An ancient Roman bust which was purchased at a Goodwill store in Austin, Texas, five years ago for $35 is heading back to Pompejanum, a Pompeii-style villa in Aschaffenburg, Germany. The bust vanished from Pompejanum during the Second World War.
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New Shakespeare museum to open above long-lost Elizabethan theatre
Next year the long-awaited Museum of Shakespeare will open in London on the site of a lost theatre that the legendary playwright William Shakespeare (1564-1616) knew intimately. “This will be Shakespeare as you have never experienced it before,” said Harry Parr, co-founder of the project.
Continue readingTwo men guilty of trying to sell historically significant Anglo-Saxon coins
Two men were found guilty of an illegal scheme to sell £766,000 worth of Anglo-Saxon coins which, as it turns out, have huge significance for our understanding of the history of the 9th century. Craig Best and Roger Piling were found guilty of possession of criminal property and conspiracy to convert criminal property by Durham Crown Court.
Continue readingCalifornian auctioneer pleads guilty to forging up to 30 Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings
A Californian auctioneer has admitted to his involvement in forging up to 30 Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) paintings after initially denying all charges. The FBI’s art crime investigators exposed the fraud last year after suspicions were raised during a special exhibition at the Orlando Museum of Art.
Continue readingScientists discover long-lost Medieval Bible translation using UV light
Nearly 1,500 years after it was first written, a “hidden chapter” of a Christian Bible at the Vatican Library has been rediscovered by scientists. The never-before-seen translation was concealed under three layers of text and only became visible after using ultraviolet imaging.
Continue readingEnthralled by art? Careful not to fall in
A 26-year-old Canadian man has been charged with one count of mischief after falling into the Talus Dome, a monumental public sculpture in Edmonton, Canada. Rescue teams spent an hour and a half trying to free the man from the sculpture.
Continue readingPlans for a high-speed train between Pompeii and Rome to bolster tourism
Italy’s culture minister has announced plans for a new high-speed train linking the country’s capital to the archaeological site of Pompeii in an attempt to increase tourism to the UNESCO World Heritage Site which is located 14 miles southeast of Naples. The project is costing €35 million and will include the construction of a new train station next to the archaeological site, allowing visitors to reach the site easily from Rome and Rome’s Fiumicino Airport.
Continue readingRare Pieter Brueghel the Younger painting discovered in French home sells for €780,000 (£680,000)
An exceptionally rare painting by Pieter Brueghel the Younger (1564-1638), which had been hanging in a French home since 1900, has sold for €780,000 (£680,000) in Paris. It is one of the 17th-century Flemish artist’s largest known works, measuring 112cm high and 184cm wide.
Continue readingFlorentine museum shocked by US school branding Michelangelo’s David as “pornography”
A US school recently caused international uproar for pressuring its principal to resign after Michelangelo’s (1475-1564) David was shown in a sixth-grade art lesson. The Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence and mayor of the city have now invited the school to visit the iconic statue in person to try to resolve the puzzling issue.
Continue readingHokusai’s ‘Great Wave’ sails past auction estimate at Christie’s
Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic ukiyo-e woodblock print, Under the Great Well of the Great Wave off Kanagawa, far surpassed its estimate of $500,000-700,000 in a sale at Christie’s New York last week, selling for $2.8 million. The sale marks a new high record for the print.
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