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186 articles
Exhibition Review
Breaking Lines: Futurism and the Origins of Experimental Poetry: Dom Sylvester Houédard and Concrete Poetry in Post-war Britain
05/2025 | 1466 | 167
Pages: 494–7
related names
Reviewer:
Thomas, Greg (Thomas, Greg)
Subjects
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Breaking Lines: Futurism and the Origins of Experimental Poetry: Dom Sylvester Houédard and Concrete Poetry in Post-war Britain Estorick Collection, London 15th January–11th May | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
13. Madrigale veneziano (Venetian madrigal) from Aeromusiche d’alfabeto in libertà: Marinetti Crali Cenisi, by Tullio Crali. 1944. (Private collection; exh. Estorick Collection, London).
Attributed works:
14. ishtar’s descent, by Dom Sylvester Houédard. 1971. Typed page 29.7 x 21 cm. (Courtest Lisson Gallery, London; exh. Estorick Collection, London).
Attributed works:
15. Untitled, by Dom Sylvester Houédard. 1967. Newspaper cuttings, fabric and PVC plastic, 35.7 by 33.7 cm. (Courtesy Lisson Gallery, London; exh. Estorick Collection, London).
Exhibition Review
Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet
05/2025 | 1466 | 167
Pages: 482–85
related names
Reviewer:
Campbell, Ian (I. C.) (Campbell, Ian (I. C.))
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Reviewed Items
subjects:
Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet Tate Modern, London 28th November 2024–1st June 2025 | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Superficie magnetica, by Davide Boriani. 1965. Aluminium, iron filings, polyurethane foam, magnets, motor and sensor, 80 by 87 by 26 cm. (Private collection; exh. Tate Modern, London).
Attributed works:
2. Lichtraum (Jena), by Otto Piene. 2005/2017. Rubber, metal, foamboard, wood, electric motor, control unit and light, dimensions variable. (© Otto Piene Estate and DACS, London; photograph Atkinson Museum; exh. Tate Modern, London).
Attributed works:
3. Still from Land, by Samia Halaby. 1988. Kinetic painting coded on an Amiga computer, duration 1 minute 15 seconds. (Tate; courtesy the artist and Sfeir- Semler Gallery, Beirut and Hamburg; exh. Tate Modern, London).
Book Review
Graphic Assembly: Montage, Media, and Experimental Architecture in the 1960s
06/2020 | 1407 | 162
Pages: 553
related names
Reviewer:
Sadler, Simon (Sadler, Simon)
Subjects
dates:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Graphic Assembly: Montage, Media, and Experimental Architecture in the 1960s By Craig Buckley. 400 pp. incl. 66 col. + 162 b. & w. ills. (University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2019),  27.99. ISBN 978–1–5179–0161–5. | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
6. Continuous monument, St Moritz, by Superstudio. 1969. Cut-and-pasted paper with coloured pencil on printed paper (Courtesy Superstudio archive).
Article
The Art of Conservation XVI: Scientific examination of works of art in museums and galleries
12/2019 | 1401 | 161
Pages: 1004-1017
related names
Author:
Kirby, Jo (Kirby, Jo)
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Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Johannes Wilde holding an X-radiograph plate in front of The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine, by Ciro Ferri, in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, in the 1930s. (IPD Photographic Agency, Vienna; Courtauld Institute of Art, London, Wilde Special Collection).
Attributed works:
10. Joyce Plesters working with the Zeiss laser microspectral analyser, in the Scientific Department, National Gallery, London. Photograph, c.1977. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
11. Microsectioner mounted to a binocular microscope on an adjustable stand in preparation for sampling. Photograph, undated. (Harvard Art Museums Archives, Harvard University, Cambridge MA.).
