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Image for Celebrating the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection
editorial

Celebrating the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection

September 24, 2015

By Freyda Spira

Associate Curator Freyda Spira announces a new section of the Met's website dedicated to the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection of Printed Ephemera.
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Essay

Baseball Cards in the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection

November 1, 2018

By Allison Rudnick

Though Jefferson R. Burdick allegedly never attended a baseball game, a major part of his vast gift to The Met is one of the largest collections of baseball cards now held by any public institution.
Image for Ephemera in The Jefferson R. Burdick Collection
How do baseball cards, celebrity portraits, postcards, and sports cards reveal histories of modern America?
Image for Baseball Cards from the Collection of Jefferson R. Burdick
The Jefferson R. Burdick collection at The Met features 100+ historic baseball cards from the 19th century to the 1950s, showcasing legends and varied styles.
Image for A First Look at *On The Ropes: Vintage Boxing Cards from the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection*
Assistant Curator Allison Rudnick provides an overview of On the Ropes, the first exhibition of the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection to showcase boxing cards, which feature some of the most celebrated boxers of the last two centuries.
Image for Baseball Cards from the Collection of Jefferson R. Burdick
Past Exhibition

Baseball Cards from the Collection of Jefferson R. Burdick

February 13–July 22, 2025
The Jefferson R. Burdick collection of ephemera at The Met contains one of the most distinguished collections of historical baseball cards anywhere in the world. In 1947, Burdick (1900–1963), an electrician from Syracuse, New York, and avid collect…
Image for Baseball Cards from the Collection of Jefferson R. Burdick
Past Exhibition

Baseball Cards from the Collection of Jefferson R. Burdick

July 20, 2023–January 23, 2024
An integral part of the Museum’s collection of ephemera, the Burdick collection of baseball cards tells the history of popular printmaking in the United States. In 1947, after having approached A. Hyatt Mayor, the Museum’s curator of prints and pho…
Image for The Age of Süleyman “the Magnificent” (r. 1520–1566)
Essay

The Age of Süleyman “the Magnificent” (r. 1520–1566)

October 1, 2002

By Linda Komaroff and Suzan Yalman

Under Süleyman, popularly known as “the Magnificent” or “the Lawmaker,” the Ottoman empire reached the apogee of its military and political power.
Image for Hudson River School Visions: The Landscapes of Sanford R. Gifford
Sanford Gifford (1823–1880), a leading Hudson River School landscape painter and a founder of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, was so esteemed by the New York art world that, at his untimely death, the Museum mounted a show of his work—the first monographic exhibition accorded any artist—and published a Memorial Catalogue that, for nearly a century, remained the principal source on his oeuvre. Gifford's art, which was inspired by the work of Thomas Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School, and by that of J. M. W. Turner, and enriched by his travels in Europe (from 1855 to 1857, and from 1868 to 1869), came to be called "air painting," for he made the ambient light of each scene—color saturated and atmospherically potent—the key to its expression. His approach to painting and his unique style gave rise to a highly distinctive body of work, of enchanting and mesmerizing effect. While Gifford himself compiled a "List of Chief Pictures" late in his career, a significant part of his extant oeuvre consists of small-scale studies, preparatory works in oil, and original drawings, most of which are in annotated sketchbooks and document the progression from on-site record to idealized vision achieved in his major pictures. The four essays that open the catalogue—which accompanies the first exhibition of Gifford's work since 1970—examine the artist's place in the Hudson River School (Franklin Kelly), his numerous Catskill Mountain subjects (Kevin J. Avery), his experiences and perceptions as a traveler both at home and abroad (Heidi Applegate), and the variety of his patrons (Eleanor Jones Harvey). Following are entries by Avery and Kelly that discuss in detail the seventy paintings by the artist in the current exhibition; each is shown in color and many are supplemented by comparative illustrations of related works by Gifford, his Hudson River School mentors and colleagues, and those painters, in addition to Cole and Turner, who exerted some influence on his art—among them Frederic Edwin Church and John F. Kensett.