Home > Competitions > Apollo Weekly Competition

Explore the Apollo archive

Look back over two vibrant years of Apollo: browse every issue from January 2006 to the present day.

Archive
Apollo

Apollo weekly competition

Each Friday Apollo offers you the chance to win a superb prize. Simply answer the question set each Friday (www.apollo-magazine.com/competitions) and you could win some of the finest art history books reviewed in Apollo.

Thursday, 4th September 2008

The prize for our competition last week was the lavish hardback 'Nineteenth Century French Art' (Flammarion; £60) that explores the extraordinarily rich and productive period of French art, described by the book's editor Henri Loyrette as "France's 'Quattrocento'".

We asked you: Which artist painted Un Enterrement a Ornans? (1850-51)

Answer: Gustave Courbet

Congratulations to Pallas Athene, the winner this week, drawn at random from the correct answers.

This Friday, following the hundreds of competition entries we received, we have decided to extend the Francophile theme. Our prize is the extremely handsome hardback 'Empire Style: Authentic Decor' by Bernard Chevallier (Thames & Hudson; £32). This book explores the furniture and interior design of France's Empire period that was guided by the tastes of Emperor Napoleon and Empress Josephine. Chevallier discusses the design of the finest Neoclassical antechambers, bedrooms, libraries and salons, accompanied by superb photography by Marc Walter.

For your chance to win, simply answer the following question:

Percier and Fontaine were pupils of which architect?

Email your answer to offers@apollomag.com using 'Empire' as the subject of your email.

Best of luck!

Comments

Post a comment

Your comment:*

Your name:*

Your email address:*
(We won't publish this)

*Required information

Please click the button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

LATEST NEWS & COMMMENT

Manhattan transfer

The Lower East Side, once home to immigrants and aspiring artists, is no receiving the uptown treatment.

Shakespeare in stone

The National Trust's plans to acquire Seaton Delaval Hall are a tribute to a genius who has inspired writers and artists for centuries.

In pursuit of collectors

The Fitzwilliam Museum is celebrating the centenary of the directorship of Sydney Carlyle Cockerell with an exhibition that makes clear that he was in many ways the first modern museum director.