LÉON BONNAT
A Frenchman with Spanish influences who stripped away surface beauty to find the pain, humanity, and truth in his subjects, Léon Bonnet was revered by his contemporaries but existed in an uncomfortable middle ground between movements that stagnated his wider acclaim. Bonnat had the technical ability of the academic painters who were in vogue in late 19th century Paris, yet he emphasised feeling and overall effect rather than high attention to detail much like the impressionists who were making waves and breaking boundaries. As a result, he never quite fit into either group, and gallerists and collectors struggled to place his work. He made his living painting portraits of celebrities of the day, though both contemporary and modern critics agreed that his genius was most readily found in his religious paintings. ‘Christ on the Cross’ is one of the most known and loved crucifixion paintings of the western world. Rendering Christ with exacting brushstrokes, allowing the brutality of crucifixion and the pain of his humanness to wash over the viewer, it both allows the viewer compassion and insight, while retaining respect and glory for Christ himself.
ROBERT BRACKMAN
Regarded in his time as a master of portraiture and one of the finest art teachers in the country, Robert Brackman was a quintessential working artist. Technically gifted, good natured, and able to render not just the physical attributes of subjects but capture something of their essence, he was well liked and regarded within the artistic community and beyond, painting portraits of notable figures from John Rockefeller to Charles Lindbergh, receiving commissions from the State Department and the military, and creating large scale paintings for the burgeoning Hollywood film industry. Yet for all his skill, Brackman lacked a clear and cohesive point of view in his art that would have allowed him to make a name outside the circle of contemporaries and clients he found himself in. Expertly and elegantly combining classicism with the more academic painting styles of the day, his work is exquisitely composed and dedicated rendered, covering not just portraiture but still life and landscape as well. Yet it pushes few boundaries, and instead feels concerned with aesthetics above all else; Brackman’s training and skill removed novelty from his work which was, in many ways, his downfall.
EDOUARD VUILLARD
An artwork about looking at art, and encouraging us to value that experience. Painted from a low vantage point, Vuillard puts us directly in the gallery and at eye level with the other patrons. The painting is unusually matte, thanks to a specially formulated distemper and an unvarnished canvas. All of this contributes to a sense of accessibility, removing the museum from he pedestal and instead inviting us in to a place that feels welcoming and un-intimidating. Painted in the wake of the First World War, the work serves as an ode to museums, to the importance of and necessity for a space to engage with the past so as to remind us of our humanity. One of four works painted of Vuillard’s favourite galleries at The Louvre in Paris, each in its own way speaks to the simple, revolutionary act of looking at art, and the importance of preservation and engagement in a time of destruction.
Robin Sparkes April 2, 2025
Carl Jung, one of the pioneers of psychoanalysis, tells the story of a patient who dreamt of a golden scarab…
1h 54m
4.1.26
In this clip, Rick speaks with Jonah Hill about social media and social pressures caused by it.
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Thomas Sharp March 31, 2026
There were two ways that people living a very long time ago would leave handprints on the walls of caves.
Sunday 5th April
Easter has arrived, a day of renewal, celebration, and quiet wonder. After the stillness of the past days, something begins to rise, both within the Earth and within ourselves. In the garden, we feel this quality of light and the response from the flowers. We hold a renewed sense of hope, something needed even more acutely in this modern world. The Easter Moon rises in Libra, a sign of light and balance, before continuing into the water sign of Scorpio, where deeper forces of transformation begin to stir. As we walk the land today, we are invited to feel this movement, from balance into transformation, from stillness into life. The resurrection lives not only in story, but in the soil beneath our feet, in the cosmos, and in our hearts.
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