Giovanni Boldini 1842-1931

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Giovanni Boldini 1842-1931 Giovanni Boldini 1842-1931 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com Giovanni Boldini 1842-1931 Biography Born in Ferrara, in Italy, Giovanni Boldini is renowned for his illustrations and portraits, which have built his international reputation. He became one of the most fashionable portrait painters in Paris at the beginning of the 20th century and managed to make a comfortable living from his painting. Born into a large family, Giovanni Boldini's father was a painter and restorer of canvases, who also engaged in the practice of copying paintings by Raphael and subjects by Francesco Guardi, an eighteenth-century Venetian painter. Boldini, who was particularly talented, was initiated to the practice of painting and frequented a group of painters from Ferrara, particularly inspired by Dosso Dossi, an Italian painter of the Ferrara school renowned for his mythological subjects, as well as other great artists from the Quattrocento - 15th century Italian period, that initiated the First Renaissance, announcing the beginning of the Renaissance in Europe. Boldini's reputation, already firmly established, allowed him to move to Florence in 1862. He chose to settle there in order to perfect his training and joined the Academy of Drawing, one of the first art academies that appeared in Europe. Under the direction of Enrico Pollastrini, an Italian academic painter renowned for his figurative style, he perfected his plastic technique. In this context, Boldini met the Macchiaioli group, which developed in Florence and then in Tuscany during the 19th century. This group is made up of artists influenced by the Impressionists, who broke with academism and are today considered the initiators of modern Italian painting. They also met Diego Martelli, the 19th century Italian art critic and patron of the arts, who established himself as the cultural reference point for the Macchiaioli movement. The latter succeeded in popularizing the principles of French Impressionism. Boldini's work, in the early stages of his career, consisted of landscape painting. He also produced wall panels, but in 1867 he met Edgar Degas, a painter, sculptor, engraver and naturalist and impressionist photographer, during the Universal Exhibition. He also met great names in painting such as Édouard Manet, Alfred Sisley, Gustave Caillebotte, but he became particularly close to Jean-Baptiste Corot. Boldini travels to Holland and discovers the painting of Frans Hals. This painter marks a turning point in the artist's style. Boldini shows a tendency to restrict the range of his palette, and to suggest colour rather than express it, he moves to darker shades and black is even more present. His brushstrokes become more relaxed, with the overall impression overriding the more subtle details. While his early paintings were cheerful and lively, his later portraits emphasize the stature and dignity of the people portrayed. After his stay in Paris, the artist chose to move to London. Following an in-depth study of English portraits and caricatures, and in particular those of Thomas Gainsborough - one of the most famous portrait and landscape painters of 18th century Great Britain - Boldini devoted himself to this painting of a new genre. He thus multiplied the portraits of British high society, which earned him great success and established his reputation: the commissions were particularly numerous. Boldini returned to the French capital: he set up a workshop near the Place Pigalle and became friends with the art dealer Adolphe Goupil, French captain of industry and one of the most important 19th century art dealers and publishers. Then his career was launched: customers flocked to the doors of his studio to be portrayed and the value of his paintings and pastels exploded. His genre paintings, 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com Giovanni Boldini 1842-1931 depicting figures in 18th century costumes, were a great success, but his female portraits were particularly popular. These elegant figurations, translated by the artist with fluidity and a lively touch, are a real eye-catcher. Accompanied by Degas in 1889, the artist travelled throughout Spain and Morocco and also stayed in Italy in 1892. Giovanni Boldini took part in the Universal Exhibitions of Paris in 1889 and Brussels in 1897, as well as in the first edition of the Venice Biennale. He then exhibited in New York, and portrayed many famous figures such as Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, founder of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Marthe de Florien, a great French actress and courtesan of the Belle Époque, known for her affair with Georges Clémenceau. She also had an affair with the artist. He also portrayed Cornelius Vanderbilt, a great American businessman. Until 1923-1924, Boldini produced nudes, still lifes and landscapes of Venice, Rome and the French province. His eyesight weakened and he died in 1931. Museums Musée d'Orsay, Paris Galerie nationale d'art moderne et contemporain, Rome Musée d'Art de São Paulo Musée de la Villa Grimaldi Fassio Raccolte Frugone, Gênes Musée Giovanni Boldini, Ferrare Bibliography David Downton, "Les Maîtres de l'illustration de mode [" Master of Fashion Illustration "]", Paris, Eyrolles,? septembre 2011, p. 24-31 Andrea Buzzoni " Museo Giovanni Boldini " in Ferrara Arte, 1997, Ferrare Borgogelli Alessandra, Boldini, édité par Giunti Editore, 2001 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com.
