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  1. Lionel Benedict Nicolson MVO (6 August 1914 – 22 May 1978) was a British art historian and author. He was the author of The Painters of Ferrara (1950) and Hendrick Terbrugghen (1958). Biography. Nicolson was born on 6 August 1914. He was the elder son of authors Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West and the brother of writer and politician Nigel.

  2. Benedict Nicolson. (1914-1978), Art historian. Sitter in 3 portraits. The longest-serving Editor of the Burlington, from 1947 to 1978, Nicolson was for three decades completely identified with the Magazine's fortunes and reputations.

  3. 4 de mar. de 2024 · As Deputy Surveyor of the King’s Pictures (1939–1947) and editor of the Burlington Magazine (1947–1978), Nicolson played a prominent role in the British art world during a period of change and...

  4. Las investigaciones de Benedict Nicolson y Jean Boyer identifican desde los sesenta del siglo XX a Bigot con el legendario Maître à la chandelle o «Maestro de la candela». Sin consenso...

  5. Benedict Nicolson, The international Caravaggesque movement. Oxford (Phaidon) I979.* The late Benedict Nicolson's name needs no introduction to scholars interested in Caravaggism. For over twenty-five years he used his position as editor of The Burlington Magazine to further the causes of Caravaggism, and particularly Northern

  6. hmn.wiki › es › Benedict_NicolsonBenedict Nicolson

    Nicolson era el hijo mayor de los autores Harold Nicolson y Vita Sackville-West y hermano del escritor y político Nigel . Los niños crecieron en Sissinghurst Castle , en las profundidades rurales de Kent , rodeados de los famosos jardines que ahora administra el National Trust . Nicolson se educó en Eton College y Balliol College, Oxford , estudiando historia moderna. En 1939, fue nombrado ...

  7. Benedict Nicolson: becoming an art historian in the 1930s by CAROLINE ELAM, CASVA, National Gallery of Art, Washington editing the burlington magazine was the centre of Benedict Nicolson's life for over thirty years. Explaining his decision to give up his post as Deputy Surveyor of the King's Pictures, he wrote to Bernard Berenson in 1949: