Update April 2023
Dear traveller,
What’s new? It’s a question we are often asked, by clients, journalists, tourist boards, fellow tour operators, our own staff. New is exciting, no doubt, and has pushed the boundaries of Martin Randall Travel in thrilling ways over the years. ‘New’ in 2023 also has the benefit (if I can put a positive spin on the last three years) of rounding up some of the many new tours we had planned for 2020 but which were inevitably postponed.
But ‘new’ at MRT is hard to define. Rare is it that a tour will repeat in the same way year after year. Different lecturers bring different opinions, museums expand, restaurants open, and music programmes are never the same. We keep on top of developments wherever we go, and make sure the ‘old’ tours are renewed. After all, the stalwarts in our tour list have provided much enjoyment for 30+ years, with careful review, refinement, and importantly, regular prospecting.
So, while this Update celebrates anniversaries and new itineraries – Sir Christopher Wren, Picasso, Renaissance Rivals, Lusatia, Gastronomic Basque Country – the calendar towards the back lists the full range for 2023 and 2024. All the tours honed, tweaked, brought up to date; ‘new’ in their own way. We are delighted to share these with you.
With best wishes,
Fiona Charrington • Chief Executive March 2023
We have begun to launch our programme for next year – find a regularly updated list at martinrandall.com/2024. If you would like to receive details for a particular tour as soon as they are ready, please call, or send an e-mail to alerts@martinrandall.co.uk.
Martin Randall Travel Ltd
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www.martinrandall.com Contents Medieval Champagne 4 Lusatia: Germany’s Eastern Borderlands........... 6 Renaissance Rivals 8 Fiesole to Lucca: Tuscany on Foot .................... 10 Italian Design 12 Gastronomic Basque Country .......................... 14 Celebrating Picasso 16 Sir Christopher Wren ......................................... 18 Martin Randall Festivals 20 Calendar 2023 ............................................... 21–24 Calendar 2024 ............................................... 25–28 Online talks ......................................................... 28
Cover: Sudden Shower over Shin-Ōhashi Bridge and Atake from One Hundred Famous Views of Edo by Hiroshige. Left: Departure for the Island of Cythera (1717), engraving by Nicolas-Henri Tardieu after Jean-Antoine Watteau.
Medieval Champagne
Architecture, sculpture and stained glass
26 September–3 October 2023 (mj 906)
8 days • £3,120
Lecturer: John McNeill
Outstanding Gothic architecture, with some of the finest collections of medieval sculpture and stained glass in France.
Based in Reims and Troyes, two of the three principal centres of medieval Champagne.
The art and architecture of southern Champagne is inextricably entwined with that of Burgundy’s far north: Châtillon-sur-Seine, Pontigny and Auxerre are also examined.
Champagne is better known for its wine than its monumental culture, though along with neighbouring Burgundy it abounds in architecturally distinguished towns. It also played a major role in the development of Gothic architecture and retains more medieval statuary and stained glass than any other region in France.
The old county recognised three principal towns: Reims, Provins and Troyes – all of them sites of major European annual fairs. This lent a cosmopolitanism to medieval Champagne – an openness and suggestibility evident in its material culture. It should equally be celebrated for its earlier monuments.
The greatest of the 11th-century are the abbey of St-Remi at Reims and the hill-top church at Châtillon, while for the 12th century one is spoiled for choice. The 13th century saw Champagne at the cutting edge of Europe: at Reims, the tracery window was invented, while at Troyes the clerestory was perhaps first glazed. The late-13th century marked something of a change of direction – St-Urbain at Troyes is one of the keys to late medieval architecture in Europe.
Champagne suffered grievously during the Hundred Years War and recovery was protracted and uneven. Its great concentration of sculptural and glazing shops only reached a peak in the early 16th century, but there is still much to savour.
Itinerary
Day 1. Eurostar at c. 10.30am, London St Pancras to Paris. Drive to Reims; first of two nights here.
Day 2: Reims. Walk to the cathedral: the greatest and most varied architectural sculpture in France. Afternoon at the abbey of St-Remi, and among the stunning Roman and medieval collections housed in the adjacent monastic precinct.
Day 3: Châlons-en-Champagne, Orbais, Troyes. The museum at Notre-Dame-en-Vaux in Châlons-en-Champagne houses the finest early Gothic cloister sculpture in Europe. Orbais Abbey perfectly illustrates the shift from early to high Gothic architecture. First of five nights in Troyes.
Day 4: Troyes. Troyes Cathedral’s treasury, flamboyant west front and rich stained glass form a splendid ensemble. Visit the church of St-Urbain with razor-sharp tracery, openwork gables and fastidiously coloured glass. View 16th-century sculpture at La Madeleine, and visit the museum of stained glass at the Cité du Vitrail.
Day 5: Villemaur-sur-Vanne, Villeneuvel’Archevêque. See the Renaissance wooden choir screen at Villemaur and the episcopal church at Villeneuve, the town where Louis IX received the crown of thorns. Free afternoon in Troyes.
Day 6: Pontigny, Auxerre. Drive to Pontigny’s Cistercian church, contrasting a light-filled nave with a beautiful early Gothic east end. At Auxerre, visit St-Eusèbe, the Cathedral and the amazingly well-preserved Carolingian crypt at St-Germain.
Day 7: Châtillon-sur-Seine, Tonnerre, Chaource. Châtillon boasts a wonderful early Romanesque church on a hill above the Seine, and a museum built to house the Vix vase. Visit Margaret of Burgundy’s great hospital at Tonnere and the charming late medieval church at Chaource.
Day 8: Provins. In Provins, see the walled upper town and church of St-Quiriace. Eurostar from Paris to London St Pancras, arriving c. 6.30pm.
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Reims, Notre Dame, 18th-century copper engraving.
Lusatia: Germany’s Eastern Borderlands
Cities, palaces and gardens along the Oder-Neisse Line
17–23 July 2023 (mj 797)
7 days • £2,460
Lecturer: Dr Jarl Kremeier
A rarely-visited and unspoilt area, yet each day presents something of European importance. Visit gardens laid out by one of Europe’s foremost patrons of landscape gardening, Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau.
Old and important trading cities (Bautzen Görlitz, Zittau) which largely escaped wartime damage and are now well restored.
Historically, the ground covered by this tour was the territory of two margraviates of the Holy Roman Empire, Brandenburg to the north and Lusatia to the south. Lusatia maintained strong links to the Kingdom of Bohemia throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. Continuing ecclesiastical relations with Prague led to the embedding of Roman Catholic institutions in what became Lutheran territories. This is evident in the Baroque abbeys which are dotted around an area otherwise dominated by Gothic churches.
