Christmas is coming, and so maybe your thoughts are set on one of those German Christmas markets, your chilled hands warmed by a glass of mulled wine. Head to Hamburg, and you can take in a top-class exhibition as well. Caspar David Friedrich: Art for a New Age starts at the Kunsthalle on December 15, marking the 250th anniversary of the birth of the leading German Romantic painter, a major retrospective with more than 60 paintings looking at the new relationship between man and nature that Friedrich explored at the start of the 19th century. It’s on until April 1. We’re big Friedrich fans, and we’ve already enjoyed one exhibition of his work this year, in Schweinfurt in northern Bavaria.
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But let’s head back to London, stopping in first at the National Gallery for the first-ever exhibition dedicated to a neglected 15th-century Florentine painter. That’s Francesco Pesellino: A Renaissance Master Revealed in a free show from December 7 to March 10. Pesellino worked with contemporaries including Fra Filippo Lippi and obtained commissions from the Medici family, but died at the early age of 35. The show aims to shed light on this little-known artist as a story-teller who filled his work with splendid detail.
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One of the greatest of Italian Renaissance portrait painters is Giovanni Battista Moroni, and there’s a major retrospective of his output on at the Gallerie d’Italia in Milan from December 6 to April 1. Moroni (1521-1580): A Portrait of His Time will have loans from major Italian and international collections and show the artist’s pictures alongside those of his contemporaries, including Titian, Veronese and Lorenzo Lotto.
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Images
Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), Moonrise over the Sea, 1822, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Alte Nationalgalerie. © bpk/Nationalgalerie, SMB/Jörg P Anders
Pauline Boty (1938-1966), Colour Her Gone, 1962, Wolverhampton Art Gallery
Claude Monet (1840-1926), Rising Tide at Pourville (Marée montante à Pourville), 1882, Brooklyn Museum, New York. Photo: Brooklyn Museum