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History is a construction. What happens when we bring stories consigned to the margins up to the light? How does that complicate our certainties about who we are, as individuals, as nations, as human beings? As in her fiction, the essays in Out of the Sun demonstrate Esi Edugyan's commitment to seeking out the stories of Black lives that history has failed to record. In five wide-ranging essays, written with the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement in the background, Edugyan reflects on her own identity and experiences. She delves into the history of Western Art and the truths about Black lives that it fails to reveal, and the ways contemporary Black artists are reclaiming and reimagining those lives. She explores and celebrates the legacy of Afrofuturism, the complex and problematic practice of racial passing, the place of ghosts and haunting in the imagination, and the fascinating relationship between Africa and Asia dating back to the 6th Century. With calm, piercing intelligence, Edugyan asks difficult questions about how we reckon with the past and imagine the future.
Considers Claude Monet's paintings of buildings in their environment, offering a reappraisal of an artist more often associated with landscapes, seascapes and gardens
Jonathan Conlin discusses the history of the National Gallery - one of the greatest collections of art in the world, and an institution that has courted controversy from the day it opened.
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This volume brings together the exceptional collection of paintings found in The National Gallery, London - one of the world's major repositories of paintings and perhaps the most significant in terms and variety and entirety since all the main European schools of painting are represented. Works featured in the book include masterpieces by Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, Botticelli, Poussin, van Dyck, Vermeer, Manet, Constable, Degas, Seurat, van Gogh, Monet, Caravaggio, Goya and many, many others. In addition to holdings in Flemish art and the largest collection of Velazquez outside of Spain, the gallery also houses one of the finest collections of British art including Hogarth, Gainsborough, Stubbs, Constable and Turner. The works featured in this collection represent the pivot points around which the entire world of European painting from the Middle Ages through the nineteenth century rotates. Sumptuously illustrated with 600 colour plates, PAINTINGS IN THE NATIONAL GALLERY is an invaluable resource for scholars and art lovers alike.
This Tiny Folio book highlights the works of The National Gallery, London, which has one of the most magnificent--and the most beloved--collections of paintings in the world. Founded in 1824, the National Gallery houses a rich and comprehensive range of European painting from the Middle Ages to the 1920s. Among the works represented in this colorful and compact survey of the Gallery's collection are masterpieces by Sandro Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Titian, Rembrandt, Peter Paul Rubens, Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, Edgar Degas, and Paul Cézanne, as well as some lesser-known delights. Located on Trafalgar Square, in the heart of London, the original Wilkins Building has recently been extended by the handsome new Sainsbury Wing, which contains some of the world's greatest paintings.
An investigation into the overlapping cultures of East and West in Renaissance Venice through the work of the supremely talented Bellini family
In this text, Neil MacGregor engages with images of Christ wherever they may be found throughout the world. Through them he follows not only the life of Christ, but also the development of Christian culture since His birth.
Published to accompany the exhibition of the same name held at The National Gallery, London, 11th May-30th October 2016.