In order to protect peace and order in Upper Lusatia, six cities formed an alliance of mutual protection in 1346, which lasted until 1815 when Lusatia was partitioned and territories were ceded to the Kingdom of Prussia. From 1871 Lusatia became a part of united Germany and was divided between Prussia and Saxony.
Our journey through this fascinating region takes us to the creations of Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau, a genius for his further development of the English landscaped Park. Pückler (1785–1871) inherited two large estates at Muskau (now a unesco world heritage site) and Branitz. Both rank among the highlights of 19thcentury garden design in continental Europe.
Itinerary
Day 1: Frankfurt an der Oder, Eisenhüttenstadt. Fly (BA) from Heathrow to Berlin Brandenburg
and drive southeast to Frankfurt an der Oder. Largely devastated by allied bombing, amid the post-war architecture stand the impressive gabled town hall and Brick Gothic Marienkirche. Eisenhüttenstadt (formerly Stalinstadt), ‘the first socialist town on German soil’, was established in the 1950s. Overnight in Neuzelle.
Day 2: Neuzelle, Branitz. Neuzelle Abbey is one of the most significant Baroque monuments in northern Germany. The medieval Cistercian Monastery was largely revamped in the 17th and 18th centuries and now forms an amazing architectural ensemble. Schloss Branitz (Cottbus) sits in a very fine park designed by its owner, Prince Pückler-Muskau. Continue to Bad Muskau where two nights are spent.
Day 3: Bad Muskau. Spend the day at the estate of Prince Pückler-Muskau which comprises his first landscaped garden – vast, c. 600 ha – laid out at great expense from 1816. Two thirds of this garden is now in Poland, the river Neisse having been chosen as the border in 1945. Since 1989 both sides have been open to pedestrians.
Day 4: Bautzen, Görlitz. Drive South to Bautzen, a picturesque city in the Spree valley, renowned for its many towers. Once the administrative centre and capital of the Lusatian League. Continue to the other major Lusatian power, Görlitz, where three nights are spent.
Day 5: Görlitz. The German side of Görlitz retains the old city centre which is abundant in Renaissance and Baroque architecture. Across the bridge are the now Polish former eastern suburbs.
Day 6: Zittau, St Marienthal. At the tripoint where Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic meet, Zittau is an interesting example of urban planning with an oval inner city, and city walls which became a Ringstrasse lined with 19thcentury public buildings.
Day 7. Fly from Berlin Brandenburg, arriving at London Heathrow in the afternoon.
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Schloss Branitz ©SFPM/Hans Bach.
Renaissance Rivals
Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael: the tumultuous trio
18–24 October 2023 (mj 962)
7 days • £3,740
Lecturer: Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
A fascinating exploration of the three greatest artists of the Italian High Renaissance.
Milan, Florence, Rome, with Italy’s finest art galleries and visits by special arrangement. Led by Dr Michael Douglas-Scott, specialist in 16th-century Italian art.
In the years 1495–1520 the rivalry between these three artists – Leonardo, Michaelangelo and Raphael – provided the impetus for the creation of the great pinnacle of European visual culture, known as the ‘High Renaissance’. Competition was central to the Italian Renaissance. Artists competed with orators and humanists for positions at court. In Milan, Leonardo won the attention of the Duke, Ludovico ‘il Moro’ Sforza, who commissioned him to paint The Last Supper and to make a giant equestrian statue of his father Francesco. The latter was never finished as in 1499 the Sforza regime fell and Leonardo returned to his homeland of Florence.
Here he ran into direct (and acrimonious) competition with the (younger) sculptor Michelangelo. They were both engaged in providing painted battle-scenes for the town hall for the republican regime that had replaced Medici control. From Urbino, Raphael, arrived in town in 1505 just in time to learn from their heroic achievements and failures.
Raphael then took his own renewed style to Rome and, in his turn, entered into competition with the great Michelangelo under the patronage of Pope Julius II. As Raphael painted the Stanza della Segnatura, the Sistine Chapel ceiling was frescoed by Michelangelo. Raphael paid tribute to Michelangelo by including him in the School of Athens but his hero resented the younger rival’s success, claiming that ‘everything he learned he learned from me’.
Itinerary
Day 1. Fly at c. 9.30am from London Heathrow to Milan Malpensa. The scene is set with a visit to the Brera, one of Italy’s finest art galleries. Overnight in Milan.
Day 2: Milan, Florence. Visit the Renaissance church of Sta Maria delle Grazie, home to Leonardo’s Last Supper. The Pinacoteca Ambrosiana has works by Raphael, Bramantino, Luini. Take an afternoon train to Florence, where the next three nights are spent.
Day 3: Florence. The Uffizi holds key works by all three artists, as well as every other major Florentine painter. In the afternoon see Michaelangelo’s Slaves in the Accademia, before focusing on work undertaken for the Medici family in the Cappelle Medicee.
Day 4: Florence. Visit Casa Buonarotti, house of Michelangelo’s family. Continue to the Palazzo Pitti; the Galleria Palatina is outstanding for High Renaissance and Baroque paintings. The Bargello holds Florence’s finest sculpture collection. The vast Franciscan church of Sta Croce is furnished with sculpted tombs, altarpieces and frescoes.
Day 5: Florence, Rome. By train to Rome. The delightful Villa La Farnesina has frescoes by Raphael. Continue to the Chigi Chapel in Santa Maria del Popolo and the Galleria Borghese. First of two nights in Rome.
Day 6: Rome. Rise early for a private visit to the Vatican to see (in peace) the most precious assemblage of painting in the western world; including Michelangelo’s frescoes in the Sistine Chapel and Raphael’s frescoes in the adjacent Stanze. An afternoon walk includes Piazza Navona, the Pantheon (for Raphael’s tomb).
Day 7: Rome. The Basilica of St Peter in the Vatican was the outcome of the greatest architects – Bramante, Raphael, Sangallo, Michelangelo –and contains major sculpture. Return to London Heathrow, arriving at c. 6.30pm.
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The School of Athens, copper engraving c. 1781, by Giovanni Volpato (1732–1803), after Raphael.
Fiesole to Lucca: Tuscany on Foot
Country walks and Renaissance art
24 September–1 October 2023 (mj 904)
8 days • £3,420
Lecturer: Dr Thomas-Leo True
Six country walks amid the beautiful scenery around Fiesole and Lucca.
Special arrangements to visit villas and gardens, some with proprietors or gardeners.
Visits to places of artistic and gastronomic interest, and to picturesque towns and villages.
Pleasing views, cooling breezes, the cultivation of vine and olive, light and space: these were key in encouraging wealthy merchants in Florence and Lucca to build villas in the surrounding countryside as their summer residences. But just as the town houses were constructed to demonstrate the accomplishments of the patron and the skills of his architect, their country villas did the same, with the added benefit of a garden.
