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Thursday, July 29, 2010

Upcoming Exhibitions at The Met from Cultured Peachy!

The World of Khubilai Khan: Chinese Art in the Yuan Dynasty
September 28, 2010-January 2, 2011

This exhibition will cover the period from 1215, the year of Khubilai's birth, to 1368, the year of the fall of the Yuan dynasty in China founded by Khubilai Khan, and will feature every art form, including paintings, sculpture, gold and silver, textiles, ceramics, lacquer, and other decorative arts, religious and secular. The exhibition will highlight new art forms and styles generated in China as a result of the unification of China under the Yuan dynasty and the massive influx of craftsmen from all over the vast Mongol empire - with reverberations in Italian art of the 14th century.
The exhibition is made possible by Bank of America. The exhibition is also made possible by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, The Dillon Fund, The Henry Luce Foundation, Wilson and Eliot Nolen, the Oceanic Heritage Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, Florence and Herbert Irving, and Jane Carroll. It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.
Accompanied by a catalogue.
Press preview: Monday, September 20, 10:00 a.m.-noon

The Roman Mosaic from Lod, Israel
September 28, 2010-April 3, 2011

First discovered in 1996 during construction on the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway in Lod (formerly Lydda), Israel, this large and impressive mosaic floor has only recently been uncovered and was displayed briefly in situ to the public in Israel during the summer of 2009. Believed to belong to a large house owned by a wealthy Roman in about A.D. 300, the mosaic comprises a large square panel with a central medallion depicting various exotic animals and two rectangular end panels, one of which represents a marine scene of two merchant ships amid a sea of marine creatures. The floor, which adorned a richly appointed audience room, is extremely well preserved and highly colorful. It has now been removed from the ground and will be exhibited for the first time outside Israel at the Metropolitan Museum. The Lod Mosaic is on loan from the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Shelby White and Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Center.
The exhibition is made possible by Diane Carol Brandt in memory of Ruth and Benjamin Brandt.
Additional support is provided by Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman and The David Berg Foundation.
Press preview: Monday, September 27, 10:00 a.m.-noon

Miró: The Dutch Interiors
October 5, 2010-January 17, 2011

A series of three early 20th-century avant-garde paintings by Barcelona-born Joan Miró (1893-1983) are juxtaposed with the two paintings from the Dutch Golden Age that inspired them, providing rare insight into the artist's creative process. Preparatory studies and a fourth related canvas complete the exhibition.
Press preview: Monday, October 4, 10:00 a.m.-noon

Man, Myth, and Sensual Pleasures: Jan Gossart's Renaissance
October 6, 2010-January 17, 2011

The first major exhibition in 45 years devoted to the Burgundian Netherlandish artist Jan Gossart (ca. 1478-1532), it will bring together Gossart's paintings, drawings, and prints, and place them in the context of the art and artists that influenced his transformation from Late Gothic Mannerism to the new Renaissance mode. Gossart was among the first northern artists to travel to Rome to make copies after antique sculpture and introduce historical and mythological subjects with erotic nude figures into the mainstream of northern painting. Most often credited with successfully assimilating Italian Renaissance style into northern European art of the early 16th century, he is the pivotal Old Master who changed the course of Flemish art from the Medieval craft tradition of its founder, Jan van Eyck, and charted new territory that eventually led to the great age of Rubens.
The exhibition is made possible by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation and the Gail and Parker Gilbert Fund. Additional support is provided by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Hester Diamond, David Kowitz, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, and Joyce P. and Diego R. Visceglia. The exhibition was organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in association with The National Gallery, London. It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.
Accompanied by a catalogue.
Press preview: Monday, October 4, 10:00 a.m.-noon

Katrin Sigurdardottir at the Met
October 19, 2010-March 6, 2011

Two new site-specific sculptural installations created by Katrin Sigurdardottir, an Icelandic artist (born 1967) who lives and works in New York City and Reykjavik, are the focus of this exhibition. Sigurdardottir is known for her highly detailed renditions of places, both real and fictional, that often incorporate an element of surprise. Entitled Boiseries, the installations are interpretations of 18th-century French rooms preserved at the Metropolitan, one from the Hôtel de Crillon (1777-1780) on the Place de la Concorde, Paris, and the other from the Hôtel de Cabris (ca. 1775) at Grasse in Provence. The exhibition is the seventh in the Metropolitan's series of solo exhibitions of the work of contemporary artists at mid-career.
The exhibition is made possible in part by Sarah Peter.
Press preview: Monday, October 18, 10:00 a.m.-noon

