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National Gallery presents Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting

Tthe National Gallery in London presents Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting on view through 21 September 2014.

Vincenzo Catena, Saint Jerome in his Study, probably about 1510. Oil on canvas, 75.9 x 98.4 cm. Bought, 1862. © The National Gallery, London
Vincenzo Catena, Saint Jerome in his Study, probably about 1510. Oil on canvas, 75.9 x 98.4 cm. Bought, 1862. © The National Gallery, London
‘Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting’ aims to increase visitors’ appreciation and understanding of some of the most beautiful and architectonic paintings by Italian masters such as Duccio, Botticelli, Crivelli and their contemporaries. Visitors will be encouraged to look in new ways at buildings depicted in paintings, and to investigate how artists invented imagined spaces that transcended the reality of bricks, mortar and marble.

The exhibition is the result of a research partnership between the National Gallery and the University of York, and offers a fresh interpretation of some of the National Gallery’s own Italian Renaissance collection. In addition, other masterpieces are featured – such as the Venetian master Sebastiano del Piombo’s ‘The Judgement of Solomon’ (Kingston Lacy, The Bankes Collection, National Trust), on display in London for the first time in 30 years, and ‘The Ruskin Madonna’ by Andrea del Verrocchio (National Gallery of Scotland).

Five short films have been commissioned to coincide with this exhibition, providing modern perspectives on real and imagined architecture from award-winning Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, film-maker Martha Fiennes, art historian T J Clark, film historian John David Rhodes and computer game cinematic director Peter Gornstein.