Podcast appearances and mentions of jan six

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Best podcasts about jan six

Latest podcast episodes about jan six

UI Breakfast: UI/UX Design and Product Strategy
Episode 292: Using Tokens in Design Systems with Jan Six

UI Breakfast: UI/UX Design and Product Strategy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 32:30


How can tokens help your design and development teams become more efficient? Our guest today is Jan Six, staff product designer at GitHub and co-creator of Tokens Studio. You'll learn how design components and tokens correlate on a technical level, why adoption is the biggest challenge in design systems, how you can get started with creating your own systems, and more.Podcast feed: subscribe to https://feeds.simplecast.com/4MvgQ73R in your favorite podcast app, and follow us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Podcasts.Show NotesTokens StudioNaming Tokens in Design Systems – an article by Nathan CurtisThe Many Faces of Themeable Design Systems – an article by Brad FrostPrimer – GitHub's design systemVisit Jan's websiteFollow Jan on BlueskyThis episode is brought to you by Wix Studio — the new web platform for agencies and enterprises. The magic of Wix Studio is its advanced design capabilities which makes website creation efficient and intuitive. Here are a few things you can do:Work in sync with your team on one canvasReuse templates, widgets and sections across sitesCreate a client kit for seamless handoversAnd leverage best-in-class SEO defaults across all your Wix sitesStep into Wix Studio to see more at wix.com/studioInterested in sponsoring an episode? Learn more here.Leave a ReviewReviews are hugely important because they help new people discover this podcast. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a review on iTunes. Here's how.

What Catholics Believe
Facing WW3? • Free Speech Imprisoned • SSPX Cozies Up To Francis • St. Raphael • Purgatorian Society

What Catholics Believe

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 66:43


Facing World War or Lord of the World? "Vengeance is the law of Allah!" Imprisoning free speech. Jan-Six and the Left's data vigilantes. Synod Cardinal: Francis can change catechism at will, make LGBT OK. While New Order Catholics reject Francis' Synodal Church, SSPX cozies up to New Order. Pray for St. Raphael to guide SSPX. Purgatorian Society: ihmpurgatorian@gmail.com This episode was recorded on 10/24/2023. Our Links: http://linkwcb.com/ Please consider making a monetary donation to What Catholics Believe. Father Jenkins remembers all of our benefactors in general during his daily Mass, and he also offers one Mass on the first Sunday of every month specially for all supporters of What Catholics Believe. May God bless you for your generosity! https://www.wcbohio.com/donate Subscribe to our other YouTube channels: @WCBHolyMassLivestream @WCBHighlights May God bless you all!

Jewelry Journey Podcast
Episode 198 Part 1: The Serendipitous Journey Jan Krulick-Belin Took to Write Her First Book

