Apollo
View more issues: Feb 2004, March 2004, May 2004
Articles in April 2004 issue of Apollo
- Town Houses of Medieval Britain
by John Goodall - David Alexander previews the London Original Print Fair
by David Alexander - The Crystal Palace at Sydenham: the Crystal Palace was an integtal part of the Victorian art world, as Robert Thorne discovered at the Dulwich Picture Gallery's exhibition
by Robert Thorne - The London original print fair
- Round the galleries: a selection of current exhibitions and works of art on the market
by Samson Spanier - Round the auction houses
- Erratum
- Soane and the Grenvilles: Peter Inskip traces the story of Sir John Soane's work at Stowe, Buckingham House, Brasenose College, and Wotton House
by Peter Inskip - Exemplary gestures and 'authentic' physiognomies: Eckart Marchand offers an interpretation of Ghirlandaio's Famous Men in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence
by Eckart Marchand - Fox Talbot's Botanic Garden: W.H. Fox Talbot's early experiments with photography at Lacock Abbey were in part prompted by his passion for botany, as Katie Fretwell explains
by Katie Fretwell - 'A casket to enclose pictorial gems': in 1838 James Morrison, one of the richest men in England commissioned the architect J.B. Papworth to complete, decorate and furnish Basildon Park in Berkshire as a setting for his art collection. It was the culminati
by Caroline Dakers - God is in the details: Tate Britain's exhibition on the Pre-Raphaelite approach to nature is ambitious in its intellectual scope
by Michael Hall - Time for tea: in celebration of the remarkable craftmanship involved in the making and taking of a cup of tea, Peter Brown tells the extraordinary story of how one of the best-loved beverages was introduced to the Western world
by Peter Brown - Ideal Reality: Tate Modern's Brancusi exhibition reveals a fundamental failure to grasp the sculptor's true meaning
by Eric Shanes - Titian in Connemara: in the 1830s enterprising English artists in search of Picturesque novelty discovered the west of Ireland. Among them was William Evans of Eton, as Louisa M. Connor Bulman describes
by Louisa M. Connor Bulman - Prunella Clough: the recent exhibition at Olympia shone some welcome light on a neglected artist
by Susannah Woolmer - El Greco in the whole: The National Gallery's El Greco exhibition is important not just for the quality of the works on show, but because it attempts to present the painter in the round
by Robin Cormack - Hampton Court: a Social and Architectural History
by Ian Gow - A catalogue of the drawings of George Dance the Younger is a highlight of recent books on architecture and design
by David Watkin - Francois Linke 1855-1946: the Belle Epoque of French Furniture
by James Yorke - A Bronzino discovery: Pentimenti and vivacious brushwork persuade Janet Cox-Rearick and Philippe Costamagna that they have identified a Madonna and Child painted by Bronzino in Pontormo's studio
by Janet Cox-Rearick