In these less-visited corners of Tuscany, there is an extraordinary number of villas and gardens. This tour includes some of the best, linking them by geographical proximity and for the purposes of aesthetic and architectural comparison. There is something about discovering them on foot which enables one better to understand their genius loci and their merits.
As gardens were considered extensions of the villa, they were designed to display artworks of the horticultural variety as well as sculpture of stone and bronze. The shapes of the topiary, the patterns of parterres and the delight of the vistas combine with the beauties of carefully-positioned Renaissance and Baroque sculpture.
Beyond the gardens, the Tuscan climate lends itself to producing well-structured red wines as well as excellent olive oil. The combination of care for provenance of ingredient and excellent cooking means that meals should be of a high order. Matching local wines with food is an increasingly popular craft, and this tour offers an opportunity to experience this first hand.
Itinerary
Day 1: Villa La Pietra, Fiesole. Morning flight from London Heathrow to Pisa (BA). Visit Villa La Pietra, built in the 15th century by Francesco Sassetti. Drive to Fiesole; first of three nights here.
Day 2: Fiesole, San Domenico. Visit Fiesole’s cathedral. After a steep climb, an easy walk to Monte Ceceri (c. 3 km, 1½ hrs). Walk the old road to the convent of San Domenico where Fra’ Angelico first worked, and see his altarpiece there.
Day 3: Settignano, Pian de’ Giullari. Walk to Settignano through olive groves and woodland (c. 5.5 km, 2 hrs). Villa Gamberaia is one of the most perfect examples of garden art. Lunch at Pian de’ Giullari. Overlooking Florence, San Miniato al Monte is a splendid Romanesque basilica.
Day 4: Fiesole, Pistoia, Lucca. Visit Villa Medici, built in the 15th century, where Cecil Pinsent designed a series of green ‘rooms’ on a steep slope. Pistoia is home to important sculpture in the church of Sant’Andrea and the cathedral. First of four nights in Lucca.
Day 5: Lucca, Matraia, Villa Oliva Buonvisi. See the Romanesque cathedral of San Martino then drive to Matraia for a walk through olive groves (2.5 km, 30 mins), lunch and an olive-oil tasting. Walk on paths and lanes beside some of Lucca’s finest summer retreats then descend to Marlia (c. 3 km, 1 hour). Visit the 15th-century Villa Oliva.
Day 6: Compitese villages, Pietrasanta. Pietrasanta is famous for its skilled marble workers; visit a workshop. Walk through the villages of Sant’Andrea di Compito and San Giusto di Compito (c. 3.5 km, 1½ hrs).
Day 7: Camigliano, Villa Torrigiani. Drive to Camigliano and walk on grassy paths to Sant’Andrea in Caprile (7 km, 2½ hrs). Lunch before visiting Villa Torrigiani and its garden. Return to Lucca for a wine tasting and dinner.
Day 8. Return to Heathrow arriving at c. midday.
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Tuscan landscape, etching c. 1920.
Italian Design
Modernism in Turin and Milan
23–29 October 2023 (mj 983)
7 days • £3,320
Lecturer: Dr Philippa Joseph
The history and development of Italy’s design industry from Art Nouveau to the present day. Iconic 20th-century buildings and important private collections, several accessible only by arrangement.
Based in two beautiful historic cities which were central to the development of modern design.
In the 1950s and 60s, Italian design epitomised head-turning, sophisticated chic the world over. However, its origins can be traced back to the turn of the 20th century and earlier, when Art Nouveau began sweeping through Europe’s most fashionable cities. Turin, the first capital of the fledgling Italian state following unification, was at the vanguard of the flamboyant new style.
Futurism followed from 1909, with its emphasis on energy and speed. Turin, the heart of Italy’s burgeoning automobile industry, was at the forefront of this dynamic new movement. Italy was soon in the thrall of International Modernism in architecture, and developed its own version, Rationalism, exemplified in 1936 by Giuseppe Terragni’s Casa del Fascio in Como.
The country’s postwar reconstruction was encapsulated by architect Ernesto Rogers and in the decades that followed, Italy produced innumerable beautiful and innovative buildings, cars, furniture and industrial designs, including the Vespa scooter, the Fiat 500, and Olivetti’s Lettera 22 portable typewriter. Olivetti combined design excellence with corporate beneficence, and its headquarters at Ivrea had bright, modern factories surrounded by open green space.
Milan and its environs are still home to many important furniture firms, and since the 1930s has held the famous international design fair, the Triennale di Milano. It is now also home to the recently opened Museo del Design Italiano.
Itinerary
Day 1: Turin. c. 7.30am flight (BA) from London Gatwick to Turin. Visit the test track on the roof of Lingotto, the former Fiat factory, an homage to Futurism (1926). Continue to the excellent Museo dell’Automobile. First of three nights in Turin.
Day 2: Turin. Visit the Expo 61 trade fair pavilions by Pier Luigi Nervi, and the Palavela by Franco Levi and Annibale and Giorgio Rigotti. Visit one of the best surviving Stile Liberty houses, Villa Scott, and the striking Teatro Regio interior designed by Carlo Mollino (1905–73).
Day 3: Ivrea, Turin. Olivetti was Italy’s most important postwar company, its offices and factories now a UNESCO site. In Turin, an optional visit to the Mole Antonelliana, former synagogue and Europe’s first skyscraper, now home to the National Museum of Cinema.
Day 4: Milan. Visit Grattacielo Pirelli, an iconic skyscraper (1960), designed by Gio Ponti, Alberto Rosselli and Pier Luigi Nervi. Palazzo dell’Arte houses the Museo del Design Italiano. Visit the Fondazione Franco Albini, dedicated to the creator (with Franca Helg) of many classic furniture designs. First of three nights in Milan.
Day 5: Binasco, Rho. In Binasco, view the MUMAC Coffee Museum’s collection of espresso machines, and memorable Pop Art furniture at Kartell. In Rho, Museo Storico Alfa Romeo holds some of the marque’s most important cars.
Day 6: Brianza, Como. In the area of Brianza there are scores of important furniture companies including Cassina and Bonacina. Terragni’s Casa del Fascio in Como of 1932–6 is probably the most famous Rationalist building in Italy.
Day 7: Milan. The Museo del Novecento houses important 20th-century art, including works by Metaphysical and Futurist artists. Villa Necchi Campiglio is a Modernist/Art Deco house designed by Piero Portaluppi. Fly from Milan to Heathrow, arriving at c. 8.00pm.
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Turin, interior roof of the Lingotto (former Fiat factory) ©Alexander Schimmeck.