Jewelry Journey Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 25:09


What you'll learn in this episode:   How art history and jewelry history interact How Jan's experience as a historian helped her write her first book, and what she learned from self-publishing Why sweetheart jewelry became popular during World War II, and why few people today know what it is How Jan draws on her theater background to connect with and educate museum goers How museum education and jewelry history developed into their own fields   About Jan Krulick-Belin   Jan Krulick-Belin, a museum and art consultant and art and jewelry historian, has more than forty years of experience at such institutions as the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Denver Art Museum, Beaumont (Texas) Art Museum, and Smithsonian Institution. Retired as director of education at the Phoenix Art Museum, she still works with museums, art organizations, and private collectors and served as guest curator at the Sylvia Plotkin Judaica Museum, Phoenix.   Additional Resources  Facebook: www.facebook.com/JanKrulick Website: www.jankrulick.com Amazon: www.amazon.com/author/jankrulickbelin Twitter: @JanKrulickBooks   Photos Available on TheJewelryJourney.com    Transcript As an art and jewelry historian and museum educator, Jan Krulick-Belin was uniquely qualified to follow the surprising journey she went on to write her first book, “Love, Bill: Finding my Father Through Letters from World War II.” Bringing together her knowledge of World War II-era culture and  her research skills, writing the book was a labor of love. She joined the Jewelry Journey Podcast to talk about her tips for self-publishing; what sweetheart jewelry is and why it became so popular during World War II; and what it was like to be at the forefront of the museum education field. Read the episode transcript here.    Sharon: Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Jewelry Journey Podcast. This is the first part of a two-part episode. Please make sure you subscribe so you can hear part two as soon as it's released later this week.    One of the eternal questions is whether one has to be a jewelry historian to appreciate the background of jewelry. Do you have to be a jeweler to appreciate jewelry? My guest, Jan Krulick-Belin, can answer all our questions. She is an independent museum educator and a jewelry historian. She is also the author of a book called “Love, Bill: Finding my Father Through Letters from World War II.” She most likely would not have been able to diligently research or write the book without being a historian. Being a historian was important to her becoming a museum educator, jewelry historian and an author. She'll weave the pieces for us together in today's jewelry journey. Jan, welcome to the podcast.   Jan: Thanks, Sharon. It's great to be with you again.   Sharon: I'm glad you could make it this time. I know you've been traveling all over the world. Every year, you go somewhere exotic and wonderful.   Jan: We try.   Sharon: I know you came back from the Netherlands for the Vermeer exhibit.   Jan: The Johannes Vermeer exhibition, which was a once-in-a-lifetime exhibit that was amazing to have been able to bring together. I think it was 28 of the 36 or 37 known or attributed works by Johannes Vermeer. There will never be anything like it again, so I was happy to go. I'm also very fascinated by Dutch painting and have actually lectured on jewelry in Dutch paintings.   Sharon: Were you able to learn anything this time around?   Jan: I had the opportunity, as I said, to see a lot of his paintings together in one place, side by side, and I had the luxury to really look at them longer than most other opportunities. I think the way they did the exhibition, they encouraged looking. There was no audio guide. You weren't allowed to go through on a tour. There was very little labeling. It was all about looking carefully. To me, looking is part of learning.   Sharon: As a jewelry historian and an art historian, which one was more important in this exhibit?   Jan: Probably the art historian part of it comes first because I think the focus of the exhibition was to understand this artist's work, what made it different than other work at the same time period during the Dutch Golden Age. What was his focus? His interest in light? His interest in painting about love and relationships and religion or nonreligion? His interest in optics? All of those things came into play in understanding his work. I think the art history brain was working a little harder than the jewelry history brain.   Sharon: Do you think of art history as your vocation or your avocation, and jewelry history as an avocation?   Jan: That's a good one. I'm trained academically as an art historian and a museum educator. That is what I spent most of my professional career doing. Jewelry history, as a field, came a little bit later, almost towards the end of my formal work in the museum setting. It was something I've always been interested in and attracted to. My mother loved jewelry. As a little girl, I can always remember diving into her jewelry drawers when she wasn't paying attention. The attraction to jewelry has always been there.   