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Categories
Category Archives: Biography
Epiphanius Evesham
Being very definitely an on-trend kind of person, I am self-isolating at home at the moment. This is mostly because my friends and colleagues are none too keen on meeting up with my coughing, snivelling, snotty self. No, I don’t … Continue reading
Fede Galizia
One of the perks of my part-time employment is that my job description includes an injunction to open the mail, which regularly contains interesting Stuff, not least the beautifully designed and printed catalogues of auction houses trying to tempt us … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Biography, Italy, Museums and Galleries, Natural history
Tagged Fede Galizia, Jan Breughel, Milan, paintings, Pople Paul IV, still life
2 Comments
In Ghent
Him Indoors and I are partial to the Flemish Primitives (and indeed to the Flemish in general), so the opportunity of the current exhibition in Ghent, ‘Van Eyck: An Optical Revolution’, offering ‘the largest Jan van Eyck exhibition ever’ and … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Biography, History, Museums and Galleries
Tagged Flemish Primitives, Ghent, Jan van Eyck, MSK, St Bavo's cathedral
1 Comment
Sir Thomas Gresham and His College
I had for some time been meaning to find out more about Sir Thomas Gresham, but, when embarking on this quest, was diverted almost immediately by the discovery that the first substantial biography of him was written by John William … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Biography, History, London, Museums and Galleries
Tagged Antwerp, cloth trade, Gresham College, J.W. Burgon, London, Royal Exchange, Sir Thomas Gresham
2 Comments
The Man in the Moone
What is the oldest published work of science fiction? This is not a question to put to me, as science fiction is a genre to which I am not greatly drawn. There’s H.G. Wells and Ray Bradbury, and that other … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Bibliography, Biography, History, Museums and Galleries
Tagged flight to the moon, Francis Godwin, geese, James I, science fiction, seventeenth century
2 Comments
The Naming of Plants
Richard Chandler Alexander Prior (1809–1902) does not (yet) appear in the pages of the ODNB, though his day may come. He knew and corresponded with many of the great scientists of the nineteenth century; he was a physician whose health … Continue reading
Posted in Bibliography, Biography, Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, History, Natural history, Printing and Publishing
Tagged botany, English plants, Linnaean system, nomenclature, taxonomics
2 Comments
Art and Spectacle
… is the subtitle of the current exhibition at the Queen’s Gallery on the art collections of George IV, of whom I wrote, some time ago and in another place: ‘But the mystery of the Prince’s character – childish, petulant, … Continue reading
Plant of the Month: January 2020
One of the most mournful utterances you will hear from a gardener is: ‘I had one, but it died.’ Next up is, ‘I had one, but it doesn’t flower any more.’ This is the case, alas, with me and Iris … Continue reading
Francesco Cupani
The Alpine House @CUBotanicgarden is pretty stunning at the moment, what with the cyclamen, autumn crocus and colchicums – do go and have a look! Among all the incredibly photogenic flowers, I came across Colchicum cupani, which compelled me finally … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Botany, Gardens, History, Italy, London, Natural history
Tagged botany, Francesco Cupani, gardens, Paolo Silvio Boccone, Robert Uvedale, Sicily, sweet peas
6 Comments
Pills
An appurtenance of any self-respecting apothecary’s shop was, it seems, a pill-tile. Made of pottery, and sometime lavishly decorated like that other essential, the pharmacy jar, it provided a flat, smooth surface on which to roll pills. The Fitzwilliam Museum … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Biography, Botany, History, Museums and Galleries, Natural history
Tagged apothecaries, Domestic Medicine, druggists, pill-moulds, pill-tiles, pills, William Buchan
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