Gastronomic Basque Country
Food, art and architecture
4–11 September 2023 (mj 849)
8 days • £4,310
Lecturer: Gijs van Hensbergen
Long, lazy lunches including two in restaurants with three Michelin stars.
Excellent wines of La Rioja-Alavesa.
Architecture by Gehry, Calatrava, Moneo, and varied landscapes of coast, plain and mountain.
Straddling the Pyrenees, the Basque Country has wonderful and varied scenery, a magnificent range of art and architecture and a culinary tradition which ranks with the best in the world. It is a land of abundance, though there is one striking exception: tourists are in short supply.
The landscape reaches from the Atlantic coast, with natural harbours and fishing communities from which the wealth of the region has derived since ancient times, to the hills and mountains majestically clothed with broadleaf forests. Both the highlands and the fertile rolling lowlands provide the raw ingredients which supplement the seafood and inspire gastronomic greatness.
The best of Basque cooking mixes a strong sense of tradition with startling innovation. From all-male dining clubs, where friends cook for each other, to indoor markets spilling over with smoked idiazabal cheeses and fresh fish, from rustic cider clubs to chic new bars vying for the ‘tapas of the year’ prize, Basques remain obsessed with the quality and provenance of their food.
From Bilbao we drive out to the Rioja-Alavesa, northern rim of the most prestigious winemaking area in Spain, before continuing onwards to San Sebastián, arguably the most gastronomic city in the world.
In between restaurants, wineries and specialist food shops, we linger in medieval villages, Gothic churches and Baroque interiors. Here we find fine contemporary architecture, while nestling in the upland valleys we explore a doughty vernacular of remarkable distinctiveness and beauty.
Itinerary
Day 1: Bilbao. Morning flights (Vueling), London Gatwick to Bilbao. First of three nights here.
Day 2: Bilbao. A morning walk in the medieval quarter before lunch at the riverside Art Deco market. The afternoon is spent studying Gehry’s titanium-clad Guggenheim Museum.
Day 3: Laguardia, Marqués de Riscal. Laguardia is the most picturesque of Riojan villages. See the ramparts and 14th-century portal of Santa María de los Reyes. Tasting at Bodega El Fabulista, where wine is produced by treading the grapes. The bodegas of Marqués de Riscal are among the most venerable in the region. The visit includes a tasting in the cellars of their Gehry-designed hotel, followed by lunch.
Day 4: Bilbao, San Sebastián. Visit Bilbao’s Fine Arts Museum before driving to the outskirts of San Sebastián for lunch at one of the most famous restaurants in Spain, Arzak. Despite its three Michelin stars and status as one of the world’s best restaurants, it remains firmly a family business. First of four nights in San Sebastián.
Day 5: Getaria. The traditional fishing village of Getaria is perched on a rocky promontory in the Bay of Biscay. Here we taste the local specialities of txakoli wine and anchovies. Lunch is at Michelin-starred Elkano, where the local catch is grilled to perfection over a wood fire.
Day 6: San Sebastián. Gastronomic capital of Spain. Behind the ancient fisherman’s quarter is a compact old town with an arcaded central square and traffic-free streets. Lunch in a private dining club, a rare privilege. Some free time.
Day 7: San Sebastián, Lasarte-Oria. Visit the Chillida Leku sculpture museum in San Sebastián. Lunch at Martín Berasategui’s three Michelin-star restaurant in Lasarte-Oria.
Day 8. Afternoon flight, Bilbao to London Gatwick, arriving at c. 2.45pm.
Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 14
Bilbao, the Church and bridge of San Antonio, wood engraving c. 1880.
Celebrating Picasso
Special exhibitions in Málaga, Madrid, Barcelona and Paris
21–29 November 2023 (mj 125)
9 days • £3,830
Lecturer: Gijs van Hensbergen
2023 marks the 50th anniversary of Picasso’s death with a series of events.
Special exhibitions in Málaga, Madrid, Barcelona and Paris, with two nights in each city.
First-class, high-speed rail travel between cities, from Málaga back to London.
Picasso was unique, complex, contrary – a fireball of inspiration that transformed everything he touched. No artist dominated the 20th century quite like him. Fifty years after his death we can reflect on his contribution to painting, sculpture, print-making, pottery, theatre design, poetry, photography and the status of the artist as media superstar and political provocateur.
Spanish to the core, for more than 70 of his 92 years Picasso lived in France, where he produced more than 35,000 original works of art. Within his home country during the Franco regime many dismissed Picasso’s work as ‘the manic doodles of the artist from Málaga’ and reviled his outpourings as Communist bunk. Such works as were in Spain were secreted during the regime in clandestine private collections. All that has long changed. Barcelona honoured him in the 1960s with the opening of its Picasso museum. In late 2003, his home town of Málaga opened its own Picasso museum.
From the Málaga of Picasso’s childhood we move north by rail, via Madrid and Barcelona, to Paris, and take in a host of special exhibitions to mark the historic milestone. En route we visit sources of inspiration for the man who claimed the greatest artist was the greatest kleptomaniac. Even in his 80s, brooding over homeland Spain, he would refashion scraps of paper, make lightning notations and surrealist doodles while twisting wire bottle tops into pocket sculptures as he rethought the boundaries of the world of art.
Itinerary
Day 1: Málaga. Fly at c. 10.30am from London Heathrow to Málaga (British Airways). An afternoon walk includes the house where Picasso was born. First of two nights in Málaga.
Day 2: Málaga. The Carmen Thyssen museum has a fine collection of old masters and 19th-century Spanish painting. The afternoon is spent in the Picasso Museum, where over 200 works span his entire career. Exhibition: The Echoes of Picasso.
Day 3: Málaga to Madrid. Travel by high-speed AVE train to Madrid (c. 3 hours). Lunch is served on board. In the afternoon visit the Prado Museum. First of two nights in Madrid.
Day 4: Madrid. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Exhibition: Picasso, the Sacred and the Profane. Lunch nearby at one of Picasso’s haunts. Centro de Arte Reina Sofía is home to Picasso’s Guernica. Exhibition: Picasso 1906: The Turning Point.
Day 5: Madrid to Barcelona. High-speed AVE train from Madrid to Barcelona (c. 3 hours) with lunch on board. Visit the National Museum of Catalan Art. First of two nights in Barcelona.
Day 6: Barcelona. Walk in Barcelona’s Gothic Quarter, inspiration of Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, and Els Quatre Gats, the bar where Picasso held his first one-man show. The afternoon is devoted to the Picasso Museum: Exhibition: Miró–Picasso.
Day 7: Barcelona to Paris. Travel by high-speed TGV train, through the Pyrenees and French countryside, arriving late-afternoon in Paris (c. 6 hours 45 minutes). First of two nights in Paris.