In the last few years, working my last job as education direction at the Phoenix Art Museum, the museum did fundraisers every year which involved an art and antique show. That's where I met some important people in the jewelry business who had booths there. In conversation with them, they told me about a program that was run every summer back east called Jewelry Camp. I think Sharon could smile because that's where we first met. I decided that when I stopped working full-time, I would take the opportunity and attend. That was the beginning of diving into this offshoot of art history.    It's all related. Art history involves not only paintings and sculptures, but the decorative arts. Jewelry is one of those decorative art forms, and I think they go hand-in-hand. It was an avocation at first, but now I'm lecturing in both, so I guess it's now become a vocation. It's gone around full circle.    Sharon: Do you think that once you write a book on jewelry and jewelry history, it will become more of a vocation?   Jan: Oh gosh, that's a good question. The book you mentioned, my first and only book, had absolutely nothing to do with either one of these two things. People kept saying, “What's your next book?” and I thought, “Oh, God.” It was such a process getting one book out that I thought, “That's it,” but I have been playing around with an idea. I've been doing research towards it. I'm not sure yet if I'll ever bring it to fruition, but it does relate to art history and jewelry history, so it's more in my wheelhouse. It's more of an art historical, jewelry historical fiction. We'll see how it turns out. It is based on an actual diamond that existed and disappeared shortly before World War II, when it was stolen in Paris. I'm playing with the idea. Maybe finally I can bring in all the things I've done professionally and for fun into my writing.   Sharon: That's a fascinating book. I can't wait to read it. It sounds like an interesting subject. You talked about the fact that you couldn't have written the first book you wrote, “Love Bill.” You went through all your father's—who you never met, who died when you were six.   Jan: Six, yes.   Sharon: How did being a historian play into that?   Jan: Number one, for the audience members who aren't familiar with the book, being a historian and understanding basic research skills and diving into primary source documents and that type of thing was necessary. It never started out as a book. I joke about it when I speak to groups; I'm kind of an accidental author.    My dad did die when I was only six years old. A year or so before my mother passed, she mentioned that she had saved all the love letters he had written her from World War II and that she had been saving them for me. That was an interesting occurrence in and of itself because my mom hardly ever talked about my father growing up. I don't know if it was grief or if she didn't want to get into it. As I wandered down this lengthy path of family and family secrets, there were things she did not want me to find out about. Obviously, had I read all the letters in her presence before she passed, the questions and answers that she didn't want to talk about probably would have had to come out. She gave me the letters when we were moving her into assisted living, and she made me promise I wouldn't read them until after she was gone. It took about another five years for me to gather up the courage and the emotional want to sift through the letters.    It really started out as a journey of understanding who my father was. The more I got into it, my interest in visiting all the places he was stationed during the war grew, as well as my interest in trying to track down a very close friend he made while he was stationed in Morocco in North Africa at the very beginning of the Americans' involvement in the war. I had all these crazy ideas of, “Oh, I'm going to find this man and his family,” blah, blah, blah. As I was going on this actual journey and doing the research to try to find this person and to learn more about my father's time in the army and all of that—research, as I said—I was telling people the story. As the events were getting more and more interesting and crazy and incidental and miraculous, everybody was telling me what a great book it would be.    It's all fun when people tell you, “Oh, you should write a book. It's the easiest thing in the world to sit down and do.” In my professional career, I've done lots of writing, but not a book. I started warming to the idea. I have two nieces who are very special to me. They obviously never met their grandfather, and I decided it would be something I would do and give them a little bit of their legacy, as well as finally understanding my own legacy more. So, it did turn into a book and learning about that world and how you go about self-publishing and marketing and all of that. That was a whole new world for me. I always say now I divide my life into my author, World War II journey, and the other is my art and jewelry history world.   