Recommended publications
  • Giovanni Boldini [PDF]
    Giovanni Boldini Oil Paintings Giovanni Boldini [Italian genre and portrait painter, 1842-1931] A Lady with a Cat canvas painting 39056-A Lady with a Cat.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39056 | Order the painting A Portrait of John Singer Sargent, L'uomo Dallo Sparato canvas painting 39057-A Portrait of John Singer Sargent, L'uomo Dallo Sparato.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39057 | Order the painting Consuelo Duchess of Marlborough with Her Son Ivor Spencer Churchill canvas painting 39058-Consuelo Duchess of Marlborough with Her Son Ivor Spencer Churchill.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39058 | Order the painting Count Robert de Montesquiou canvas painting 39059-Count Robert de Montesquiou.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39059 | Order the painting Countess de Rasty Seated in an Armchair canvas painting 39060-Countess_de_Rasty_Seated_in_an_Armchair.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39060 | Order the painting 1/3 Girl In A Black Hat canvas painting 39061-Girl In A Black Hat.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39061 | Order the painting Henri Rochefort canvas painting 39062-Henri Rochefort.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39062 | Order the painting In the Studio canvas painting 39063-In the Studio.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39063 | Order the painting La Femme Au Chapeau Noir canvas painting 39064-La Femme Au Chapeau Noir.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39064 | Order the painting La Pianista canvas painting 39065-La Pianista.jpg Oil Painting ID: 39065 | Order the painting Total 9 pages, 1/9 | Page : [1] 2 3 4 5 Giovanni Boldini (Nationality : Italian genre and portrait painter, 1842-1931) Giovanni Boldini (December 31, 1842 - July 11, 1931) was an Italian genre and portrait painter, belonging to the Parisian school.
    [Show full text]
  • Portraits of the Belle Epoque
    Jane Van Nimmen exhibition review of Portraits of the Belle Epoque Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 11, no. 1 (Spring 2012) Citation: Jane Van Nimmen, exhibition review of “Portraits of the Belle Epoque,” Nineteenth- Century Art Worldwide 11, no. 1 (Spring 2012), http://www.19thc-artworldwide.org/spring12/ portraits-of-the-belle-epoque. Published by: Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art. Notes: This PDF is provided for reference purposes only and may not contain all the functionality or features of the original, online publication. Nimmen: Portraits of the Belle Epoque Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 11, no. 1 (Spring 2012) Portraits of the Belle Epoque Centro del Carmen, Valencia April 5 – June 26, 2011 CaixaForum, Barcelona July 19 – October 9, 2011 Curators: Tomàs Llorens and Boye Llorens Catalogue Portraits of the Belle Epoque. Essays by Valeriano Bozal, Danièle Devynck, Barbara Guidi, Boye Llorens, Tomàs Llorens, and Pilar Pedraza; biographies by Alicia Izquierdo Ramírez. Madrid: El Viso; Valencia: Generalitat Valenciana, Consorci de Museus de la Comunitat Valenciana; Barcelona: Fundación “la Caixa,” 2011. 272 pp.; 123 color illustrations, 4 b/w; bibliography. ISBN: 978-84-95241-81-8 (English) Retratos de la Belle Epoque ISBN: 978-84-95241-79-5 (Spanish) Retrats de la Belle Epoque ISBN: 978-84-95241-80-1 (Catalan) €55,89 The stunning exhibition Portraits of the Belle Epoque in 2011 resulted from the first collaboration between the Consortium of Museums of the Valencian Community and “la Caixa” Foundation in Barcelona. Tomàs Llorens, co-curator of the show with his son, Boye Llorens, deliberately included the commonplace phrase “Belle Epoque” in the title (fig.
