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2,438 results for Avar

Image for Reflecting on Alarm Will Sound's Residency
editorial

Reflecting on Alarm Will Sound's Residency

June 27, 2014

By Alan Pierson

Alarm Will Sound Artistic Director Alan Pierson looks back on the group's yearlong exploration of the Museum.
Image for Meet Me at The Met: Amor Towles
video

Meet Me at The Met: Amor Towles

October 7, 2024
For writer Amor Towles, The Met is not just one museum, but many.
Image for The Artist Project: Ghada Amer
video

The Artist Project: Ghada Amer

September 16, 2015
Ghada Amer reflects on an Iranian tile panel, _Garden Gathering_, in this episode of The Artist Project.
Image for Introducing Alarm Will Sound
editorial

Introducing Alarm Will Sound

October 8, 2013

By Meryl Cates

This year's Artist in Residence program brings Alarm Will Sound, one of the most creative ensembles working today, to the Met.
Image for Nadar
Publication

Nadar

Nadar, whose real name was Félix Tournachon (1820–1910), was a conspicuous, even astonishing presence in nineteenth-century France. Engaging and quick-witted, he invented himself over and over, as a bohemian writer, a journalist, a romantic Utopian, a caricaturist, a portrait photographer, a balloonist, an entrepreneur, a prophet of aeronautics. The name "Nadar" was on everyone's lips. Today, it is Nadar's photography that is remembered. In just a few years he taught himself the young art and became one of its greatest practitioners, making portraits that are intimate and extraordinarily beautiful. His sitters, who were often his friends, included the great men and women of his time: Dumas, Rossini, Baudelaire, Sarah Bernhardt, Daumier, Berlioz, George Sand, Delacroix. Nadar had a remarkable capacity to elicit his sitter's most natural qualities and to create, even more than a likeness, a true portrait of character. Nadar's legendary name has been attached not only to his original photographs but to reprints, copies, and a great deal of studio work. For that reason, this volume exactingly reproduces some one hundred photographs from the years 1854–60, the period of his earliest and finest photography, allowing viewers to become familiar with the subtle light and balanced, velvety tones that distinguish Nadar's original work. Accompanying the photographs are essays that shed new light on the many facets of Nadar. The biographical sketch by Maria Morris Hambourg concentrates on his bohemian youth, his literary and journalistic experiences, and his emergence as a photographer. Françoise Heilbrun carefully traces the roots and development of Nadar's photographic art, while his relation to the art and artists of his time is investigated by Philippe Néagu. André Jammes tells us what became of Nadar's own prints; Ulrich Keller explains how to distinguish them from later prints and copies. Nadar's restless modernity took him beyond portraiture into scientific realms, including medical photography and making pictures underground, activities explored by Sylvie Aubenas. And the myth that the aged Nadar wove in his memoirs—of adventurer, flier, man of the future—is analyzed by André Rouille. The intriguing, often eminent individuals who confront us from their portraits are further revealed through brief biographies in the book's catalogue section, where Nadar's interpretations of his subjects are also discussed. A chronology of Nadar's life and numerous additional illustrations further enrich this exploration of a remarkable man and his work.
Image for Nadar (1820–1910)
Essay

Nadar (1820–1910)

October 1, 2004

By Malcolm Daniel

Ringmaster, publicist, and performer in a highly theatrical life, the legendary Nadar wore many hats—those of journalist, bohemian, left-wing agitator, playwright, caricaturist, and aeronaut.
Image for The Artist Project: Kamrooz Aram
video

The Artist Project: Kamrooz Aram

February 29, 2016
Artist Kamrooz Aram reflects on the ancient arts of Iran in this episode of The Artist Project.
Image for Saving an Altarpiece (Part I): Coming Apart at the Seams
editorial

Saving an Altarpiece (Part I): Coming Apart at the Seams

October 3, 2016

By Alan M. Miller

Associate Conservator M. Alan Miller describes the initial steps in the conservation of Peter Candid's monumental altarpiece of the Annunciation.
Image for The Artist Project: Adam Fuss
video

The Artist Project: Adam Fuss

December 7, 2015
Photographer Adam Fuss reflects on a marble grave stele of a little girl in this episode of The Artist Project.
Image for The Year One
Essay

The Year One

October 1, 2004

By Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art

A look at the art created across the world in the years around Year One of the Western calendar reveals an incredible richness and variety of cultures.
Image for Gold Buckle

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1678

Image for Gold Drinking Bowl with Handle

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1709

Image for The Avar Treasure

Date: 600s (bucket)–700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1673–1701, 1704–1705, 1707–.1712a

Image for Ewer of Zenobius

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1704

Image for Gold Strip

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1644

Image for Gold Strip

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1645

Image for Gold Strip

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1646

Image for Gold Belt Mount with Rivet

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1694a, b

Image for Gold Belt Mount with Loop

Date: 700s
Accession Number: 17.190.1689