Sharon: You talked about something that I would have done if I had been writing this book, and that is putting it down and saying, “I can't do it. Forget it.”   Jan: I can be a wonderful procrastinator. I think there is that element in all of us. In this time period, the journey began when I stopped working full time in the museum world. I was picking up projects and doing consulting. When somebody asked me to do a project, it was much easier to say yes to that because that was familiar, and then I could push the book aside. But after a number of years of constantly pushing it aside, every time I went back to it, I noticed that I'd lose my train of thought and my voice would change, and the author's voice is so important in writing a book. So, I finally said, “O.K., that's it. I'm not going to take any new projects. I'm going to do it,” and that's what I did.    It's like anything else. It's a discipline. I literally sat down at my desk in the morning, just like I was going to work, from 8:30 or 9 in the morning until 5. I said, “O.K., if I get a page today, great. If I get 10 or 15 pages, even better.” That's what people were telling me in the author world. A lot of writers I was meeting at author groups I got involved with here in the Phoenix area, they said you just push, and it's not easy.   I do remember I had a wonderful professor in graduate school who actually was the founder of the museum education program at George Washington University, which I attended. One time I said to her, “This is hard,” when she gave a writing assignment. She goes, “Why did you ever think writing was easy?” It was like, “Boom!” It was a revelation to me. I just assumed that people who sat down and wrote books and articles and doctoral theses and all of that, they could just whip it out. It's not like that. I was able to take a deep breath and go, “O.K., that's what editors are for, so just do the best you can.” That's what I did. I just pushed through.   Sharon: I remember when we first met, we were having breakfast and you told us about the idea for the book. I thought, “Oh, yeah, when I see it, I'll believe it,” and you've written the book.   Jan: Yeah, it took a few years from the time we first met, but as I said, I just decided to do it at one point. You realize when you're up in the middle of the night and you can't shut off your brain and you have all these ideas going. It wouldn't let me go.    In a way, I feel like my dad was sitting on my shoulder. The one thing I learned about him in working on the project was that he always wanted to be a writer himself. His dream was to own a bookstore. There's this little part of me who felt like he was a part of the process. He was there guiding me. So many strange and wonderful things happened during that whole journey. I felt like he was there opening doors for me, things that were coincidental or almost miraculous, the things that would happen. I followed that path and those signposts until I finally had this finished project. It was exciting. Of all the things I've accomplished in my whole career at all levels, I think I'm proudest that I've published a book and it's done well in terms of critical review.   Sharon: I give you a lot of credit.    Jan: Thank you.   Sharon: Do you think that's related to your interest in sweetheart jewelry? First, explain what that is, then, does that have a connection?   Jan: The idea of sweetheart jewelry really started during World War I, but by World War II, it became a full-blown thing. During World War II, a lot of precious materials and metals and things like that were rationed for the war effort, things like pearls and crystals and rhinestones and diamonds. All of these things were unavailable due to the war and shortages, and there were enemy countries we couldn't trade with anymore for some of those raw materials.    So, there was a new type of jewelry. Women's clothing was rationed. Women were wearing very simple, very straight, very—shall we say—boring clothing during the war, and they felt that they needed to glam it up and jazz it up a bit. The type of jewelry that became very popular was whimsical and made with fun materials like plastics, Bakelite, wood, metals, fabrics, textiles. They were also buying and making and designing things with patriotic imagery. It was part of boosting morale in this country during the war. It was a way to lift your own spirits and look a little more glamorous or more fun in your dress. A lot of these things, because they were fairly inexpensive, were sold to raise money for the war effort. On the flip side, you could buy things here in the States, but GIs overseas were also able to pick up things that would say, “My sweetheart,” or “Mom,” those kinds for things, for the women in their lives back home.    