    [Show full text]
  • The Impact of Medardo Rosso's Internationalism on His Legacy
    Sharon Hecker Born on a train: the impact of Medardo Rosso’s internationalism on his legacy In 1977 and 2014, the Italian Ministry of Culture (Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paesaggio) declared numerous sculptures by Medardo Rosso (1858–1928) to be of national cultural interest and therefore not exportable.1 This decree is based on the premise of Rosso’s ties to Italy, his country of birth and death, as well as on the Ministry’s belief in his relevance for Italian art, culture and history. However, Rosso’s national identity has never been secure. Today’s claims for his ‘belonging’ to Italy are complicated by his international career choices, including his emigration to Paris and naturalization as a French citizen, his declared identity as an internationalist, and his art, which defies (national) categorization.2 Italy’s legal and political notifica (literally meaning ‘notification’ or national ‘designation’), as it is termed, of Rosso’s works represents a revisionist effort to settle and claim his loyalties. Such attempts rewrite the narrative of art history, and by framing Rosso according to exclusively Italian criteria, limit the kinds of questions asked about his work. They also shed light on Italy’s complex mediations between laying claim to an emerging modernism and to a national art. This essay assesses the long-term effects of Rosso’s transnational travel upon his national reputation and legacy. I contend that Rosso, by his own design, presented himself as an outsider who did not belong to national schools and nationally defined movements of his time. This was a major factor that contributed to his modernity.
    [Show full text]
  • Press Kit Boldini
    BOLDINI AND LATE 19 TH -CENTURY SPANISH PAINTING THE SPIRIT OF AN AGE Fundación MAPFRE Recoletos Exhibition Hall 9 September 2019 to 12 January 2020 BOLDINI AND LATE 19 TH -CENTURY SPANISH PAINTING. THE SPIRIT OF AN AGE Fundación MAPFRE is pleased to invite you to the press conference for the exhibition Boldini and late 19 th -century Spanish painting. The spirit of an age , to be held on 16 September at 10.30am in the Fundación’s Auditorium on Paseo de Recoletos, 23 (Madrid). The exhibition offers the first monographic presentation in Spain of the work of Giovanni Boldini while also establishing a dialogue between his work and that of various Spanish painters of his day, such as Mariano Fortuny, Eduardo Zamacois and Raimundo de Madrazo. Taking part in the press conference will be the exhibition’s curators Francesca Dini and Leyre Bozal Chamorro , the former an art historian and expert on Boldini and the latter the curator of collections at Fundación MAPFRE, in addition to Nadia Arroyo Arce , director of Culture at Fundación MAPFRE. Press conference : 16 September at 10.30am Exhibition dates : 19 September 2019 to 12 January 2020 Venue : Fundación MAPFRE, Sala Recoletos (Paseo de Recoletos, 23. Madrid) Curators : Francesca Dini and Leyre Bozal Chamorro Production : Fundación MAPFRE www.fundacionmapfre.org @mapfrefcultura #ExpoBoldini @mapfrefcultura #ExpoBoldini facebook.com/fundacionmapfrecultura MAPFRE CORPORATE COMMUNICATION Alejandra Fernández Martínez Tel: + 34 91 581 84 64 [email protected] Cover image: Giovanni Boldini Cléo de Mérode , 1901 Oil on canvas Private collection BOLDINI AND LATE 19 TH -CENTURY SPANISH PAINTING. THE SPIRIT OF AN AGE INTRODUCTION “The past is not a lost age, but rather an era that can be relived through literature and art” , as Marcel Proust wrote in Time regained , the last volume of In search of lost time .
