DRAWING BOARD
November 2013
Some of the most talented artists of early 17th-century Rome were linked by violence as much as skill. Caravaggio was a murderer, Bernini had a lover's face slashed when she (already married) betrayed him with his brother, Salvator Rosa was said
Like this article? Share, save or print using the icons below
October 2013
Honoré Daumier (1808-1879) is often compared to Emile Zola. It is easy to see why: both embraced realist techniques to chronicle ordinary urban life in an age of seemingly endless social upheaval.
Like this article? Share, save or print using the icons below
September 2013
Sir Hugh Casson (1910-99) was the John Betjeman of postwar British architecture: the unthreatening, homely face of a sometimes difficult art form. Casson came to notice when, at the age of only 38, he was appointed Dir
Like this article? Share, save or print using the icons below
July/August 2013
David Jones’s service at the front inspired an epic poem about World War I, “In Parenthesis”. Long neglected, it is ripe for rediscovery
Like this article? Share, save or print using the icons below
Drawing Board
drawing board
More content
- ONLINE ONLY: An Untidy Bill
- The Misfit at No 10
- Web of Terror
- Underrated: John Donne
- The Anti-Green Ecologist
- On the Edge of the Abyss
- Lunch With J.K.
- Backing the Habit: Life as a Nun Today
- Saving Gemma from Her Carers
- Rude Britannia II
- Confronting Islamic Intimidation
- We Can Have a Free Press and Justice Too
- Crime, Vengeance and Atonement
- Warmed Over
- Lost in Translation
- He Stood with Giants
- Crying Wolf And Playing Chicken
- How to Save Marriage From Hitting the Rocks
- The Parable of the Stupid Samaritan
- Secret Deal With South Africa's Stalinists
Popular Standpoint topics

















