The Getty’s Coveted Titain

The Getty has “pulled off one of the most spectacular Old Master painting purchases in history. Titian’s magnificent Portrait of Alfonso d’Avalos is now hanging in the Californian museum. Yet until recently the portrait was on show at the Louvre in Paris, which had hoped to add it to its permanent collection. The French museum, not renowned for letting important pictures slip through its fingers, had the opportunity to buy the Titian at a preferential rate but decided not to do so.” The Getty paid $70 million, making the Titian the second-most expensive Old Master in history.

A Photo Of Van Gogh?

Is a photograph from 1886 really a portait of Vincent van Gogh, or is it “a simple case of mistaken identity?” Van Gogh painted more than 40 self-portraits but there are only two photographs in existence that are widely believed to be the artist – at the ages of 13 and 19. The latest discovery, bought for just $1 in the early 1990s in an antique dealer’s shop, is the subject of a new exhibition that attempts to make the case for its authenticity.”

Going Back To A Beethoven Piano

Beethoven heard a different piano than the ones we use today. Now some Australians have turned back the clock. “The separation of sound quality between note textures is so significant on these old instruments, and it’s something Steinway has tried to minimise. With the Stuart we are going back to the sound concept of the 17th and 18th centuries, when instruments were far more clearly transparent. We are dealing with the age of enlightenment. Nothing is hidden, everything is open. This instrument is sublimely suited for this repertoire. This is the sort of thing Beethoven would have wished to have had in his time.”