    [Show full text]
  • Morgan's Holdings of Eighteenth Century Venetian Drawings Number
    Press Contacts Patrick Milliman 212.590.0310, [email protected] l Alanna Schindewolf 212.590.0311, [email protected] NEW MORGAN EXHIBITION EXPLORES ART IN 18TH-CENTURY VENICE WITH MORE THAN 100 DRAWINGS FROM THE MUSEUM’S RENOWNED HOLDINGS Tiepolo, Guardi, and Their World: Eighteenth-Century Venetian Drawings September 27, 2013–January 5, 2014 **Press Preview: Thursday, September 26, 2013, 10:00–11:30 a.m.** RSVP: (212) 590-0393, [email protected] New York, NY, September 3, 2013—The eighteenth century witnessed Venice’s second Golden Age. Although the city was no longer a major political power, it reemerged as an artistic capital, with such gifted artists as Giambattista Tiepolo, his son Domenico, Canaletto, and members of the Guardi family executing important commissions from the church, nobility, and bourgeoisie, while catering to foreign travelers and bringing their talents to other Italian cities and even north of the Alps. Drawn entirely from the Morgan’s collection of eighteenth-century Venetian drawings—one of Giambattista Tiepolo (1696–1770) Psyche Transported to Olympus the world’s finest—Tiepolo, Guardi, and Pen and brown ink, brown wash, over black chalk Gift of Lore Heinemann, in memory of her husband, Dr. Rudolf Their World chronicles the vitality and J. Heinemann, 1997.27 All works: The Morgan Library & Museum, New York originality of an incredibly vibrant period. The All works: Photography by Graham S. Haber exhibition will be on view from September 27, 2013–January 5, 2014. “In the eighteenth century, as the illustrious history of the thousand-year-old Venetian Republic was coming to a close, the city was favored with an array of talent that left a lasting mark on western art,” said William M.
    [Show full text]
  • The Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century the Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century
    The Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century The Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century The Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century Valentina Rossi and Amanda Hilliam DE LUCA EDITORI D’ARTE The Splendours of Venice View Paintings from the Eighteenth Century Lampronti Gallery 1-24 December 2014 9.30 - 6 pm Exhibition curated by Acknowledgements Amanda Hilliam Marcella di Martino, Emanuela Tarizzo, Barbara De Nipoti, the staff of Valentina Rossi Itaca Transport, the staff of Simon Jones Superfreight. Catalogue edited by Amanda Hilliam Valentina Rossi Photography Mauro Coen Matthew Hollow LAMPRONTI GALLERY 44 Duke Street, St James’s London SW1Y 6DD Via di San Giacomo 22 00187 Roma [email protected] [email protected] p. 2: Francesco Guardi, The lagoon with the Forte di S. Andrea, cat. 20, www.cesarelampronti.com detail his exhibition and catalogue commemorates the one-hundred-year anniversary of Lampronti Gallery, founded in 1914 by my Grandfather and now one of the foremost galleries specialising in Italian Old TMaster paintings in the United Kingdom. We have, over the years, developed considerable knowledge and expertise in the field of vedute, or view paintings, and it therefore seemed fitting that this centenary ex- hibition be dedicated to our best examples of this great tradition, many of which derive from important pri- vate collections and are published here for the first time. More precisely, the exhibition brings together a fine selection of views of Venice, a city whose romantic canals and quality of light were never represented with greater sensitivity or technical brilliance than during the eigh- teenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • A Parisian Antique Shop Pencil
    Giovanni BOLDINI (Ferrara 1842 - Paris 1931) A Parisian Antique Shop Pencil. Signed Boldini at the lower right. 101 x 133 mm. (4 x 5 1/4 in.) The present sheet belonged to the English collector H. S. Reitlinger (1882-1950) and later passed into the collection of the eminent scholar Julius S. Held (1905-2002). As Christopher White has noted, Held ‘was a keen collector of drawings who made a virtue of a limited pocket by selecting either unfashionable subjects by better known artists or examples by the more obscure.’ A large number of drawings from Held’s collection are today in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Provenance: Henry Scipio Reitlinger, London (Lugt 2274a), his collector’s mark stamped on the verso An unidentified collector’s mark m.j.r. / paris stamped on the verso Professor and Mrs. Julius S. Held, Old Bennington, VT (his mark, not in Lugt, stamped on the verso). Exhibitions Binghamton, State University of New York, University Art Gallery, and elsewhere, Selections from the Drawing Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Julius S. Held, 1970, no.110. Literature: Olivier Gabet, Un marchand entre deux Empires: Élie Fabius et le monde de l’art, Paris, 2011, illustrated p.26. Artist description: The son of a minor painter and restorer in Ferrara, Giovanni Boldini arrived in 1864 in Florence, where he enrolled in the Accademia di Belle Arti. He first exhibited his work in Florence in 1867, and in the same year visited the Exposition Universelle in Paris. From the earliest years of his career he displayed a remarkable talent as a portrait painter.