It's a really interesting type of jewelry. This time period was short-lived in a way, but it said a lot about who we were in America during the war and how we felt and what we thought about those servicemen overseas. Some of them are really fun. Maybe a GI would buy a pin for his girlfriend, and it was a picture of a soldier with a heart that would say, “I'm taken,” just to remind men who were left behind in the States that she's got somebody overseas. There are some wonderful themes. You'll see a lot of “V for Victory” pins.    So, it was something I started learning about. My very first piece of sweetheart jewelry I found was actually by accident. I didn't know what it was. It turned out it was what I now know is called a MacArthur Heart. It was a pin that actually wound up on the cover of Life Magazine. It was a large heart with a keyhole, and it was suspended from a skeleton key. It was red Bakelite, and as I said, it wound up on a model on the cover of Life Magazine in the early 40s. They said, “General MacArthur holds the key to our future and the key to our hearts and minds.”    I found it at a flea market; I didn't know what it was. Someone at Jewelry Camp said, “Hey, that thing is really important. Do you know what it is?” I said, “A heart? I don't know.” That's what happened. So, I started looking it up, and I was fascinated by this whole area of jewelry. I have really started collecting it. Once I got involved in working on my dad's story and on the book, I was even more into all things World War II. It was like two parts of my world and my life coming together in one thing, which was an interesting occurrence. I still collect it. Each of the different branches of the armed services had their own, even including the women's armed services divisions. They each had their own type of sweetheart jewelry, and I've collected a lot. Dad was in the Army Air Corps, so I do focus a lot on Army Air Corps-related sweetheart jewelry, but other stuff as well if it is interesting or fun or something I don't have already.   Sharon: Do you find that, since most people don't know what it is, you find it at flea markets or antique stores?   Jan: All of the above. Once eBay came along, you can find a lot of things on eBay that required you to hunt in flea markets and antique malls and antique stores. A lot of people don't know what they are, so quite often if I scan a case and see one, I will educate the person who has the booth because they don't know what it is. You can find it anywhere else you'd go look for antique jewelry.    Sweetheart jewelry was also made by some of the high-end houses. Cartier is known for making a handful of very famous sweetheart jewels that they designed and sold around the war. Again, fine materials were difficult to come by, but when France was occupied by Germany, Cartier did a very subversive brooch called the Caged Bird Brooch. It is a little bird in a cage, and the colors of the stones on the bird were red, white and blue, the colors of the French flag. When France was liberated, they developed what they called the Freed Bird Brooch, which is the cage door swung open and the bird looks like it's about to come out. Tiffany made some wonderful pieces as well. Gips did a great bracelet. They also made cuffs that had gold and silver stars on them.    We know during the war and still to this day, we talk about a gold star family. During the war, you would fly a banner in your window. You would have a blue star on the banner for each service person in your family overseas or serving in the armed services. A silver star would mean somebody was wounded in action, and a gold star meant you lost somebody who was killed in action. So, Tiffany made a cuff bracelet with gold stars on it. It wasn't only the cheaper variety and costume jewelry, but that was more prevalent and much more pervasive during this time period.    Sharon: Did people know what they were buying?   Jan: Oh, yes. It was definitely a conscious decision. As I said, it was a way to support the war effort. It was a way to show the pride you had if you had a loved one in the service overseas. As I said, the GIs were able to buy this stuff. There was a lot of stuff being sold at canteens on the bases, particularly in the Pacific theater. There was a lot of mother-of-pearl jewelry that would say “Mother” on it or “Sweetheart.” There was wooden stuff or even trench art. Soldiers were making jewelry from artillery shells or whatever things they could get their hands on and sending them back home just send their love and say, “I'm here. I'm O.K. We're doing our part.” It was very common knowledge then; not so much now.   Sharon: Now, people don't know what it is.   Jan: I have a lecture on it because it is something that people are very interested in once you start telling them about it. I've had people come up to me and show me stuff they've had, that their mothers or grandmothers or aunts had and left, and they didn't know what it was. I said, “Well, that's a piece of sweetheart jewelry.” They had no idea what it was.    Sharon: That's interesting. We will have photos posted on the website. Please head to TheJewelryJourney.com to check them out.

