On this day eight hundred years ago at Runnymede near Windsor, King John signed Magna Carta.
Portraits can render honour to remarkable men and women, but there are other ways.
The long life and few words of a vice-regal cockatoo
Queen Elizabeth II is now the longest-reigning British sovereign
Desperately seeking Woolner medallions
Beyond the centenary of the ANZAC landings at Gallipoli, a number of other notable anniversaries converge this year. Waterloo deserves a little focussed consideration, for in the decades following 1815 numerous Waterloo and Peninsular War veterans came to Australia.
Nothing quite prepares the first-time visitor to Cambodia for the scale and grandeur of the monuments of the ancient Khmer civilisation of Angkor.
This year (in March) we will celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the formal establishment of the National Portrait Gallery. In the life of institutions, twenty years is not a long time.
I first knew Dr. Hoff when in 1986, long after retiring from the National Gallery of Victoria, she taught a graduate seminar on Rembrandt.
Where do we draw a line between the personal and the historical? Although she died in Melbourne in 1975, when I was not quite eleven years old, I have the vividest memories of my maternal grandmother Helen Borthwick.
James McCabe provides proof that hanging wasn’t necessarily a fate reserved for the perpetrators of murder and other deeds of darkest hue.
The first index I created was for my first book, and, to my astonishment, that was almost twenty-five years ago.
Once central to military strategy and venerated in patriotic households, Lord Kitchener is now largely forgotten.
Angus Trumble explores the creative manifestations of radiance.
When did notions of very fine and very like become separate qualities of a portrait? And what happens to 'very like' in the age of photographic portraiture?
The caricaturist and engraver James Gillray's biting satires about Sir Joseph Banks.