    [Show full text]
  • Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals February 20, 2011 - May 30, 2011
    Updated Friday, February 11, 2011 | 3:41:22 PM Last updated Friday, February 11, 2011 Updated Friday, February 11, 2011 | 3:41:22 PM National Gallery of Art, Press Office 202.842.6353 fax: 202.789.3044 National Gallery of Art, Press Office 202.842.6353 fax: 202.789.3044 Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals February 20, 2011 - May 30, 2011 Important: The images displayed on this page are for reference only and are not to be reproduced in any media. To obtain images and permissions for print or digital reproduction please provide your name, press affiliation and all other information as required(*) utilizing the order form at the end of this page. Digital images will be sent via e-mail. Please include a brief description of the kind of press coverage planned and your phone number so that we may contact you. Usage: Images are provided exclusively to the press, and only for purposes of publicity for the duration of the exhibition at the National Gallery of Art. All published images must be accompanied by the credit line provided and with copyright information, as noted. File Name: 2866-103.jpg Title Title Section Raw File Name: 2866-103.jpg Iconografica Rappresentatione della Inclita Città di Venezia (Iconongraphic Iconografica Rappresentatione della Inclita Città di Venezia (Iconongraphic Representation of the Illustrious City of Venice), 1729 Display Order Representation of the Illustrious City of Venice), 1729 etching and engraving on twenty joined sheets of laid paper etching and engraving on twenty joined sheets of laid paper 148.5 x 264.2
    [Show full text]
  • Gallery Painting in Italy, 1700-1800
    Gallery Painting in Italy, 1700-1800 The death of Gian Gastone de’ Medici, the last Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany, in 1737, signaled the end of the dynasties that had dominated the Italian political landscape since the Renaissance. Florence, Milan, and other cities fell under foreign rule. Venice remained an independent republic and became a cultural epicenter, due in part to foreign patronage and trade. Like their French contemporaries, Italian artists such as Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, Francesco Guardi, and Canaletto, favored lighter colors and a fluid, almost impressionistic handling of paint. Excavations at the ancient sites of Herculaneum and Pompeii spurred a flood of interest in classical art, and inspired new categories of painting, including vedute or topographical views, and capricci, which were largely imaginary depictions of the urban and rural landscape, often featuring ruins. Giovanni Paolo Pannini’s paintings showcased ancient and modern architectural settings in the spirit of the engraver, Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Music and theater flourished with the popularity of the piano and the theatrical arts. The commedia dell’arte, an improvisational comedy act with stock characters like Harlequin and Pulcinella, provided comic relief in the years before the Napoleonic War, and fueled the production of Italian genre painting, with its unpretentious scenes from every day life. The Docent Collections Handbook 2007 Edition Francesco Solimena Italian, 1657-1747, active in Naples The Virgin Receiving St. Louis Gonzaga, c. 1720 Oil on canvas Bequest of John Ringling, 1936, SN 165 Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini Italian, 1675-1741, active in Venice The Entombment, 1719 Oil on canvas Bequest of John Ringling, 1936, SN 176 Amid the rise of such varieties of painting as landscape and genre scenes, which previously had been considered minor categories in academic circles, history painting continued to be lauded as the loftiest genre.
