For a breath of fresh air, try the Watts Gallery - Artists’ Village in the Surrey village of Compton, whose immersive online offering is as close to a day in the country as we might reasonably expect ...
It is no secret that English Victorian intellectual John Ruskin (1819-1900) loved Venice, and the maritime city was the subject of one of his most famous written works, The Stones of Venice. He made ...
This year marks the bicentenary of the birth of art critic John Ruskin, one of the most influential thinkers of the 19th century and in many ways a role model for our own time. To celebrate the ...
John Ruskin was a complicated man. A British artist in the Victorian era, an educator, preservationist, moral leader, critic of art and society — this man of infinite curiosity sought to implement ...
In the long run, genius can be its own worst enemy. The more difficulty there is getting a handle on a body of work — it’s so varied, demanding, distinctive, provocative, and, yes, uneven — the easier ...
WHEN in the year 1843 appeared the first volume of Modern Painters, by a Graduate of Oxford, the world of English connoisseurship was ruled by conventional notions which are hardly now understood.
Bendor Grosvenor is right (“Is AI killing the art connoisseur?”, Arts, Life & Arts, FT Weekend, November 29) — artificial intelligence is not killing art connoisseurship. The world’s first and ...