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23,724 results for The Met Unframed

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editorial

Framed!

August 7, 2012

By Kristen and Ethan

Kristen and Ethan, members of the Teen Advisory Group, share their photograph of Antonio Canova's sculpture Perseus with the Head of Medusa and their insights about how the Museum serves as a frame for its artworks.
Image for Wild: Fashion Untamed
Wild: Fashion Untamed examines the practical, spiritual, psychosexual, and socioeconomic underpinnings of fashion's fascination with animals and birds. Skins, furs, feathers, and animals prints have played a major role in the history of fashion. In this volume's five chapters, deer, tigers, zebras, leopards, spiders, serpents, crocodiles, and the plumage of a variety of birds are referenced in examples that vividly convey how artists and designers have found inspiration from sources in prehistory, ancient mythology, and native cultures and have quoted the physical and sexual characteristics of the animal kingdom to evoke ideals of femininity. Examples from the history of art portraying the fashions and symbolisms of their time are discussed in concert with creations by contemporary designers. A prehistoric cave painting, for example, finds a striking corollary in an image showing a 1999–2000 Jean Paul Gaultier ensemble. A Minoan Snake Goddess proves a suitable companion to John Galliano's reptilian-patterned leather gown from his 2002–2003 Dior collection. A vintage photograph of Sitting Bull wearing the Native American feathered war bonnet appears alongside a similar-looking headdress of 1987 by Bob Mackie. The uses of fur to announce not only the wearer's wealth and power but also that of a nation are revealed in an early eighteenth-century portrait of Louis XIV in an ermine robe. Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and supermodel Kate Moss wear sumptuous furs in a striking present-day manifestation of such economic exhibitionism. The animal rights activists and animal welfare organizations that have emerged since the 1970s are discussed, accompanied by a potent example of a Lynx advertising campaign depicting a woman in a fur hat with a skinned dog around her neck. Thierry Mugler's black leather and insect-like silhouettes convey a deadly fetishized femininity, while Dolce & Gabbana's leopard prints display a softer femininity reminiscent of the 1950s Hollywood siren, as exemplified by a publicity still for MGM Studios of Ava Gardner in a leopard patterned bathing costume. A striking image of a group of women wearing black-and-white zebra patterns in a room filled with tellingly matching accoutrements represents the signature animal prints of Roberto Cavalli, who has widely celebrated the power and beauty of the wild kingdom. WILD: Fashion Untamed continues the ongoing objective of the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute to document and interpret the diverse aspects of historical and contemporary fashion. This generously illustrated volume effectively highlights humanity's ongoing obsession with animals in clothing from prehistoric times to the present. Faunal apparel has always represented and will continue to represent one of our more primal instincts, even as it also addresses issues of changing social attitudes about the relationships of human to animal and human to human. In the Introduction to this fascinating publication, Andrew Bolton, Associate Curator, The Costume Institute, writes: "Straddling the ideologies of nature and artifice, designers have sought to shape ideals of femininity that evoke and invoke the physical and symbolic characteristics of animals, ideals that have resonance in both the past and the present."
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video

Framed by the Body

January 22, 2015
"The most important thing here is the relationship between the two bodies."—Griffith Mann, curator
Image for Play Bubble Guppies: Dive into The Met
editorial

Play Bubble Guppies: Dive into The Met

April 4, 2022

By The Digital Editors

Learn more about the new game from Noggin and The Met
Image for The Met Around the World
The Met Around the World presents the Met's work via the global scope of its collections and as it extends across the nation and the world through a variety of domestic and international initiatives and programs, including exhibitions, excavations, fellowships, professional exchanges, conservation projects, and traveling works of art. The Met Around the World is designed and maintained by the Office of the Director. Traveling Exhibitions The Met organizes large and small exhibitions that travel beyond the Museum's walls, extending our scholarship to institutions across the world. See our international exhibition program from 2009 to the present. Traveling Works of Art The Met lends works of art to exhibitions and institutions worldwide to expose its collection to the broadest possible audience. See our current international loans program. Conservation Projects The preservation of works of art is a fundamental part of the Met's mission. Our work in this area includes treating works of art from other national and international collections. See our international conservation program from 2009 to the present. Excavations The Met has conducted excavations for over 100 years in direct partnership with source countries at some of the most important archaeological sites in the world. Today we continue this tradition in order to gain greater understanding of our ancient collections. See our international excavation program from the Met's founding to the present. Fellows The Met hosts international students, scholars, and museum professionals so that they can learn from our staff and pursue independent research in the context of the Met's exceptional resources and facilities. See the activities of our current national and international fellows. Exchanges & Collaborations The Met's international work takes many forms, from participation in exchange programs at partnering institutions and worldwide symposia to advising on a range of museum issues. These activities contribute to our commitment to advancing the work of the larger, global community of art museums. See our international exchange program and other collaborations from 2009 to the present.
Image for Angélique Kidjo at The Met | MetLiveArts
Angélique Kidjo, one of the most singular and extraordinary voices in international music, performs live at The Met.
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editorial

Introducing Podcasts from The Met

February 23, 2022

By Sofie Andersen and Nina Diamond

Looking to calm your mind and find inspiration? Listen to uplifting podcasts produced by The Met.
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video

Met Stories: Connection

April 3, 2020

By Jenita Pettway and Ariun Sanjaajamts

Watch episode four of Met Stories with Jenita Pettway and Ariun Sanjaajamts.
Image for The Crucifixion with the Virgin and Saint John

Hendrick ter Brugghen (Dutch, The Hague? 1588–1629 Utrecht)

Date: ca. 1624–25
Accession Number: 56.228

Image for View of Haarlem and the Haarlemmer Meer

Jan van Goyen (Dutch, Leiden 1596–1656 The Hague)

Date: 1646
Accession Number: 71.62

Image for Armor Garniture of George Clifford (1558–1605), 
Third Earl of Cumberland

Made under the direction of Jacob Halder (British, master armorer at the royal workshops at Greenwich, documented in England 1558–1608)

Date: 1586
Accession Number: 32.130.6a–y

Image for Marble sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysos and the Seasons

Date: ca. 260–270 CE
Accession Number: 55.11.5

Image for Portrait of a Man with Gloves

Corneille de Lyon (Netherlandish, The Hague, active by 1533–died 1575 Lyons)

Date: ca. 1535
Accession Number: 30.95.279

Image for Wheat Field with Cypresses

Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, Zundert 1853–1890 Auvers-sur-Oise)

Date: 1889
Accession Number: 1993.132

Image for Madonna and Child Enthroned with Two Angels

Fra Filippo Lippi (Italian, Florence ca. 1406–1469 Spoleto)

Date: ca. 1440
Accession Number: 49.7.9

Image for Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790)

Joseph Siffred Duplessis (French, Carpentras 1725–1802 Versailles)

Date: 1778
Accession Number: 32.100.132