Day 8: Paris. The Picasso Museum possesses one of the greatest collections of the artist’s work. We also visit one of the special Picasso exhibitions taking place in Paris (exhibition to be confirmed).
Day 9: Paris. The Pompidou Centre hosts a special exhibition of drawings and prints by Picasso. Afternoon Eurostar to London St Pancras.
Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 16
Málaga, Picasso Museum ©Picasso Museo Málaga.
Sir Christopher Wren
The tercentenary of England’s most famous architect
26–30 September 2023 (mj 910)
5 days • £2,310
Speaker: Simon Bradley
A celebration of one of the world’s greatest architects to mark the tercentenary of his death. Includes most of his surviving works, with several special arrangements.
Cambridge, Oxford, City of London, Chelsea, Greenwich, Hampton Court.
All four nights in a central London hotel.
Sir Christopher Wren, a name known to practically everyone, is one of the few English creatives known to non-specialists. He died 300 years ago, aged 90, having served six monarchs as Surveyor General with overall control of many of the finest buildings in England erected in the decades around 1700.
Yet his progress towards mastery was fascinatingly tentative. He didn’t design a building until he was over 30, he received no formal training and saw only a narrow range of buildings in mainland Europe. And debate still rages about the input of his assistants, among whom were such greats as Robert Hooke, Nicholas Hawksmoor and John Vanbrugh.
But against his achievements, these are minor cavils. He was the designer and executant architect of St Paul’s Cathedral, one of the outstanding buildings of the Early Modern age; designed or supervised the rebuilding of 55 parish churches in London; had a significant impact on the fabric of both Oxford and Cambridge; and created icons of England such as Chelsea Royal Hospital, the extension to Hampton Court Palace and the Royal Naval Hospital at Greenwich.
In addition, he was rated by some as the most brilliant member of the Royal Society, and appointed Professor of Astronomy at both Oxford and Gresham College, London. Much of Wren’s activity as an architect can be understood in the light of his life as a scientist.
Itinerary
Day 1: Cambridge. Choose to leave from the hotel in St James’s or meet the group at Stratford Station, north-east London. Then by coach to Cambridge. See Wren’s first building, Pembroke College Chapel (1663), and a range in Emmanuel College. Trinity College Library is one of the finest things in this beautiful city. Drive back to Stratford, Jubilee Line, St James’s and dinner.
Day 2: City of London. Wren’s level of involvement in the 52 parish churches rebuilt after the Great Fire of 1666 varied; a selection of the 24 survivals provides a variety of ingenuity and beauty. St Paul’s Cathedral was the outcome of nearly 50 years of thought and effort, its achievement the more remarkable because of the scepticism and hostility Wren faced throughout.
Day 3: Oxford. By coach to Oxford. The Sheldonian Theatre was the most challenging of Wren’s early projects, and still fulfils its original function for university ceremonies. See also his completion of Tom Tower at Christ Church which completed the gateway begun under Cardinal Wolsey – an early case of the Gothic Revival.
Day 4: Chelsea, Hampton Court. The Royal Hospital, Chelsea, built to house retired and disabled soldiers, is the major embodiment of the typically English reticent style of two shades of red brick and painted woodwork. The Tudor palace at Hampton Court was transformed by Wren for William III, Mary II and Queen Anne.
Day 5: Greenwich. By river bus to Greenwich. ‘The most stately procession of buildings we possess’, ‘the finest piece of monumental classical architecture in England’ – such are the standard encomia about Wren’s creation, the Royal Hospital for Seamen, which served as both almshouse and expression of national pride. He also designed the nearby Royal Observatory. Lunch, then by river again to Westminster, finishing at the hotel by 4.00pm.
Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 18
London, St Paul’s Cathedral, early-18th-century copper engraving.
Contact us for full details or visit martinrandall.com Contact us to register your interest: CELEBRATING MUSIC AND PLACE MUSIC ALONG THE RHINE | 23–30 JUNE 2023 CELEBRATING WILLIAM BYRD | 1–5 JULY 2023 THE BACH JOURNEY | 4–10 SEPTEMBER 2023 THE THOMAS TALLIS TRAIL | 20–22 OCTOBER 2023 SALZBURG STRING QUARTET FESTIVAL | MAY 2024 MOZART ALONG THE DANUBE | 28 JULY–4 AUGUST 2024 THE DIVINE OFFICE | SEPTEMBER 2024 OPERA IN SOUTHERN SICILY | OCTOBER 2024 UK CHAMBER MUSIC BREAKS 2023–24: The Consone Quartet, 3–5 November 2023 William Howard & the Carducci Quartet, 19–21 April 2024 more to be announced
UK CHAMBER MUSIC BREAKS: Linos Piano Trio, 21–23 April 2023 Elias String Quartet, 8–10 May 2023
Photo ©Ben Ealovega.
Calendar 2023
The vast majority of our programme for the rest of 2023 is now available to book, including Christmas and new year (see page 24) – visit martinrandall.com for full details. Should you find that the tour you are looking for is not yet on-sale, please contact us to register your interest. Our full anticipated programme for 2024 can be found on pages 25–28.
