![]() ![]() For many visitors, even those familiar with Alma-Tademas art, the surprise of the exhibition was the artistic output of his wife Laura Alma-Tadema and his daughter Anna. Each day of the two-day event addressed different themes in Alma-Tadema’s art: day one considered the studio houses, including those of Alma-Tadema and other artists (especially Leighton House), studio-houses abroad, and the cultural life of the extended Tadema family. That event was organized by a team that included Elizabeth Prettejohn, Peter Trippi, Sarah Victoria Turner (of the Paul Mellon Centre), and Maria Wyke (Professor of Latin, UCL), and Ian Christie (Professor of Film and Media History, Birkbeck, University of London). ![]() This post is the first in a series that will consider the research presented by the exhibition, the accompanying publication, and the speakers at the symposium. Installation of the exhibition “Alma-Tadema At Home in Antiquity” at Leighton House Museum. ![]()
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