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September 2019

Vol. 161 | No. 1398

Editorial

Out of the attic

Sometimes fairy tales really do come true. On first hearing, the story of the seventeenth-century canvas of Judith beheading Holofernes that was discovered in the attic of a house in Toulouse in 2014 sounded like a work of fiction, especially once it became known that eminent scholars were prepared to argue that the painting was by Caravaggio. 

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Free review

Escape into Art? The Brücke Painters in the Nazi Period Brücke-Museum and Kunsthaus Dahlem, Berlin; Emil Nolde – A German Legend: The Artist during the Nazi Period. Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin

These two excellent exhibitions, both with highly informative catalogues, explore with a new openness the relationship between Expressionism and National Socialism. As part of Escape into Art? at the Brücke-Museum, which investigates the period up to 1945, the neighbouring Kunsthaus Dahlem examines the rehabilitation of the Brücke artists in the post-war era.(1) It is the first time that these two institutions have joined forces, which is symbolic of a new wider approach. 

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  • The first mixing of the Becket blood and water relic at Canterbury Cathedral

    Pilgrimage scenes in newly identified medieval glass at Canterbury Cathedral

    By Rachel Koopmans
  • Detail of Fig.3, showing the faces of Abra and Judith

    Caravaggio’s other ‘Judith and Holofernes’

    By John Gash
  • Portrait of Miss Jacquet, by Gustave Courbet

    ‘Madame de Brayer’ identified: Courbet and his Brussels portraits, 1856–58

    By Dominique Marechal
  • Sir Charles Holmes, by Elliott & Fry

    Charles Holmes and the restoration of paintings at the National Gallery, London

    By Jacob Simon
  • Pablo Picasso with John Richardson

    Sir John Richardson (1924–2019)

    By Elizabeth Cowling
  • Hessel Miedema

    Hessel Miedema (1929–2019)

    By Paul Taylor
  • Francis Picabia Catalogue Raisonné. Edited by Beverley Calté, William A. Camfield, Candace Clements and Arnauld Pierre

    By Trevor Stark
  • Painting the Page in the Age of Print: Central European Manuscript Illumination of the Fifteenth Century. Edited by Jeffrey F. Hamburger, Robert Suckale and Gude Suckale-Redlefsen, with Eberhard König, transl. David Sánchez

    By Eric White
  • Seen from Behind: Perspectives on the Male Body and Renaissance Art. By Patricia Lee Rubin

    By Sarah Betzer
  • Maioliche di Savona e Albisola a Firenze (1650–1700). By Marco Spallanzani

    By Dora Thornton
  • Early Rubens. Edited by Sasha Suda and Kirk Nickel

    By Dennis P. Weller
  • Ottoman Baroque: The Architectural Refashioning of Eighteenth-Century Istanbul. By Ünver Rüstem

    By Gauvin Alexander Bailey
  • Joseph-Benoît Suvée, 1743–1807: un artiste entre Bruges, Rome et Paris. By Sophie Join-Lambert and Anne Leclair

    By Philippe Bordes
  • History of the Royal Hibernian Academy of Arts. By John Turpin

    By Philip McEvansoneya
  • Frances Hodgkins: European Journeys. Edited by Catherine Hammond and Mary Kisler; Finding Frances Hodgkins. By Mary Kisler

    By Mark Stocker
  • Silent Beauty: Nordic and East Asian Interaction. Edited by Anne-Marie Pennonen and Hanne Selkokari

    By Sarah Bolwell