The Artistic Furniture of Charles Rohlfs
October 19, 2010-January 23, 2011

This is a small, scholarly focused exhibition of about 50 pieces of the distinctive "artistic furniture" and related objects produced by the workshop of Charles Rohlfs (1853-1936) in Buffalo, New York. His unusually inventive forms and imaginative carving combined many influences, from the abstract naturalism of Art Nouveau to the bold forms of the Arts and Crafts movement. The exhibition explores Rohlfs's work in the context of new research that reveals his success in Europe as well as in America, and traces his influence on other 20th-century furniture designers. The exhibition will draw from many public and private collections.
The exhibition is made possible by Alamo Rent A Car. Additional support is provided by the Windgate Charitable Foundation. The exhibition was organized by the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Chipstone Foundation, and American Decorative Art 1900 Foundation.
Accompanied by a catalogue.
Press preview: Monday, October 18, 10:00 a.m.-noon


John Baldessari: Pure Beauty
October 20, 2010-January 9, 2011

This is the first major U.S. exhibition in 20 years to survey the work of legendary American artist John Baldessari, widely renowned as a pioneer of conceptual art. Baldessari (b. 1931, National City, California) turned from an early career in painting toward photographic images that he combined with text, challenging historically accepted rules of how to make art. In his groundbreaking work of the late 1960s, he transferred snapshots of banal Southern Californian locales onto photo-sensitized canvases and hired a sign painter to label them with their locations or excerpts from how-to books on photography. Throughout the whole of his career, Baldessari's sharp insights into the conventions of art production, the nature of perception, and the relationship of language to mass-media imagery are tempered by a keen sense of humor. The exhibition brings together a full range of the artist's innovative work over five decades, from his early paintings and phototext works, his combined photographs, and the irregularly shaped and over-painted works of the 1990s to his most recent production. A selection of his videos and artist's books will also be included.
The exhibition is made possible in part by The Daniel and Estrellita Brodsky Foundation.
Additional support is provided by Glenstone. The exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in association with Tate Modern, London.
It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.
Accompanied by a catalogue.
Press preview: Monday, October 18, 10:00 a.m.-noon

Stieglitz, Steichen, Strand
November 10, 2010-April 10, 2011

This exhibition features three giants of photography—Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946), Edward Steichen (1879-1973), and Paul Strand (1890-1976)—whose works are some of the Metropolitan's greatest photographic treasures. The diverse and groundbreaking photography by these artists will be revealed through a presentation of more than 100 works drawn entirely from the collection. Alfred Stieglitz, a photographer of supreme accomplishment as well as a passionate advocate for photography and modern art through his gallery "291" and his sumptuous journal Camera Work, laid the foundation of the Met's collection. He donated 22 of his own works in 1928—the first photographs to enter the Museum's collection as works of art—and more than 600 by other photographers, including Steichen and Strand, in later decades. Featured in the exhibition are portraits, city views, cloud studies by Stieglitz, as well as numerous images from his composite portrait of Georgia O'Keeffe, part of a group selected for the collection by O'Keeffe herself. Stieglitz's protégé and gallery collaborator, Edward Steichen, was the most talented exemplar of the Photo-Secession, with works such as his three large variant prints of The Flatiron and his moonlit photographs of Rodin's Balzac purposely rivaling the scale, color, and individuality of painting. By contrast, the final double issue of Camera Work (1917) was devoted to the young Paul Strand, whose photographs from 1915-1917 treated three principal themes—movement in the city, abstractions, and street portraits—and pioneered a shift from the soft-focus and painterly aesthetic of Pictorialism to the straight approach and graphic power of an emerging modernism.
Accompanied by a publication.
Press preview: Monday, November 8, 10:00 a.m.-noon

Haremhab, The General Who Became King
November 16, 2010-July 4, 2011

The exhibition examines the Metropolitan's well-known statue of Haremhab as a Scribe, focusing on the historical and art-historical significance of the statue and of its subject: a royal scribe, and general of the army under Tutankhamun, who eventually became king (18th Dynasty, ca.1323-1309 B.C.).
Press preview: Monday, November 15, 10:00 a.m.-noon







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July 28, 2010






VISITOR INFORMATION


Hours




Fridays and Saturdays

9:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.


Sundays, Tuesdays-Thursdays

9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.


Met Holiday Mondays in the Main Building:
September 6, October 11, December 27, 2010;
January 17, February 21, April 25, and May 30, 2011

9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.


All other Mondays closed; Jan. 1, Thanksgiving, and Dec. 25 closed

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