Sunday, June 28, 2026

National Gallery of Art, 2026

The complete re-hanging of the National Gallery was only recently completed, and, of course, we had to see what they had done. Same 2000+ pictures, different locations, different interpretive stuff. On the whole, after three visits, I'd say, it was not an improvement. There is still a very broadly chronological/national organization, but to it, alas, they have added the "themed" approach that seems increasingly popular in the art museum world. You want to see all five of the Gallery's Botticellis? Five different rooms, depending on which "theme"--"family palace," "ambition, innovation," "wonders of design," "looking at nature, "wonders of art," for example--some assistant curator has decided upon. A massive dumbing-down, I think, but full future employment for picture-hangers as the themes come and go. A more expert, professional, appraisal is here. The grand labyrinth effect remains, too, in the sense that you can't walk any particular nationality or epoch without having to retrace steps, sometimes many steps. Oh well. It's still a grand collection and a grand place, and we'll return whenever we're in London. Below are just a few old favorites and a few new items. The search box will take you to many others.

Van Eyck self-portrait (?); 1430s; apart from being my favorite,
the Gallery is doing a special exhibition next fall, collecting
all nine known surviving van Eyck portraits; I think I've
already seen them all, except not all in the same room; we
did that kind experience with Vermeer a couple years ago at
the Rijksmuseum and found it not a helpful experience...

Never miss an Ucello, Battle of Romano; yeah, we like the old stuff

A favorite Botticelli, Venus and Mars

Holbein Erasmus

Memling triptych monster 

The re-hang seemed to have missed this huge hall...

Holbein's Ambassadors, now hung at the narrow end of a room where
you can't get far enough to the right to see the skull...what were they
thinking?

Never miss a Luini, Jesus among the Doctors, 1515

Velazquez' "Rokeby" Venus; between the Gallery, the Wallace, and
Wellington's Apsley House, there must be a couple dozen Velazquez
paintings in London...

























































































































































The Vigee-LeBrun self portrait that got us into her incredible
life and art, years ago...



The Nation's favorite painting, Turner's Fighting Temeraire...

And a favorite choo-choo picture, Turner's Rain, Steam, and Speed...

Oops, after a wrong turn, we are back in the 18th century, admiring
a wonderful Vernet...

van Gogh, Landscape with Ploughman, 1889

The National Gallery is famously focused...paintings only, Medieval
to twentieth century; but in one of the older parts, under the dome, 
there are perhaps a dozen or more beautiful and large 19th century
floor mosaics, depicting a variety of actions, moods, virtues, what have
you, that we'd not appreciated before...certainly worth a stop, despite the
traffic under the dome

Contemplation

Mud Pie...um, still processing this...

Open Mind

Defiance

Humour...





British Museum, 2026

Our first visit to the BM was in 1979, and there were many subsequent visits. In 2021, 2022, and 2024, we had apartments in Bloomsbury, Fitzrovia and Pimlico, and thus the museum was within walking distance, sometimes just a few blocks, and there were many, many more visits. We feel like we know the place pretty well. Consequently, our lone 2026 visit was confined to a few favorites in the Celtic/Roman/British eras rooms. Use the search box for probably dozens of previous British Museum posts.

The Fishpool Hoard, deposited around 1464, during the War
of the Roses; some 1300 gold coins and several items of very
finely worked jewelry; largest Medieval hoard yet found in
Britain; we like hoards



Among the Fishpool jewelry

Incredible detail

Padlock engraved "all of my heart"





Bronze-cast church or monastery door knocker



Nice jaws of hell...alabaster, Medieval

We scarcely ever noticed aquamaniles before our visits to the Met
 in 2024; now we see them everywhere...for washing hands at the 
table; always on the look-out at Goodwill...




A Medieval citale...sort of a pre-guitar...converted in 1578
to a violin...inscription refers to Elizabeth I and her special
gentlemen friend, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester




Seal of Chichester Cathedral, c. 1220; "you stood and you watched as..."
wait, no...



Aquamaniles everywhere...

The Dunstable Swan jewel; c. 1400; the swan an emblem
of the Lancasters...



"Museum closing, go home"







Monday, June 22, 2026

In London

So the blog will be in London for a while, doing museums, parks, shows, restaurants, miscellaneous scenery, etc. We'll be back in Winter Garden, June 23nd.

Dawn from our flat in Pimlico


Saturday, June 20, 2026

British Out-Takes, 2026, 2

More British road-trip out-takes...

In Gloucester, gotta' love a city with a community toilet scheme, 
and proud of it; also St. Oswald's retail park

And a frog bench

And a hairstylist whose clients bring him fridge magnets

Ex cathedra

Apparently one of the more obscure northern saints

Sorry we missed it; a show called "The Full Bronte," at the Edinburgh
Fringe years ago, was one of the best we've ever seen


Cracked me up

Wool churches were particularly into the agnus dei thing

Still pondering; how do you shift gears?

She made me do it

Ever popular Sheela-na-gig at The Henge Shop, Avebury;
looks somewhat Cycladic to me...sort of

Royal Mail beautification campaign

Awaiting transport to 18th century Scotland

Flying just above us at Kilpeck, in the midst of multiple Romanesque
epiphanies

From Powys, one can see that Medieval castles had to
be defensible from every room

#1 "I am the Lord, thy Master, thou shalt have no other masters
before me..."

Not very old headframe; still in Wales

Sufficiently poignant that I will not provide a link to
Peter Cook's "My Experiences Down the Mine"

There are a dozen or more principal charity shop chains in Britain; "Cats
Protection" is new to us; maybe it's for protecting people from cats

Anatomically interesting Chester door fixture designating a 
female toilet; no male counterpart

In Chester; of course; used books and records

Still wondering what forest dogs are and whether they want to be rescued