April 2023
3–11 The Ring in Berlin (mj 662)
Barry Millington
10–21 Art in Japan (mj 674) Dr Monika Hinkel
11–16 Palladian Villas (mj 677)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
12–19 Romans & Carolingians (mj 678)
Dr Hugh Doherty
17–22 Pompeii & Herculaneum (mj 683)
Dr Mark Grahame
18–27 Anjou & the West (mj 682) John McNeill
19–27 The Cathedrals of England (mj 684)
Jon Cannon
19–28 Albania: Crossroads of Antiquity (mj 686)
Carolyn Perry
20–24 Ravenna & Urbino (mj 687)
Dr Luca Leoncini
20–25 Opera in Vienna (mj 696) Dr John Allison
20–26 Southern Tuscany (mj 690)
Dr Fabizio Nevola
21–23 Linos Piano Trio at The Castle Taunton (mj 689)
21– 2 Samarkand & Silk Road Cities (mj 688)
Dr Peter Webb
24– 3 The Venetian Land Empire (mj 691)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
24– 6 Civilisations of Sicily (mj 692)
Dr Philippa Joseph
May 2023
8–10 The Elias String Quartet at The Swan, Lavenham (mj 706) Richard Wigmore
8–13 Tuscan Gardens (mj 708)
Dr Katie Campbell
8–14 Walking Hadrian’s Wall (mj 705)
Dr Matthew Symonds
8–15 The Duchy of Milan (mj 716)
Dr Luca Leoncini
8–20 Traditions of Japan (mj 717)
Professor Timon Screech
8–21 The Western Balkans (mj 714)
Professor Cathie Carmichael
10–18 Aragón: Hidden Spain (mj 715)
Dr Zahira Bomford
12–19 Courts of Northern Italy (mj 723)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
12–19 Art in Scotland (mj 719) Christopher Baker
12–20 Great Irish Houses (mj 724)
Anthony Lambert
13–22 Cities of Catalonia (mj 718)
Gijs van Hensbergen
13–22 Classical Greece (mj 712)
Professor Antony Spawforth
15 Choral Day: Byrd in the City (lj 722)
15–21 Prague Spring (mj 720) Dr Michael Downes
18–28 Moldavia & Transylvania (mj 727)
Dr Shona Kallestrup
18–29 Leipzig Mahler Festival (mj 729)
Dr Paul Max Edlin
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19–25 Dresden Music Festival (mj 726)
Dr Jarl Kremeier
19–30 Samarkand & Silk Road Cities (mj 725)
Dr Peter Webb
21–25 Castles of Wales (mj 730) Dr Marc Morris
22–26 Great Private Houses in Norfolk (mj 735)
Dr Andrew Moore
23– 1 The Medieval Pyrenees (mj 737)
Dr Richard Plant
30– 3 Berlin: New Architecture (mj 748)
Tom Abbott
June 2023
3–10 Medieval Burgundy (mj 754) John McNeill
7–14 Gastronomy & the Golden Age (mj 755)
Gijs van Hensbergen
8–11 Glyndebourne & Garsington (mj 760)
Dr John Allison
9–12 Versailles: Seat of the Sun King (mj 762)
Professor Antony Spawforth
12–18 Art in Tyrol, South & North (mj 763)
Dr Ulrike Ziegler
12–18 Gastronomic Fruili-Venezia Giulia (mj 764) Marc Millon
12–19 Footpaths of Umbria (mj 766)
Dr Thomas-Leo True
14–23 Great French Gardens (mj 765)
Steven Desmond
15–23 Great Houses of the North (mj 768)
Dr Steven Parissien
16 London Squares Walk (lj 773)
Martin Randall
16–23 Medieval Alsace (mj 769) Dr Richard Plant
17–25 Gardens in the Highlands (mj 770)
Colin Crosbie
19–23 Medieval Middle England (mj 772)
John McNeill
19–25 Walking in Southern Bohemia (mj 771)
Martina Hinks-Edwards
22–28 Walking the Rhine Valley (mj 774)
Richard Wigmore
23–27 West Cork Chamber Music Festival (mj 777) Leo Samama
23–30 MUSIC ALONG THE RHINE (mj 776)
27– 1 Lincolnshire Churches (mj 785)
John McNeill
29– 3 Copenhagen Modern (mj 780)
Professor Harry Charrington
July 2023
1– 5 CELEBRATING WILLIAM BYRD (mj 787)
3– 7 West Country Churches (mj 790)
John McNeill
5– 9 Flemish Painting (mj 791)
Dr Sophie Oosterwijk
6 Wren 300 (lj 789) Martin Randall
6–11 Savonlinna Opera (mj 792) Simon Rees
11–16 Hindsgavl: Chamber Music in Denmark (mj 793) Dr Michael Downes
12–19 Cave Art of France (mj 795) Dr Paul Bahn
17–23 Lusatia: Germany’s Eastern Borderlands (mj 797) Dr Jarl Kremeier
19 The London Backstreet Walk (lj 801)
Sophie Campbell
19–23 Opera in Munich (mj 800) Patrick Bade
27– 3 The Hanseatic League (mj 820)
Andreas Puth
28 London Gardens Walk (lj 810)
Louisa Allen
August 2023
2– 6 Verona Opera (mj 818) Dr R.T. Cobianchi
7–16 Medieval Saxony (mj 838) Dr Ulrike Ziegler
11–14 Drottningholm & Confidencen (mj 825) Dr David Vickers
14–20 Rossini & Puccini (mj 827)
Rupert Christiansen
15–20 King Ludwig II (mj 828) Tom Abbott
20–25 The Lucerne Festival (mj 832)
Dr Michael Downes
25–31 The Schubertiade (mj 835)
Richard Wigmore
27– 4 Mitteldeutschland (mj 840)
Dr Jarl Kremeier
31 London Neighbourhoods (lj 841)
Martin Randall
2023 Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 22
September 2023
1–12 Samarkand & Silk Road Cities (mj 842)
Dr Peter Webb
2– 9 The Heart of Italy (mj 848)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
2–13 Walking to Santiago (mj 852)
Dr Rose Walker
3– 8 Isambard Kingdom Brunel (mj 846)
Anthony Lambert
4– 8 The Age of Bede (mj 860) Imogen Corrigan
4–10 THE BACH JOURNEY (mj 850)
4–11 Gastronomic Basque Country (mj 849)
Gijs van Hensbergen
6–11 Dutch Modern (mj 853)
Professor Harry Charrington
7–11 Ravenna & Urbino (mj 858)
Dr Luca Leoncini
8–15 Courts of Northern Italy (mj 859)
Professor Fabrizio Nevola
9–13 Chateaux of the Loire (mj 855)
Dr Sarah Pearson
9–18 Classical Greece (mj 856)
Dr Dan Jolowicz
11–18 Walking in Slovenia (mj 861)
Professor Cathie Carmichael
26–30 Sir Christopher Wren (mj 910)
Simon Bradley
26–30 Arts & Crafts in the Cotswolds (mj 865)
Janet Sinclair
26– 3 Medieval Champagne (mj 906)
John McNeill
27– 5 The Cathedrals of England (mj 907)
Jon Cannon
27– 5 Two Spains: The Spanish Civil War & its aftermath (mj 908) Giles Tremlett
30– 4 Siena & San Gimignano (mj 920)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
London Organs Day
October 2023
2– 7 Gardens & Villas of Campagna Romana (mj 923) Amanda Patton
4–10 Art in the Netherlands (mj 922)
Desmond Shawe-Taylor
5–13 Berlin, Potsdam, Dresden (mj 925)