Khalid & Sophie
#38 - Khalid & Sophie podcast - 19-10-2022 (S03)

Khalid & Sophie

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 47:49


Woensdagavond in Khalid & Sophie:    Het is de dag van Sophie!    We nemen het nieuws van de dag door met ons duo van dienst: Alex Ploeg en Tanja Jess.    Het kabinet stuurt een normale delegatie naar het omstreden WK in Qatar - misschien zelfs inclusief de Koning! SP-leider Lilian Marijnissen is woedend over dit besluit. Met historicus Arend Jan Boekestijn en sportjournalist Frits Barend is ze te gast.    Jasper Krabbé exposeert met liefst 100 zelfportretten in galerie Jan Six. Vanavond vertelt hij over deze bijzondere tentoonstelling.     Vrijdag komt de nieuwe biografie over George Michael uit. De zanger is een van de grootste muzikale helden van radio-dj Gerard Ekdom. Hij schuift aan over Michaels leven en muziek.      Elvis E brengt een ode aan George Michael en zingt zijn nummer "Freedom! ‘90". 

De Nieuwe Wereld
'Op Rembrandt raak je nooit uitgekeken.' Een gesprek met Jan Six

De Nieuwe Wereld

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 74:39


Jelle van Baardewijk in gesprek met kunsthandelaar en kunsthistoricus Jan Six over de schilderkunst.

The Daily Boogie
Jan Six

The Daily Boogie

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 53:35


- Fortifying Democracy  - Fugitive apprehended  To support the show, please subscribe on Podbean, iTunes or Patreon Join the live audience on D-Live Follow on Twitter @BoogieBumper Join the Discord Grab Daily Boogie Merch Show Links; January 6 committee asks 35 major communication companies to 'preserve' metadata of 'potentially involved individuals' Jan. 6 committee to ask phone records be kept of lawmakers who participated in 'Stop the Steal' Donald Trump's Phone Records Sought By January 6th Committee: CNN Australia has lost its mind! Anthony Karam appears in court after COVID breach in Wentworth Point

The Outlook Podcast Archive
How did this man find two lost Rembrandts?

The Outlook Podcast Archive

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 31:07


Jan Six is a Dutch art dealer whose ancestor, also called Jan Six, was painted by the Dutch Master Rembrandt in the 17th century. So when, in 2016, Jan uncovered a lost painting by Rembrandt, the news shook the art world. But, at the time, Jan was hiding another astonishing find… he told Outlook's Emily Webb his story. Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com Presenter: Emily Webb Producer: Emily Webb Picture: Jan Six takes a selfie with Portrait of a Young Gentleman by Rembrandt van Rijn in The Hermitage Museum, Amsterdam, which Jan bought at a London auction in 2016 Credit: KOEN VAN WEEL/AFP via Getty Images

Outlook
How did this man find two lost Rembrandts?

Outlook

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 31:07


Jan Six is a Dutch art dealer whose ancestor, also called Jan Six, was painted by the Dutch Master Rembrandt in the 17th century. So when, in 2016, Jan uncovered a lost painting by Rembrandt, the news shook the art world. But, at the time, Jan was hiding another astonishing find… he told Outlook’s Emily Webb his story. Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com Presenter: Emily Webb Producer: Emily Webb Picture: Jan Six takes a selfie with Portrait of a Young Gentleman by Rembrandt van Rijn in The Hermitage Museum, Amsterdam, which Jan bought at a London auction in 2016 Credit: KOEN VAN WEEL/AFP via Getty Images

1-2-tje met Yves
Gijrath & De Vlieger: "We pleuren gewoon een miljard in de sloot en vernederen de zorgmedewerkers!”

1-2-tje met Yves

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2021 21:10


Het is de vrijdag van The GYGS en deze week komt er stoom uit de oren van kompanen Gijrath & De Vlieger. Kop van Jut is Hugo de Jonge, die tijdens de persconferentie liegt dat het gedrukt staat en het Nederlandse volk een grootschalige testsamenleving door de strot duwt, waar grof geld aan verdiend wordt. Hoogtijd voor: #hugomoetsnelweg. D66 kamerlid Sidney Smeets krijgt ervan langs en het nieuwe leiderschap van Kaag wordt aan de kaak gesteld. Natuurlijk wordt er ook lol getrapt, kennis gedeeld en zijn er nieuwtjes in the GYGS. De Britse corona-variant bestaat niet, kunstkenner Jan Six wordt ontmaskerd als bedrieger en wat voor opmerkelijke uitspraak hebben de kapiteinen onderschept van Grapperhaus? Nieuwsgierig? Check de trailer. Wie ook onderdeel wil zijn van de groeiende beweging van andersdenkenden en de hele aflevering van The GYGS wil beluisteren, kan zich registreren als ‘kapitein’ op www.dekapiteinenlijn.nl. Word net als Gijrath & De Vlieger kapitein en stap aan boord!

