National treasures up for sale; art and protest in Latin America; plaster casts and the Classics Cabal
Maggie Gray
A round-up of recent news and comment from the Muse Room
Turner mania
Our October issue is out soon! In the Editor’s Letter, Thomas Marks discusses the public enthusiasm for J.M.W. Turner. With Tate’s major exhibition already open and a biopic coming soon, will the UK let one of his great works be sold off?
A reprieve for Bantry House?
Speaking of unwelcome sales: Robert O’Byrne calls attention to the likely auction of the collection at Bantry House, Co Cork. It was recently postponed: is there enough time and public support to save the contents for the nation?
‘A conspiracy of classicists’
Fleur Macdonald on Mary Beard’s upbeat birthday speech and why, despite all the gloomy predictions about the future of humanities subjects in the UK, classics still enjoys high-profile support: ‘forget PPE, this is the humanity that rules’.
The practice of making plaster-cast reproductions of famous artworks has fallen out of fashion. But can these secondary artworks ever be more authentic than the originals? Ruth Allen explores the Brussels Plaster Cast Workshop and argues for the value of the humble copy.