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Sarah Hyde


23 results

Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Unwrapped

Hole in the Wall

Through the Looking Glass

Marie Antoinette’s Spirit Animals

Life on the Orient Express

So Much More than a Shop

The Secret History

An exhibition at the Jewish Museum sheds light on the story of the famed Ephrussi family, told by Edmund de Waal in The Hare with Amber Eyes

Yves Saint Laurent, Six Ways

A Case of Identity

A Guide to the Venice Biennale

All Tarted Up

Coming Up Roses

Photo Finish

More than 100 of Julia Margaret Cameron’s haunting portraits go on view for the first Parisian exhibition of her work in nearly 40 years

A Lasting Impression

Drawings and watercolors on paper by Impressionists ranging from Degas to Toulouse-Lautrec go on view in London

Photography’s Shooting Star

Exhibitions in London and New York honor the prodigious photographer who left behind a timeless body of work following her death, at just 22

A Place in the Sun

Eighteen months and 35,000 sheets of gold leaf later, Louis XIV’s prized Apollo Fountain sculpture returns to Versailles in a sparkling restoration

A Jewel of the Avant-Garde

The Fondation Maeght, in Saint-Paul de Vence, France, celebrates its 60th anniversary with an expansion, an exhibition … and a party!

Tirzah Garwood, Lost and Found

Best known for being the wife of British painter Eric Ravilious, the long-overlooked artist and designer gets her due with a major London retrospective

Victor Hugo’s Secret Sketchbook

For the first time in 50 years, the French writer’s rarely seen works on paper—some echoing the ambient gloom of Les Misérables—go on view in London

Let Them Eat Cake!

From fans to feathers, paintings to pumps, an exhibition in London traces the evolution of Marie Antoinette’s tastes in fashion and decoration

Lucian Freud’s Paper Trail

A new London exhibition shifts the focus from the British artist’s famous paintings to his lesser-known, lifelong relationship with drawing

Winston Churchill’s Alter Ego

An exhibition in London re-introduces Churchill as a painter—a hobby he took up in the summer of 1915, amidst the depressive slump that followed his ousting from the Admiralty

The Daffodil Days