Now i`ll retire sometime in my 70s

Yeah we've been to the Rijksmuseum. It's magnificent. We fell unlucky with the Uffizi. Couldn't guarantee a date so turned up on speck and the queueGoalposts wrote:i remember seeing that in Amsterdam and was amazed at the sheer size of it,,,it is seriously huge,
as to my favourite, the head of medusa in the Uffizi florence by carravagio, it just follows you round the room, mesmorising
There's also the "internationally renowned" collection of Tiffany Glass in Haworth (Park) Art Gallery, Accrington. Interesting story how it arrived there from New York.Nonayforever wrote:I would imagine one of ( or probably ) the most important piece of Art work in our area is right on our door step at Townley Hall.
The piece by Johann Zoffany of Charles Townley in his home surrounded by his collection is truly outstanding.
Hi Kate, your brother-in-law has got great taste. Bob Dylan's "Drawn Blank" series is very popular - all the limited edition prints sell very well.KateR wrote:is Art in this case just limited to paintings/drawings? I like sculpture also, Like Lorenzo Quinn very much son of the famous actor and made a name for himself in the art world.
Brother in-law been buying a few Bob Dylan's but not my taste, however, do like a lot of his music.
Fully agree. I visited the National Gallery, London, specifically to look at van Eyck's 'Arnolfini Portrait'. I'd walked passed it on numerous previous visits because portraits don't really interest me but I'd seen a television programme about it (Making Masterpieces: From Eggs to Oil). I wasn't expecting how small it was yet unbelievably detailed. After looking at that then going to the Impressionists they looked so crude, although of course they work in other ways.RMutt wrote:It still shocks me, and it shouldn't by now, how fantastic art is in the flesh, as opposed to seeing photographs of it. I remember seeing The Lacemaker by Vermeer and being knocked out by it, partly because it was so small which I hadn't really expected. Recently I saw a big show of Francis Picabia's work, not someone I'd particularly taken much notice of in the past, but crikey they were good in the flesh. I remember seeing a big show of Chaim Soutine's once and being totally floored. The OP asks about being moved to tears. I very nearly was by the Boccioni triptych States of Mind. I can't explain why, and I certainly didn't expect to be so moved, but I just stood in front of it and something about it just had me. The thing is, you have to see stuff for real and not just pictures of it and then even the least promising of art can be surprisingly great.