    [Show full text]
  • ART HISTORY REVEALED Dr
    ART HISTORY REVEALED Dr. Laurence Shafe This course is an eclectic wander through art history. It consists of twenty two-hour talks starting in September 2018 and the topics are largely taken from exhibitions held in London during 2018. The aim is not to provide a guide to the exhibition but to use it as a starting point to discuss the topics raised and to show the major art works. An exhibition often contains 100 to 200 art works but in each two-hour talk I will focus on the 20 to 30 major works and I will often add works not shown in the exhibition to illustrate a point. References and Copyright • The talks are given to a small group of people and all the proceeds, after the cost of the hall is deducted, are given to charity. • The notes are based on information found on the public websites of Wikipedia, Tate, National Gallery, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Khan Academy and the Art Story. • If a talk uses information from specific books, websites or articles these are referenced at the beginning of each talk and in the ‘References’ section of the relevant page. The talks that are based on an exhibition use the booklets and book associated with the exhibition. • Where possible images and information are taken from Wikipedia under 1 an Attribution-Share Alike Creative Commons License. • If I have forgotten to reference your work then please let me know and I will add a reference or delete the information. 1 ART HISTORY REVEALED 1. Impressionism in London 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Edgar Degas: a Strange New Beauty, Cited on P
    Degas A Strange New Beauty Jodi Hauptman With essays by Carol Armstrong, Jonas Beyer, Kathryn Brown, Karl Buchberg and Laura Neufeld, Hollis Clayson, Jill DeVonyar, Samantha Friedman, Richard Kendall, Stephanie O’Rourke, Raisa Rexer, and Kimberly Schenck The Museum of Modern Art, New York Contents Published in conjunction with the exhibition Copyright credits for certain illustrations are 6 Foreword Edgar Degas: A Strange New Beauty, cited on p. 239. All rights reserved at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 7 Acknowledgments March 26–July 24, 2016, Library of Congress Control Number: organized by Jodi Hauptman, Senior Curator, 2015960601 Department of Drawings and Prints, with ISBN: 978-1-63345-005-9 12 Introduction Richard Kendall Jodi Hauptman Published by The Museum of Modern Art Lead sponsor of the exhibition is 11 West 53 Street 20 An Anarchist in Art: Degas and the Monotype The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation. New York, New York 10019 www.moma.org Richard Kendall Major support is provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation and by Distributed in the United States and Canada 36 Degas in the Dark Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III. by ARTBOOK | D.A.P., New York 155 Sixth Avenue, 2nd floor, New York, NY Carol Armstrong Generous funding is provided by 10013 Dian Woodner. www.artbook.com 46 Indelible Ink: Degas’s Methods and Materials This exhibition is supported by an indemnity Distributed outside the United States and Karl Buchberg and Laura Neufeld from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Canada by Thames & Hudson ltd Humanities. 181A High Holborn, London WC1V 7QX 54 Plates www.thamesandhudson.com Additional support is provided by the MoMA Annual Exhibition Fund.
    [Show full text]
  • The Age of Pleasure and Enlightenment European Art of the Eighteenth Century Increasingly Emphasized Civility, Elegance, Comfor
    The Age of Pleasure and Enlightenment European art of the eighteenth century increasingly emphasized civility, elegance, comfort, and informality. During the first half of the century, the Rococo style of art and decoration, characterized by lightness, grace, playfulness, and intimacy, spread throughout Europe. Painters turned to lighthearted subjects, including inventive pastoral landscapes, scenic vistas of popular tourist sites, and genre subjects—scenes of everyday life. Mythology became a vehicle for the expression of pleasure rather than a means of revealing hidden truths. Porcelain and silver makers designed exuberant fantasies for use or as pure decoration to complement newly remodeled interiors conducive to entertainment and pleasure. As the century progressed, artists increasingly adopted more serious subject matter, often taken from classical history, and a simpler, less decorative style. This was the Age of Enlightenment, when writers and philosophers came to believe that moral, intellectual, and social reform was possible through the acquisition of knowledge and the power of reason. The Grand Tour, a means of personal enlightenment and an essential element of an upper-class education, was symbolic of this age of reason. The installation highlights the museum’s rich collection of eighteenth-century paintings and decorative arts. It is organized around four themes: Myth and Religion, Patrons and Collectors, Everyday Life, and The Natural World. These themes are common to art from different cultures and eras, and reveal connections among the many ways artists have visually expressed their cultural, spiritual, political, material, and social values. Myth and Religion Mythological and religious stories have been the subject of visual art throughout time.
    [Show full text]