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Robert Neil MacGregor (born 16 June 1946) is a British art historian and former museum director. He was editor of the Burlington Magazine from 1981 to 1987, then Director of the National Gallery, London, from 1987 to 2002, Director of the British Museum from 2003 to 2015, [1] and founding director of the Humboldt Forum in Berlin until 2018.
Another special programme was broadcast on 25 December 2020. Neil MacGregor and a roundtable of guests, comprising Mary Beard, Chibundu Onuzo, Scarlett Curtis, David Attenborough, and Hisham Matar, discussed adding a 101st object to represent how the world has changed in the past decade since the end of the original series. [25]
Blackbourn wrote that MacGregor's choice of objects "serve to illustrate the historic fragmentation of the German lands". Blackbourn concluded that MacGregor "has written a remarkable set of reflections on the objects and places of German memory". [2] Writing for The Independent Rebecca K Morrison praised Germany: Memories of a Nation. Morrison ...
The "Lion-Man" artefact. Living with the Gods is a 30-part BBC Radio 4 series presented by Neil MacGregor, a former director of the British Museum. [1] It explores human societies and what MacGregor describes as "the connections between structures of belief, and the structures of society". [2]
Neil McGregor (born 17 July 1985, in Irvine), is a Scottish football defender who has previously played in the Scottish Premier League for Dundee. He currently plays for Kilwinning Rangers . Career
Neil McGregor (film director), Australian film director; Scott McGregor (actor) (born 1981), Australian model, Neighbours actor and TV presenter; Scott McGregor (television presenter) (born 1957), Australian actor, television presenter and railway enthusiast; Scott MacGregor (art director) (1914–1971), British art director
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The judges – the panel comprising Neil MacGregor (chair), Shahidha Bari, Helen Castor, M. John Harrison and Alain Mabanckou – said that the novel "fizzes with energy, imagery and ideas against a broad, surreal vision of the Sri Lankan civil wars. Slyly, angrily comic."