Dr Jarl Kremeier
9–15 Malta: prehistoric to present (mj 930)
Juliet Rix
12–16 Ravenna & Urbino (mj 940)
Dr Luca Leoncini
14–20 Gastronomic Piedmont (mj 943)
Cynthia Chapman
11–23
Civilisations of Sicily (mj 862)
Christopher Newall
16–26 Georgia Uncovered (mj 875) Ian Colvin
18–24 Walking a Royal River (mj 879)
Sophie Campbell
20–27 English Georgian Towns (mj 895)
Andrew Foyle
20–29 Albania: Crossroads of Antiquity (mj 898)
Carolyn Perry
22– 3 Frank Lloyd Wright (mj 900) Tom Abbott
24– 1 Fiesole to Lucca: Tuscany on Foot (mj 904)
Dr Thomas-Leo True
25–30 Pompeii & Herculaneum (mj 903)
Dr Nigel Spivey
25– 5 Essential Andalucía (mj 905)
Dr Philippa Joseph
16–22 In Search of Alexander (mj 934)
Professor Antony Spawforth
16–23 Footpaths of Umbria (mj 946)
Dr Thomas-Leo True
16–25 Castile & León (mj 935)
Gijs van Hensbergen
16–28 Civilisations of Sicily (mj 932)
John McNeill
17–22 Palladian Villas (mj 955) Dr Sarah Pearson
18–24 Renaissance Rivals (mj 961)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
20–22 THE THOMAS TALLIS TRAIL (mj 975)
21–27 The Ligurian Coast (mj 978)
Dr Luca Leoncini
2023 Subscribe to our weekly e-newsletter: www.martinrandall.com/newsletter-signup 23
21–29 Essential Jordan (mj 980) Felicity Cobbing
21–31 Oman, Landscapes & Peoples (mj 981)
Dr Peter Webb
22–28 Modern Art on the Côte d’Azur (mj 928)
Mary Lynn Riley
23–29 Malta: prehistoric to present (mj 982)
Juliet Rix
23–29 Italian Design (mj 983) Dr Philippa Joseph
24–28 Opera North
30– 4 Wexford Opera Festival (mj 995)
Dr John Allison
31– 5 Palermo Revealed (mj 996)
Dr Luca Leoncini
Hamburg: Opera & ‘Elphi’
November 2023
2– 5 Les Années Folles (mj 100) Patrick Bade
3– 5 The Consone Quartet at The Castle Taunton Dr Katie Campbell
7–11 Venetian Palaces (mj 105)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
9–20 Japanese Gardens (mj 108)
Yoko Kawaguchi
13–19 Art History of Venice (mj 110)
Dr Susan Steer
13–20 Gastronomic Sicily (mj 111) Marc Millon
15–19 Art in Madrid (mj 112) Dr Xavier Bray
20–26 The Art of Florence (mj 120)
Dr Flavio Boggi
20–27 The Printing Revolution (mj 116)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
& Stephen Parkin
21–29 Celebrating Picasso (mj 125)
Gijs van Hensbergen
30–13 Essential South India (mj 132)
Asoka Pugal
Music in Paris
London Advent Choral Day
Christmas & New Year
December 2023
Available to book now. Please contact us for full details or visit martinrandall.com
20–27 Florence at Christmas (mj 141)
Dr Michael Douglas-Scott
20–27 Turin at Christmas (mj 145)
Dr Luca Leoncini
21–27 Prague at Christmas (mj 150)
Martina Hinks Edwards
21–28 Verona at Christmas (mj 142)
Dr Susan Steer
21–28 Munich at Christmas (mj 154)
Tom Abbott
21–27 Paris at Christmas (mj 148)
Patrick Bade
28– 3 Music in Berlin at New Year (mj 155)
Tom Abbott
2023
Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 24
Illustration: Munich, Frauenkirche, watercolour by E. Harrison Compton, publ. 1912. Page 21: Ionic column, engraving 1851 by Henry Winkles. Page 26: aquatint and engraving from ‘A Picturesque Tour Through Holland’, Brabant and France, 1789
Calendar 2024
Please contact us to register your interest in any of our tours and events in 2024. Those listed here with a code in brackets are available to book. Visit martinrandall.com/2024 for a regularly updated list.
January 2024
25– 4 Oman, Landscapes & Peoples (mk 165)
Dr Peter Webb
Mozart in Salzburg
Valletta Baroque Festival
String Quartet Biennale Amsterdam
February 2024
25– 8 Vietnam: History, People, Food (mk 181)
Dr Dana Healy
27– 4 Essential Rome
27– 7 Israel & Palestine Matthew J. Adams
Music, Opera, or Ballet in Paris
Opera in Nice & Monte Carlo
Hamburg: Opera & ‘Elphi’
Connoisseur’s Rome
Opera North
UK History Symposium
March 2024
4– 9 Gardens of Madeira
8–10 Welsh National Opera (mk 192)
Simon Rees
9–22 Cambodia by River (mk 194)
Freddie Matthews
14–18 Ravenna & Urbino
19–27 Normans in the South (mk 204)
John McNeill
25– 3 Minoan Crete
Music in Berlin
Caspar David Friedrich 250
Art in the Age of Angst
The Story of Venice
Venetian Palaces
The Art of Florence
Ancient Rome
Granada & Córdoba
New Orleans to Nachitoches
April 2024
2–14 Civilisations of Sicily Dr Philippa Joseph
4–13 Extremadura Chris Moss
8–19 Art in Japan
9–14 Palladian Villas
15–20 Pompeii & Herculaneum Mark Grahame
17–26 Albania: Crossroads of Antiquity
Carolyn Perry
18–24 Gardens & Villas of the Italian Lakes
19–21 William Howard & the Carducci Quartet at The Castle Taunton
22–28 Malta: prehistoric to present (mk 252)
Juliet Rix
23– 1 Cornish Houses & Gardens (mk 250
Anthony Lambert
24– 2 The Cathedrals of England Jon Cannon
Normandy Gardens of the Riviera
Gastronomic Provence
Tom Abbott’s Berlin Tom Abbott
Romans & Carolingians
The Ring in Leipzig, or Dresden
Genoa & Turin
Friuli Venezia-Giulia
Gastronomic Lombardy
The Venetian Hills
The Heart of Italy
Lucca
Essential Jordan
Morocco: Cities & Empires
Western Andalucía
Samarkand & Silk Road Cities
May 2024
8–15 Gastronomic Veneto
10–17 Madrid & Toledo Gijs van Hensbergen
10–17 Art in Scotland
12–17 A Festival of Impressionism
Subscribe to our weekly e-newsletter: www.martinrandall.com/newsletter-signup 25
13–19 Gastronomic Catalonia
Gijs van Hensbergen
13–25 Traditions of Japan
13–26 The Western Balkans
Professor Cathie Carmichael
15–19 Stockholm Modern
Professor Harry Charrington
19–26 The Medieval Heart of Portugal
20–26 Great Swedish Houses
24– 5 The Road to Santiago
28– 4 Great Houses of the South West
31– 7 Krakow & Silesia Dr Agata Gomółka
SALZBURG STRING QUARTET FESTIVAL
June 2024
3–10 Footpaths of Umbria
3–11 Cyprus: stepping stone of history
8–15 Medieval Burgundy
24–28 Medieval West Midlands