The Daily
The Sunday Read: 'Rembrandt in the Blood'

The Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2021 62:43


It was in the winter of 2016 that Jan Six, a Dutch art dealer based in Amsterdam, made a discovery that would upend his life. He was leafing through a Christie’s catalog when he spotted a painting featuring a young man wearing a dazed look, a lace collar and a proto-Led Zeppelin coif. Christie’s had labeled it a painting by one of Rembrandt’s followers, but Mr. Six knew it was by the Dutch master himself.Today on The Sunday Read, a look at Mr. Six’s discovery of the first new Rembrandt painting in over four decades, and the fallout from finding it.This story was written by Russell Shorto and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publishers like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.

A Wonderful Chaos
Ep. 22 | "How I discovered a Rembrandt," with Jan Six

A Wonderful Chaos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021 56:34


Jan Six joins us on the Wonderful Chaos couch to discuss his journey from an auction house to international news coverage as seen in the film, "My Rembrandt." We find out how he discovered a Rembrandt, and at the same time, we dissect the curious moment when we know something that no one else seems to see.   #Rembrandt #discovery #christie's #auction #jansix #myrembrandt #emotionalintelligence #fulfilment #empowerment #authenticity #freedom #lifelessons #courage#consciousness #wisdom #selfawareness #trustyourself #growthmindset #habits #transformation #personaldevelopment #talkshow

Highlights from Talking History
Rembrandt: A Life

Highlights from Talking History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2020 49:00


This week Patrick and a high profile range of Art Historians, Artists, Curators and Biographers discuss the life and cultural legacy of Dutch artist Rembrandt. Joining Patrick on the panel are: Jan Six, Art Historian and Art Dealer, Leonore van Sloten, Curator, Rembrandt House Museum, Anne Boddaert, Curator, 'Rembrandt in Print', The Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Mark O'Kelly, Head of Painting, National College of Art and Design (NCAD), Dublin and Dr Jonathan Bikker, Research Curator, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.   

BNR's Big Five | BNR
Kunsthandel | Kunsthandelaar Jan Six

BNR's Big Five | BNR

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2019 44:28


Wie een oude meester aan de wand wil hebben, of in de kluis, weet dat hij Jan Six moet bellen. Zijn ontdekking van twee onbekende Rembrandts gaven hem wereldfaam. Wat is zijn stijl als kunsthandelaar? Wat zijn volgens hem de fijne kneepjes van het vak?

Yous & Yay: New Emotions
#25 - Yous & Yay & Jan Six

Yous & Yay: New Emotions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 74:33


Sef & Pepijn spreken met Jan Six, een Nederlandse kunsthandelaar en kunsthistoricus. Yous & Yay: New Emotions is een podcast van Sef, Pepijn en de VPRO. Meer info via www.vpro.nl/yousenyay

Met Groenteman in de kast
#38: Kunsthandelaar Jan Six over hoe hij een Rembrandt ontdekte

Met Groenteman in de kast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2018 62:41


Dat kanten kraagje, die handschoen, en die onmisk…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

rembrandt jan six
Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 8. | De leugen grijpt de macht – als je niet uitkijkt

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 8:25


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 7. | Waar is onze burgermoed?

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 3:10


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 6. | Een brandstichter in Den Haag

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 6:25


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 5. | Wat de EU kan leren van de geschiedenis

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Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 7:45


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

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Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 4. | Wantrouwen schept wantrouwen

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Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 8:30


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

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Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 3. | Leven we opnieuw in historische tijden?

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Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 11:15


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 2. | Kan Trump de wereld opblazen?

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 11:25


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact
Geert Mak | De podcast | Afl 1. | Wakker worden, struisvogels!

Uitgeverij Atlas Contact

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 9:15


In deze serie vertelt Geert Mak, auteur van onder andere ‘In Europa’ en ‘De levens van Jan Six’, over zijn werk, over parallellen in de geschiedenis, over de toestand in Europa en de wereld in dit onbestemde voorjaar van 2017.