The Week’s Muse: 28 June
A round-up of news and comment from The Muse Room: Nicholas Penny's retirement, the Mauritshuis reopening, and significance of selfies
Self-portrait in a convex mirror (1503), Parmigianino. Source: Wikimedia commons
A round-up of recent news and comment from the Muse Room
#Selfies and self-portraits
Conflating self-portraits with selfies might score a museum a few social media points, but isn’t it time they stood up for historic art as worthy in its own right? Maggie Gray on the craze for ‘selfies’ of the art-historical sort.
National Gallery director Nicholas Penny announces retirement
Nicholas Penny has announced his intention to retire from the National Gallery in London next year, fuelling plenty of summer speculation about who might replace him…
The Mauritshuis reopens in The Hague
Refreshed and subtly expanded, the Mauritshuis in The Hague reopened to the public this week . Louise Nicholson visited the jewel box of a building, and its enviable collection.
100 Hours of Looking…
How long do you spend looking at art? Kate Smith introduces a project at UCL for which a group of researchers racked up 100 hours (collectively) contemplating just a handful of cultural objects.
Repainting the past: Pictures from the Decorated Cave of Pont-d’Arc
At 36,000 years old, the Decorated Cave of Pont-d’Arc is the oldest cultural property on UNESCO’s list. A scale replica is under construction so that the original cave’s extraordinary artworks can be conserved.
More comment from the Muse Room…