24–30 Art & Music in Vienna
24– 2 Gardens in the Highlands Colin Crosbie
27– 5 Finland: Aalto & Others
Professor Harry Charrington
Flemish Painting
Versailles: Seat of the Sun King
Bauhaus
Leipzig Bach Festival
West Cork Chamber Music Festival
Gastronomic Le Marche
Riga Opera Festival
Gastronomy on the Emerald Coast
Glyndebourne & Garsington
The Ring at Longborough
Houses of the South Downs
Art in the North East
At home at Weston Park
Tudor England
July 2024
1– 5 The Welsh Marches
Habsburg Austria
Smetana 200
Opera & Ballet in Copenhagen
Art in Paris
The Dresden Music Festival
Classical Greece
Iceland’s Story
Great Irish Houses
Courts of Northern Italy
Tuscan Gardens
Gardens of the Bay of Naples
Van Gogh’s Journey
Bergen Music Festival
Classical Turkey
Arts & Crafts in the Lake District
New English Gardens & RHS Chelsea
Great Gardens of the South
Literary England
Samarkand & Silk Road Cities
1– 6 Walking to Derbyshire Houses
Anthony Lambert
8–14 Western Ireland Archaeology
28– 4 MOZART ALONG THE DANUBE
Walking the Danube
Danish Art & Design
Hindsgavl: Chamber Music in Denmark
Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania
Opera in Munich & Bregenz
Bayreuth Barockfest
Bayreuth Festspiele
King Ludwig II Tom Abbott
Savonlinna Opera
French Gothic
The Beaune Music Festival
Verona Opera
Lofoten Chamber Music Festival
Buxton Opera Festival
2024 Contact us: +44 (0)20 8742 3355 | info@martinrandall.co.uk | www.martinrandall.com 26
Yorkshire Houses
Palladianism in Southern England
Shakespeare & his World
Orkney: 5,000 years of culture
August 2024
1– 8 The Hanseatic League Andreas Puth
The Schubertiade
Summer Music in Austria
Great Houses of the Czech Lands
Moving on: Architecture & Memory
Tom Abbott
Verona Opera
Drottningholm & Confidencen
The Victorian Achievement
Early Railways: the North
Country Houses in the Scottish Borders
Royal Residences
Maritime England
Opera in Santa Fe
September 2024
3– 9 Cave Art in Spain Dr Paul Bahn
6–14 Sacred Armenia Ian Colvin
9–15 The Etruscans Dr Nigel Spivey
9–16 Franconia
11–20 Albania: Crossroads of Antiquity
Carolyn Perry
13–23 West Coast Architecture (mk 420)
Professor Neil Jackson
15–22 Dark Age Brilliance
15–25 Georgia Uncovered Ian Colvin
19–25 Gardens & Villas of the Italian Lakes
23–2 Pompeii & Herculaneum Dr Nigel Spivey
23– 3 Essential Andalucía
25– 3 The Cathedrals of England Jon Cannon
30– 7 Footpaths of Umbria
Connoisseur’s Prague
The Sibelius Festival
Champagne: vines, cellars, cuvées
Neanderthals in France
Beethoven in Bonn
Classical Greece
Civilisations of Sicily
Historic Musical Instruments
Gastronomic Emilia Romagna
Sardinia
Courts of Northern Italy
Piero della Francesca
Great Palaces of Italy
Antwerp & Oostende
Gardens of the Dutch Wave
The Douro
Gastronomic Basque Country
THE DIVINE OFFICE: CHORAL MUSIC IN OXFORD
England’s Georgian Towns
In Churchill’s Footsteps
Houses of Middle England
Gastronomic South West England
Walking a Royal River
Samarkand & Silk Road Cities
October 2024
4–12 Basilicata & Calabria
7–13 Malta: prehistoric to present (mk 485)
Juliet Rix
8–13 Palladian Villas
10–18 Berlin, Potsdam, Dresden
Dr Jarl Kremeier
12–20 Le Corbusier
14–26 Civilisations of Sicily
18–24 Roman & Medieval Provence
Dr Alexandra Gajewski
Bulgaria
Modern Art on the Côte d’Azur
Wexford Festival Opera
Courts Centres of the Po
Italian Design
Parma & Bologna
Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese
Ravenna & Urbino
Walking in Southern Tuscany
Caravaggio
Connoisseur’s Pompeii
Gastronomic Puglia
OPERA IN SOUTHERN SICILY
Essential Jordan
Palestine, Past & Present
2024 Subscribe to our weekly e-newsletter: www.martinrandall.com/newsletter-signup 27
Two Spains: The Spanish Civil War & its Aftermath
Castile & Leon
Ancient & Islamic Tunisia
Eastern Turkey
Istanbul Revealed
Liverpool Rising
November 2024
7–18 Japanese Gardens
8–19 The Making of Argentina Chris Moss
16–29 Essential India Giles Tillotson
Janáček Festival Brno
Art in Paris
Athens Arising
Venice Revisited
Venetian Palaces
Florentine Palaces
Walking in Sicily
Palermo Revealed
Art in Madrid
Art in Texas
December 2024
We usually offer around seven tours over Christmas and New Year. Please contact us to register your interest – call us, or send an e-mail to alerts@martinrandall.co.uk
Online talks
Modern China: history, economics and society since 1949
Five talks by Professor Kerry Brown
Tuesdays, 7 March–4 April • subscribe for £65
The Age of Power: Science and globalisation in the 18th century
Five talks by Patricia Fara
Thursdays, 23 March–20 April • subscribe for £65
Railway Romance: literature and culture of a British love affair
Five talks by Andrew Martin
Tuesdays, 11 April–9 May • subscribe for £65
Ivory, Apes & Peacocks: luxury, trade and exchange in the ancient world
Six talks by Professor Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones
Mondays and Wednesdays, 24 April–10 May subscribe for £75
Iconic Italian Design: five perfect partnerships
Five talks by Dr Philippa Joseph
Thursdays, 1–29 June • subscribe for £65
Recordings are available for subscribers to view for up to eight weeks after the end of a series.
Still available to watch:
The Rise and Fall of the Italian Renaissance with Dr Michael Douglas-Scott (£75; available until 25 April) • Handel in London with Richard Wigmore (£55; available until 11 May)
To find out more and subscribe, please visit: martinrandall.com/online-talks
Martin Randall Travel Ltd
10 Barley Mow Passage, London W4 4PH
Tel +44 (0)20 8742 3355
info@martinrandall.co.uk
From North America: Tel 1 800 988 6168 (toll-free)
usa@martinrandall.com
ATOL 3622 | ABTOT 5468 | AITO 5085
www.martinrandall.com
2024