Lisa sainsbury is remembered as a remarkable woman with a quick discerning mind and broad vision. Her interests spanned from health, public service, education and botany to the arts. Her attention was always focused on the human interface in those areas. She and her husband Sir Robert were pioneers in many fields, from commissioning the then little known architect Norman Foster to building a gallery and teaching space at the new University of East Anglia, to funding a computerized system of plant management at Kew Gardens. Lady Sainsbury is deservedly well known as a patron of artists and of twentieth-century..
In her article, “Sargent’s Foot Soldiers: Japanese Plants, Newport Gardeners, and Growing the Arnold...
English Victorian botanical artist Marianne North is celebrated for her meticulous attention to deta...
Henry Moore's humanist sculpture changed the course of art in the twentieth-century and raised the s...
The Visitors’ Book kept by Sir Richard and Lady Wallace at Hertford House encompasses 245 pages with...
© Cambridge University Press 2013. The attainments of Anne Seymour Damer as artist, author and stude...
Lisa French (1931–2021) was the first woman to be appointed as Director of the British School at Ath...
Lady Wallace had a remarkable life but she has remained a tantalizingly enigmatic figure, not least ...
Mary Hope Greg (1850-1949) was a lifelong follower of John Ruskin, and a Companion of Ruskin's Gui...
A woman artist and her Prime Minister : informal remarks on Art by W.E. Gladstone (1886-1890). Than...
The year 1910 was to be critical in Katherine Mansfield’s development as a professional writer. Betw...
Lady Dorothy Nevill gained acclaim as a botanist, a political hostess, one of the founding members o...
Loti Smorgon AO was an art lover from an early age. She was an avid collector throughout her life, b...
Caroline Hancock’s Joanna Drew and the Art of Exhibitions tells of one woman’s life and work behind ...
The Keatley Trust, founded in 1968 by collector John Keatley, aims to purchase the finest ceramics, ...
Anna came to Palmerston after marrying a Territory policeman, Nicholas Joseph Waters, on 1 March 189...
In her article, “Sargent’s Foot Soldiers: Japanese Plants, Newport Gardeners, and Growing the Arnold...
English Victorian botanical artist Marianne North is celebrated for her meticulous attention to deta...
Henry Moore's humanist sculpture changed the course of art in the twentieth-century and raised the s...
The Visitors’ Book kept by Sir Richard and Lady Wallace at Hertford House encompasses 245 pages with...
© Cambridge University Press 2013. The attainments of Anne Seymour Damer as artist, author and stude...
Lisa French (1931–2021) was the first woman to be appointed as Director of the British School at Ath...
Lady Wallace had a remarkable life but she has remained a tantalizingly enigmatic figure, not least ...
Mary Hope Greg (1850-1949) was a lifelong follower of John Ruskin, and a Companion of Ruskin's Gui...
A woman artist and her Prime Minister : informal remarks on Art by W.E. Gladstone (1886-1890). Than...
The year 1910 was to be critical in Katherine Mansfield’s development as a professional writer. Betw...
Lady Dorothy Nevill gained acclaim as a botanist, a political hostess, one of the founding members o...
Loti Smorgon AO was an art lover from an early age. She was an avid collector throughout her life, b...
Caroline Hancock’s Joanna Drew and the Art of Exhibitions tells of one woman’s life and work behind ...
The Keatley Trust, founded in 1968 by collector John Keatley, aims to purchase the finest ceramics, ...
Anna came to Palmerston after marrying a Territory policeman, Nicholas Joseph Waters, on 1 March 189...
In her article, “Sargent’s Foot Soldiers: Japanese Plants, Newport Gardeners, and Growing the Arnold...
English Victorian botanical artist Marianne North is celebrated for her meticulous attention to deta...
Henry Moore's humanist sculpture changed the course of art in the twentieth-century and raised the s...