Sir Charles Lock Eastlake (1793-1865), the first Director of the National Gallery in London, was a figure of crucial significance in the shaping of art historical understanding in Britain between the 1820s and 1860s. His library, consisting of approximately 2,000 volumes, reflects his interests in the fields of attribution, provenance and the history of artistic techniques. This paper contextualises the Eastlake library by comparing its contents to the Catalogo ragionato dei libri d’arte e d’antichità posseduti dal conte Cicognara (1821), a watershed art bibliography. Eastlake’s library demonstrates his pragmatic and diligent approach to his work and echoes how Leopoldo Cicognara (1767-1834) constructed his collection. The comparative appr...
In 1909, the grand couturier Jacques Doucet opened a library dedicated to art history and archaeolog...
This thesis examines the art and career of John Sell Cotman (1782-1842), one of the most inventive y...
Between his appointment as first secretary (and later director) of the National Portrait Gallery in ...
Sir Charles Lock Eastlake (1793-1865), the first Director of the National Gallery in London, was a f...
During Charles Eastlake’s directorship of the National Gallery (1855-65), the collection was transfo...
This essay examines the changing role of the museum professional and the practice of connoisseurship...
Sir Charles Lock Eastlake’s acquisition of Italian art defines his legacy as director of the Nationa...
How libraries have shaped the writing and reception of art history and criticism was explored in two...
This article brings together the social history of art collections and the history of vision in a di...
This thesis examines the evolution of connoisseurship before and after the exhibition ‘Art Treasures...
© 2015 Pamela Olive TuckettThe impact of Sir Charles Lock Eastlake on the practice and promotion of...
The subject of this thesis is the history of the library at The Göteborg Museum of Art. The aim of t...
Matthew Hayes’ volume examines the influence of nineteenth-century scholarship on the activities of ...
Frederick McCubbin (1855–1917), watching students copy chromolithographs and casts in Melbourne’s Na...
In the years following George Scharf’s appointment to the National Portrait Gallery in 1857, he had ...
In 1909, the grand couturier Jacques Doucet opened a library dedicated to art history and archaeolog...
This thesis examines the art and career of John Sell Cotman (1782-1842), one of the most inventive y...
Between his appointment as first secretary (and later director) of the National Portrait Gallery in ...
Sir Charles Lock Eastlake (1793-1865), the first Director of the National Gallery in London, was a f...
During Charles Eastlake’s directorship of the National Gallery (1855-65), the collection was transfo...
This essay examines the changing role of the museum professional and the practice of connoisseurship...
Sir Charles Lock Eastlake’s acquisition of Italian art defines his legacy as director of the Nationa...
How libraries have shaped the writing and reception of art history and criticism was explored in two...
This article brings together the social history of art collections and the history of vision in a di...
This thesis examines the evolution of connoisseurship before and after the exhibition ‘Art Treasures...
© 2015 Pamela Olive TuckettThe impact of Sir Charles Lock Eastlake on the practice and promotion of...
The subject of this thesis is the history of the library at The Göteborg Museum of Art. The aim of t...
Matthew Hayes’ volume examines the influence of nineteenth-century scholarship on the activities of ...
Frederick McCubbin (1855–1917), watching students copy chromolithographs and casts in Melbourne’s Na...
In the years following George Scharf’s appointment to the National Portrait Gallery in 1857, he had ...
In 1909, the grand couturier Jacques Doucet opened a library dedicated to art history and archaeolog...
This thesis examines the art and career of John Sell Cotman (1782-1842), one of the most inventive y...
Between his appointment as first secretary (and later director) of the National Portrait Gallery in ...