Sin, National Gallery review - great subject, modest show

★★★ SIN, NATIONAL GALLERY A small gathering can't do justice to fabulous topic

A small gathering can't do justice to this fabulous topic

Sin, what a wonderful theme for a show – so wonderful, in fact, that it merits a major exhibition. The National Gallery’s modest gathering of 14 pictures, mainly from the collection, can’t possibly do it justice; yet it’s worth a visit if only to remind oneself of the disastrous concept of original sin that weaves guilt into our very DNA by arguing that we are conceived in sin. How did such an invidious doctrine ever take hold, I wonder?

Artemisia, National Gallery review - worth the wait

★★★★★ ARTEMISIA, NATIONAL GALLERY Glorious celebration of a great baroque painter

A glorious celebration of one of the great baroque painters

It takes nerve to throw a shadow across the face of your heroine, still more to banish to the margins the severed head that might so easily dominate the painting’s centre ground. Instead, in imagining the aftermath of Judith’s beheading of Holofernes, Artemisia Gentileschi wrings out the excruciating tension of a moment, and concentrates it in a candle flame.

Nicolaes Maes: Dutch Master of the Golden Age, National Gallery review – beautifully observed vignettes

★★★★ NICOLAES MAES, DUTCH MASTER OF THE GOLDEN AGE, NATIONAL GALLERY Beautifully observed vignettes

The theatre of domestic life in 17th century Holland

A young woman sits sewing (pictured below right: Young Woman Sewing,1655). She is totally immersed in her task, and our attention is similarly focused on her and every detail of her environment. The cool light pouring though the window illuminates her work and also gives us a clear view. She sits on a wooden platform that raises her above the cold floor tiles; on one side of her is a linen basket and, on the other, an ebony chair, its carved back and legs picked out with gleaming dots of light.

Gauguin Portraits, National Gallery review - me, myself and I

★★★ GAUGUIN PORTRAITS, NATIONAL GALLERY The French artist didn't revolutionise portraiture, he was too interested in himself

The French artist didn't revolutionise portraiture, he was too interested in himself

“Gauguin was undoubtedly self-obsessed” begins the National Gallery’s latest dead cert blockbuster, as it cheerfully hijacks a de facto series begun next door at the National Portrait Gallery.

Sorolla: Spanish Master of Light, National Gallery review - a national treasure comes to London

★★★ SOROLLA: SPANISH MASTER OF LIGHT National treasure at National Gallery

A comprehensive introduction to a little known painter

The National Gallery is on a roll to expand ever further our understanding of western art, alternating blockbusters dedicated to familiar and bankable stars, with selections of work by lesser known figures from across the centuries. Last year for example we had the Finnish Gallen-Kallela, the American Thomas Cole and the Renaissance painter Lorenzo Lotto.

Sea Star: Sean Scully, National Gallery review - analysing past masters

★★ SEA STAR, SEAN SCULLY AT THE NATIONAL GALLERY The latest encounter between a living artist and the national collection

The latest encounter between a living artist and the national collection

Either side of a doorway, framing a view of Turner’s The Evening Star, c. 1830 (Main picture), Sean Scully’s Landline Star, 2017, and Landline Pool, 2018,  frankly acknowledge their roots.

Edwin Landseer / Rachel Maclean, National Gallery review - a juxtaposition of opposites

★★★ EDWIN LANDSEER/RACHEL MACLEAN, NATIONAL GALLERY A juxtaposition of opposites

The Monarch of the Glen refreshed by a Scottish political satirist

Familiarity breeds contempt, which makes it difficult to look at Edwin Landseer’s The Monarch of the Glen (pictured below). The reproduction of this proud beastie on T-towels, aprons, jigsaws and biscuit tins blinds one to the subtle nuances of the original painting.

Mantegna and Bellini, National Gallery review - curated for curators

★★★ MANTEGNA AND BELLINI, NATIONAL GALLERY Intriguing tale undone by loose ends

An intriguing tale undone by loose ends

Pitched as “a tale of two artists”, the National Gallery’s big autumn show promises a history woven in shades of friendship and rivalry, marriage and family, privilege and hard graft. Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini were brothers-in-law, Mantegna’s marriage to Nicolosia Bellini in 1453 a strategic match that brought fresh blood to Venice’s greatest artistic dynasty.