Attributed works:
12. Cross-section of a sample of orange paint from St Joseph’s robe in Fig.14, taken during conservation treatment in 1953. Black-and-white photograph taken at a magnification of about 35x by balancing a camera on the body tube of an 1895 Leitz microscope in place of the eyepiece, then hand coloured by Joyce Plesters, included in the conservation dossier for the painting. (© The National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
13. The same cross-section photographed recently using a camera integrated into modern microscope equipment, repolished before photography. The pigments and layer structure – a layer of bright orangeyellow realgar, probably mixed with orpiment, over layers of orange-yellow earth pigment and red and yellow earth pigments mixed with lead white – are revealed in far greater detail. The translucent material at the top of the cross-section is varnish. (© The National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
14. The Holy Family with a shepherd, by Titian. c.1510. Oil on canvas, 99.1 by 139.1 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
2. Rutherford John Gettens seated at the microscope, photographed by Walter R. Fleischer, Harvard News Office, at an unknown date. (HUP Gettens, Rutherford (1), Harvard University Archives).
Attributed works:
3. Walter Gräff in his examination studio in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich, in 1933. (Doerner Institut, Munich; reproduced by permission of the Doerner Institut).
Attributed works:
4. Narayan Khandekar with the Art-X portable X-ray machine (replacing the Picker) commissioned by Alan Burroughs for the Fogg Museum in 1939 with Philip III of Spain, from the workshop of Pantoja de la Cruz, at the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Harvard University. (President and Fellows of Harvard College; photograph © Caitlin Cunningham Photography, 2019).
Attributed works:
5. X-radiograph of the detail in Fig.6. Date unknown. (Harvard Art Museums/Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Alan Burroughs Collection of X-Radiographs).
Attributed works:
6. Detail of two standing nymphs from Feast of the Gods, by Giovanni Bellini and Titian. 1514/1529. Oil on canvas, 170.2 by 188 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
7. Detail of Arnolfini’s hand from Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his wife, by Jan van Eyck. 1434. Oil on panel, 82.2 by 60 cm. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
8. Infra-red photograph showing change of position of the hand between drawing and painting, the painted hand only partly obscuring the drawing as it is thinly painted. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
9. Infra-red reflectogram of the hand, recorded using the experimental SIRIS instrument with an InGaAs (indium gallium arsenide) array sensor c.2003. The images obtained with these more recent systems are sharper than those published in 1995 using the Hamamatsu vidicon (see note 39), but all reveal more drawing than in the infra-red photograph, notably in Arnolfini’s arm, the position of which was altered between drawing and painting. (© National Gallery, London).
Obituary
Hessel Miedema (1929–2019)
09/2019 | 1398 | 161
Pages: 795-796
related names
Author:
Taylor, Paul (Taylor, Paul)
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Illustrations
Attributed works:
3. Hessel Miedema, photographed c.1968. (Photograph Tresoar; Frysk Histoarysk en Letterkundich Sintrum).
Publication Received
Ravens and Red Lipstick: Japanese Photography since 1945. By Lena Fritsch
03/2019 | 1392 | 161
Pages: 264
related names
Reviewer:
Stojković, Jelena (Stojković, Jelena)
Subjects
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Ravens and Red Lipstick: Japanese Photography since 1945. By Lena Fritsch | :
Book Review
Live Form: Women, Ceramics and Community. By Jenni Sorkin
02/2019 | 1391 | 161
Pages: 174-175
Book Review
Avant-garde Art and Criticism in Francoist Spain. By Paula Barreiro López
12/2018 | 1389 | 160
Pages: 1076
Publication Received
Louise Bourgeois, An Unfolding Portrait: Prints, Books and the Creative Process. By Deborah Wye
11/2018 | 1388 | 160
Pages: 987
related names
Reviewer:
Parton, John (Parton, John)
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media:
Publication Received
Sculpture on the Move 1946–2016. Edited by Bernhard Mendes Bürgi
11/2018 | 1388 | 160
Pages: 987
related names
Reviewer:
Vernon, Jonathan (Vernon, Jonathan ; V., J.)
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