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Topic: RSS FeedBibliography for: "Museum opening of the year: The Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna: the restoration by Prince and Princess Hans-Adam II von und zu Liechtenstein of the family's Garden Palace in Vienna as a setting for works of art from the Liechtenstein collection has provided Austria with a major new museum. Andrew Wilton visited the palace, which opened to the public in March"
Andrew Wilton "Museum opening of the year: The Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna: the restoration by Prince and Princess Hans-Adam II von und zu Liechtenstein of the family's Garden Palace in Vienna as a setting for works of art from the Liechtenstein collection has provided Austria with a major new museum. Andrew Wilton visited the palace, which opened to the public in March". Apollo. FindArticles.com. 07 Jan, 2010. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0PAL/is_514_160/ai_n9480411/
Apollo
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Articles in Dec, 2004 issue of Apollo
- Bridget Riley
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As APOLLO'S review of museum acquisitions of 2004 went to press, the Metropolitan Museum of Art announced that it had bought a panel by Duccio
by Samson Spanier -
Lartigue: Album of a Century
by David Platzer -
Connoisseurs and cheapskates
by Michael Hall - Acquisiition of the year: The National Gallery, London The Madonna of the Pinks
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The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, has shelved its Caravaggio exhibition scheduled for 2005
by Samson Spanier -
The making of Raphael: David Ekserdjian reviews the ambitious, eagerly awaited exhibition devoted to the young Raphael, at the National Gallery, London
by David Ekserdjian -
Two museum curators have criticised the rise in the transportation of delicate works of art that may be damaged in the process
by Samson Spanier -
In October there was strength in all aspects of the market, from Chinese wares to French decorative artsbut even by these standards the Damien Hirst sale was unrivalled
by Susan Moore - Pieter Claesz : Master of still life in the Golden Age
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Personality of the year: Mikhail Piotrovsky, director, State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg
by Joanna Pitman -
Around the galleries: London's dealers demonstrate their Christmas spirit with some inspirational festive exhibitions
by Susannah Woolmer - La Galerie d'Apollon
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Turner in situ: the Tate's 'Turner and Venice' at the Museo Correr provides a remarkable opportunity to see these works in the city where they were made
by Eric Shanes -
The Mitchell Prizes for art history were awarded last month at the National Portrait Gallery, London
by Samson Spanier -
Sibling rivalry: Susannah Woolmer examines the complex, contrasting lives and art of Gwen and Augustus John, as presented in a thought provoking exhibition at Tate Britain
by Susannah Woolmer -
Museum opening of the year: The Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna: the restoration by Prince and Princess Hans-Adam II von und zu Liechtenstein of the family's Garden Palace in Vienna as a setting for works of art from the Liechtenstein collection has provided
by Andrew Wilton -
A man with 'buzz': in the July 1964 issue Denys Sutton looked back on the life and writings of the American critic James Gibbons Huneker
by Denys Sutton - Vivian Davies
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'Palmbeach 3', a contemporary art fair, takes place 14-15 January in Florida
by Samson Spanier -
Is the coffee-table book doomed? Michael Hall's choice of art books for Christmas suggests that this season publishers have invested more in the text than in lavish production values
by Michael Hall - Art Basel Miami
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The world in St Louis: Phillip Prodger surveys the extraordinary range of art shown in the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1904 World's Fair, perhaps the last gasp of the great nineteenth-century salon exhibitions
by Phillip Prodger -
The hype and glamour of the string of soirees that accompanied London's Frieze Art Fair have paid off
by Samson Spanier -
A bronze lover's feast: James David Draper luxuriates in the texturesand original scholarshipof the Frick's well displayed exhibition of the Quentin Foundation's sculpture
by James David Draper -
Perhaps the most spectacularcertainly the most expensivepiece of furniture ever sold is being offered in London. In New York, meanwhile, a large Roman cameo and a dazzling Sargent are the star lots
by Susan Moore -
Western antiques: the past year has seen a concerted effort by auction houses and dealers to put past troubles in the market behind them, and concentrate on well-provenanced objects of high quality
by Heather Russell - Architecture Gallery
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Exhibition of the year: 'illuminating the Renaissance: the Triumph of Flemish manuscript painting in Europe' at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the Royal Academy, London
by Christopher de Hamel -
The city proclaims its fashion credentials in two excellent exhibitions, and fights for a park thirty feet in the air
by Louise Nicholson - 'Portuguese ceramics from the 16th to 20th century'
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'Palpitating beauty': Julian Treuherz assesses the exhibitions inspired by the centenary of G.F. Watts's death
by Julian Treuherz - Susan Whitfield
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The People's Hero: Millais's The rescue and the image of the fireman in nineteenth-century art and media: J.E. Millais's celebrated painting can be best understood in the rich context of Victorian depictions of firefighters, who first became popular heroe
by John A. Walker -
Fear of death: why is the British legacy of funerary sculpture in public cemeteries so weak in comparison with Italy?
by Gavin Stamp - 2004 Ad
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How to collect: when the film critic Alexander Walker died in 2003 he bequeathed his collection of twentieth-century works on paper to the British Museum. An exhibition of them reveals how a collector of modest means can make a major impact
by Samson Spanier -
The July APOLLO reported that the Centre Pompidou, Paris, is planning to open a museum outpost in China
by Samson Spanier -
Private Lives in Renaissance Venice
by Francis Ames-Lewis -
Museum acquisitions: acquisition of the year: the print collection of Ferdinand Columbus : a renaissance collector in Seville
by Christian Rumelin - 'Faces in the crowd'
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Landscapes and faery: in 1904 the Irish symbolist writer and artist AE held his first public exhibition of paintings, in Dublin. Diana Beale reconstructs its contents and assesses its importance
by Diana Beale -
The export ban on the Macclesfield psalter, the exceptional English fourteenth-century manuscript that has been acquired by the J. Paul Getty Museum, has been extended until 10 February 2005
by Samson Spanier -
Annunciation
by Susannah Woolmer
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