Thursday, October 31, 2024

The Met: European Paintings To 1800, Part The Second

 Continuing our viewing of the Met's European Paintings to 1800...

The Met has five or six Vermeers--an entire wall--although
none are among the iconic ones, IMHO; but certainly more
Vermeers than any other museum; here, the Young Woman
with a Water Pitcher
, 1662

Study of a Young Girl Sans Pearl Earring, 1665-67

One of the more iconic Rembrandt selfies, #5,368; 1660;
nearly a room full of various Rembrandts

Including this, his Aristotle with a Bust of Homer,
1653

Van Dyke, Self-Portrait, 1620

Rubens, Rubens, Helena Fourment, and Son Frans, 1625;
holy family

One of several Caravaggios...The Musicians, 1597
Very early attributed to Caravaggio, Holy Family with
Infant Saint John the Baptist
, early 1600s

Denial of Saint Peter, 1610; the guy on the left does not seem to
have gotten the "painter of light" memo; unfinished?

Unusual El Greco; Cardinal Fernando Nino de Guevara, c. 1600

Georges de La Tour, The Fortune Teller, 1630s; see his The Cheat at the Louvre;
a cautionary series...

Claude Lorraine, Trojan Women Setting Fire to Their Fleet, 1643

Claude, Pastoral Landscape: the Roman Campagna, 1639

And another, of several: Sunrise, 1646

Poussin, The Abduction of the Sabine Women, 1634

High weirdness: Poussin, Blind Orion Searching for the Rising Sun, 1638

Jan Steen, a favorite of ours, The Lovesick Maiden, 1660

A rather unusually populated Hals, The Shrovetide Merrymakers, 1616

Another Steen, Merry Company on a Terrace, 1670 

In the "Everyday Life" room

Guido Reni, Charity, 1630; not everyday life

Rubens, Lot and His Daughters, 1613


The Met: European Paintings To 1800, Part The First

As would be expected of an "encyclopedic" museum, the Met has an extensive collection of European paintings, including just about all of the great Masters, with particular strengths (in numbers: Rembrandt, Vermeer, Velazquez)) here and there. Over our seven weeks in NYC, it took us several visits to do all these paintings--fitting them in with other Met visits too--and it will take me several posts to reflect some of what's there. And these are just the European paintings, to 1800. These paintings are not in strict chronological nor national order...sometimes they're in "themed" rooms, sometimes they're in different departments of the museum altogether. (E. g., there are two Hubert Robert paintings in the Decorative Arts rooms.) An encyclopedic museum presents classificatory challenges well beyond those of a museum that does just European paintings...for example, the National Gallery of Art (London).  

The Met's Giotto, an Adoration, c. 1320; the description says
that Giotto is generally considered the founder of Italian
painting...yet he is not mentioned at all in the museum's new
Siena: the Rise of Painting exhibit...which I'll get to in due
course

The Knock-Out (for us): van Eyk's Crucifixion and Judgement, both in original frames;
1420s; they need major restorative work, IMHO; but here one can see where Bosch got
some ideas, three generations later; and all the other major Northern masters; the Hell is
particularly lurid; I'm beginning to think of van Eyck as a fountainhead of all subsequent
painting...and not just in materials and technique...
Memling, portraits of Tommaso di Folco Portinari and Maria Baroncelli,
1470; Italians, a Medici banker and wife living in Bruges

Felippo Lippi, Portrait of a Woman and a Man at a
Casement
, 1440

Domenico Ghirlandiao, Francesco Sassetti and his Son Teodoro,
1488

Ucello, Crucifixion, 1450s

Botticelli, Three Miracles of St. Xenobius, c. 1500

A Florentine marriage chest...nevermind the picture; some of Botticelli's
biggest hits are thought to have been from marriage chests (e.g., the
great Venus and Mars at the National Gallery (London)

Attributed to the workshop of van Eyck, 1430s; certainly
not van Eyck himself

Bosch, Adoration of the Magi, 1475

Giovanni Bellini, Virgin and Child, 1480s; among
the earliest Italian oils...

Mantegna, Holy Family with Saint Magdalene, 1495;
a rare distemper on wood panel...

Durer, Virgin and Child with St. Anne, 1519

Cranach, Samson and Delilah, 1528

Cranach, Judith and Holofernes, 1530

Lotto, Venus and Cupid, 1520s; note Cupid micturating on Venus...

Veronese, Mars and Venus United by Love, 1570

Raphael, Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints, 1504

Holbein the Younger, Herman von Wedigh III, 1532

Rubens, Forest at Dawn with a Deer Hunt, 1635

The lone (elder) Brueghel, The Harvesters, 1565

Rubens and Brueghel (Jan, elder), The Feast of Achelous, 1635;
"you do the faces, I'll do the landscape...the apprentices can do
the rest..."


Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Interim Update #1,284: And Another Episode In Art History

Today marks yet another removal: from NYC to Little Rock, AR, and then to our official home base in Knoxville, TN. Our seven weeks in NYC have been innerestin', as the fella says, and I still have 30+ blog posts to do, to recount our eventful and edifying days here. But for the period of removal and transition, I'll have to pause the blog for a while. 

I did not want to leave the blog in Egypt (BFE, as one of our children liked to say), however, especially in view of an important episode that occurred yesterday, our last full day in NYC, at what is now Vicki's favorite museum, the Met. We spent the afternoon doing the Impressionist/Post-Impressionist tour, and then lingered in those rooms, re-visiting favorite painters from the Orsay, the Marmotten-Monet, the Orangerie, and others. And then it happened...

We were just entering a room full of Renoirs, when keen-eyed
Vicki spotted this silverfish (lepisma saccharinum) just 
below one of Renoir's masterpieces

As a loyal Met member, I located and notified the
nearest guard, who immediately called for back-up

I thought he might simply have swatted the bug away--I 
would have, but for the motion detecting security system--
but, no, he said the Museum would want to capture and
identify the creature, assess the extent of infestation, any
damage, etc.; seriously

The back-up, evidently a supervisor, was
on the spot almost immediately, examining the
invader...

Conferring with his colleague

And then calling for the Met's crack bug-SWAT team;
at this point we had to move on to Cezanne or maybe
Morisot, but contentedly so, having dutifully done our 
part for preservation and conservation and art history; 
we're hoping the Met will extend my membership to
2025-2026