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Jan Gossaert, The Adoration of the Kings (c) The National Gallery, London. Bought with a special grant and contributions from the Art Fund, Lord Glenconner, Lord Iveagh and Alfred de Rothschild ...
In the gallery’s new exhibition, Sensing the Unseen: Step into Gossaert’s Adoration, though, you can’t miss it. This is a new way of looking at painting, and a new way of making exhibitions .
Don’t get me wrong: Gossaert’s altarpiece, in which the three kings worship the baby Jesus inside the crumbling ruins of a palace rather than a stable, is there, immediately visible beneath a ...
‘The Adoration of the Kings’ by Jan Gossaert (1510-15). Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images. During the pandemic, the sensation of wandering through a museum exhibition has been ...
Take your first step into Jan Gossaert’s world of intricate detail, technical mastery and rich meaning in a new Gallery experience where you’ll be surrounded by the sights and sounds of his ...
Pity poor Jan Gossaert. During the winter of 1509 he became the first Netherlandish artist to visit Rome, epicentre of classical civilisation and wellspring of the Italian Renaissance.
A new artist record was set for Flemish painter Jan Gossaert at Zürich's Koller Auktionen. The work, Virgin with Child (c. 1530) fetched CHF 2.37 million.