced from drawings in Manet’s sketchbooks.
Read more: https://t.co/XSjwiKsggN
'Together these coloured prints announce a familiar Blakean struggle between the bright optimism of creative inspiration and the darker power of authority from on high.'
William Blake is on display @Tate Britain until 02/02/20.
Read the free review: https://t.co/mhLfQQoZeM
This month we are offering two free reviews from our October issue.
The first, ‘The Decorated Word: Writing and Picturing in Islamic Calligraphy’, is an exhibition review written by Abigale Balbale.
Read in full: https://t.co/vKRLVdNKCP
Did you have a chance to see the mesmerising Sorolla exhibition, just closed at the National Gallery? This month, you'll find three of his beautiful works reproduced in Elaine Kilmurray's review of the show.
Read it in our current issue: https://t.co/XSjwiKsggN
Edvard Munch's technical skills are highlighted in a tightly focused display of his prints. This month, Jill Lloyd reviews Evard Munch: Love and Angst at the British Museum until 21st July.
Read the full article in our current issue now: https://t.co/XSjwiKsggN
The £10,000 Burlington Magazine scholarship for the study of French 18th-century fine and decorative art is back for 2019. Head to our jobs and opportunities page to find out more about how to apply. Deadline for applications is 1st March 2019. https://t.co/9N06jbF5gG