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MetPublications

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  • a round mosaic of a figure with the head and wings of a bird on a human body, surrounded by a border and spheres of gold

    Creatures of Myth and Imagination: Europe and the Americas

    Perratore, Julia, Laura Filloy Nadal, and Joanne Pillsbury
    2026
    This volume considers the universe of mythical beasts formed by artists from the ancient Americas—Latin America before 1600—and western medieval Europe.
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  • Stylized painting showing a photographer operating a large wooden bellows camera, set against a backdrop of draped reddish-brown fabric and abstract gray forms.

    "Crafting a Tolita-Tumaco Seated Elder Figure"

    Ikehara-Tsukayama, Hugo C., and Amanda Chau
    2025
    The Metropolitan Museum Journal is issued annually and publishes original research on works of art in the Museum’s collection.
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  • lines of yellow, red, and blue , running across, with square-like etchings

    The Magical City: George Morrison's New York

    Norby, Patricia Marroquin, Hazel Belvo, Brenda J. Child, and Laura Wertheim Joseph
    2025
    Explores George Morrison’s role in the development of Abstract Expressionism in the United States.
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  • a colorized sphinx with red, blue, and gold coloring

    Chroma: Sculpture in Color from Antiquity to Today

    Hemingway, Séan, Sarah Lepinski, Vinzenz Brinkmann, with contributions from various authors
    2025
    Explores how many ancient and early modern works help shape ideas of skin color, race, and gender, and examines polychromy's modern reception.
  • Stylized painting showing a photographer operating a large wooden bellows camera, set against a backdrop of draped reddish-brown fabric and abstract gray forms.
    The Metropolitan Museum Journal is issued annually and publishes original research on works of art in the Museum’s collection.
    Free to download
    Download PDF
  • the head of a young woman with dark hair, in woodcut style, facing the viewer with a bold expression
    Featuring more than fifty works by artists such as José Guadalupe Posada, Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and Leopoldo Méndez, this issue of the Bulletin explores the rich artistic legacy of printmaking in Mexico from the mid-eighteenth to mid-twentieth century. Curator Mark McDonald traces the origins of The Met’s remarkable holdings of nearly two thousand Mexican prints first collected by the French-born artist Jean Charlot, who had been active in Mexico when the art form rose in prominence amid concerns of national identity following the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920). Highlighting a variety of styles and techniques, including silkscreen, letterpress, and woodcut, this vibrantly illustrated publication offers a richer understanding of Mexican prints through an analysis of how they were used as modes of political expression, education, and resistance in Mexico.
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  • a woven geometric pattern of predominantly green with some orange and beige threads

    Weaving Abstraction in Ancient and Modern Art

    Candela, Iria and Joanne Pillsbury
    2023
    Expanding the understanding of textile and fiber arts, this edition of the Bulletin features two distinct bodies of work that are intimately connected despite being separated by hundreds of years. Placing ancient Andean textiles from South America by unknown artists in conversation with works by global modern practitioners—such as Anni Albers, Sheila Hicks, Lenore Tawney, and Olga de Amaral—Weaving Abstraction in Ancient and Modern Art shows how both traditions harnessed the structure of the loom to create dynamic geometric designs. The 50 extraordinary pieces in this volume span over 2000 years and illustrate weaving’s complex and varied ways of conveying meaning, from stunning iconography to bold structural choices. In highlighting the aesthetic and cultural choices of both ancient and modern artists, this publication elevates textile arts beyond mere ornament to assert their role in the history of art past and present.
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  • a detail of a orange ceramic pot with the stylized figure of a caiman (South American alligator)

    Containing the Divine: Ancient Peruvian Pots

    Ikehara-Tsukayama, Hugo C., Dawn Kriss, and Joanne Pillsbury
    2023
    Pottery is one of the world’s most ancient and widespread technologies. Containing the Divine: Ancient Peruvian Pots explores how ceramic vessels can convey meaning far beyond their practical use. As this Bulletin attests, before the implementation of writing as we understand it today, Andean artisans used the shape and decoration of jars and bottles to communicate essential information for ritual practice and to promote the exchange of ideas. The more than 40 evocative works featured in these pages represent some 2,500 years of creativity in ancient Peru, with a focus on how these imaginative works served as conduits to worldly and divine power. Providing a rich opportunity to reflect on devotional practices of the past and today, Containing the Divine also shows how the legacy of these pots has inspired subsequent generations worldwide, from nineteenth-century British potters and French Post-Impressionist Paul Gaugin to contemporary Peruvian artist Juan Javier Salazar.
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  • a painting of a man with dark skin tone repairing a shoe, against a background of blue and yellow with other shoes and tools
    The Metropolitan Museum Journal is issued annually and publishes original research on works of art in the Museum’s collection. Highlights of volume 57 include essays on a crimson velvet “cloth of gold” associated with the Tudor dynasty; an exquisite pair of malachite torchères commissioned by the Russian Demidov family; and a drawing on muslin by Matȟó Nážiŋ detailing the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876.
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  • a stone sculpture of a fearsome and regal figure wearing an ornate headdress

    Lives of the Gods: Divinity in Maya Art

    Pillsbury, Joanne, Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, and James A. Doyle, with contributions by Iyaxel Cojti Ren, Caitlin C. Earley, Stephen D. Houston, and Daniel Salazar Lama
    2022
    An introduction to the complex stories of Mesoamerican divinity through the carvings, ceramics, and metalwork of the Maya Classic period Lives of the Gods reveals how ancient Maya artists evoked a pantheon as rich and complex as the more familiar Greco-Roman, Hindu-Buddhist, and Egyptian deities. Focusing on the period between A.D. 250 and 900, the authors show how this powerful cosmology informed some of the greatest creative achievements of Maya civilization.