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16,874 results for eye

Image for Planned Giving Glossary
Contribute to The Met's future by planning for a special gift, such as a bequest in your will or a trust that pays you income.
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Contribute to The Met's future by planning for a special gift, such as a bequest in your will or a trust that pays you income.
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Contribute to The Met's future by planning for a special gift, such as a bequest in your will or a trust that pays you income.
Image for The Artist Project: Eve Sussman
video

The Artist Project: Eve Sussman

February 29, 2016
Artist Eve Sussman reflects on William Eggleston in this episode of The Artist Project.
Image for Rye Gone Awry
editorial

Rye Gone Awry

October 2, 2014

By Tim Husband

Curator Tim Husband traces a historical connection between the role of rye in spreading a disease known as Saint Anthony's fire and a cross pendant from The Cloisters Collection.
Image for The Responsive Eye: Ralph T. Coe and the Collecting of American Indian Art
Over the past three decades, Ralph T. Coe has traveled extensively throughout the United States and Canada to assemble this collection of Native American art, one of the finest in private hands today. Immersed in the cultures of Native America, he has come to know artists and artisans, traders, dealers, and shop proprietors, selecting the very best they have to offer. This catalogue tells the stories of nearly two hundred of these objects, combining art history with personal reminiscence. As director of the Nelson Gallery of Art (now the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art), Kansas City, and as curator of two landmark exhibitions, "Sacred Circles: Two Thousand Years of North American Indian Art," in 1976, and "Lost and Found Traditions: Native American Art 1965–1985," in 1986, Coe helped to create in the art-museum world a climate conducive to exhibitions of Native American art in which work was recognized and presented as art rather than as ethnology or anthropology, as it generally has been in the past. The Ralph T. Coe Collection includes representative pieces from most Native American geographic regions and historical periods, beginning with objects dating back to the fourth millennium B.C. Many examples—men's shirts with ermine fringe, weapons, and button blankets—evoke the heroic lifestyle of the past, while small objects, such as tipi and kayak models, dolls, and tiny moccasins, speak to a more intimate significance. Ritual objects imbued with spiritual meaning—masks and katsinas, tablitas and medicine bundles—as well as utilitarian objects, such as pottery and baskets, also have a strong presence. Notably, several works by living artists are represented, the most recent made in 2001. An area that has often been ignored in private collecting is what Coe has termed Indian fancies, cross-cultural objects that illustrate the influence, beginning in the eighteenth century, of European taste on Native American art. Cumulatively, the collection provides and overview of the cultures of the American Indian. The catalogue begins with an absorbing autobiographical essay by the collector that recounts his early years in Cleveland, growing up in a highly cultured family surrounded by Impressionist and early modern paintings, and continues through his career as museum director and his life in the Southwest as an art collector. Also included are essays on the aesthetic appreciation of American Indian art. J. C. H. King of the British Museum writes a history of collecting; Judith Ostrowitz focuses on Native American art in the context of theory and text. In his foreword, Eugene V. Thaw writes about Coe as his friend and fellow collector and the role Coe has played in the awareness of the artistic heritage of Native America.
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Support

Bequests

Contribute to The Met's future by planning for a special gift, such as a bequest in your will or a trust that pays you income.
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editorial

A Grand New Year's Eve

January 1, 2015

By Kathryn Calley Galitz

Associate Museum Educator Kathryn Calley Galitz celebrates New Year's Eve at the annual Tsar's Ball.
Image for Masterworks from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation
For more than a century the Metropolitan Museum has borrowed important objects from institutions all over the world. In the present instance we have stayed close to home and mounted an entire exhibition from the holdings of a sister institution right here in New York, the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. We are delighted that the Museum and its Director, Frederick J. Dockstader, have let us show a selection of masterpieces from its collections—and the occasion is doubly pleasureful for both institutions in that we are able to make the opening of the exhibition a benefit for the American Association of Museums.
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Essay

Looking with Eyes of Faith

May 3, 2024

By Jaime Rall

Orthodox Christian writers and artists reflect on works from the Africa & Byzantium exhibition.
Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.11

Image for Wedjat Eye Amulet

Date: ca. 1070–664 B.C.
Accession Number: 26.7.1032

Image for Terracotta kylix (drinking cup)

Attributed to the Palmette Eye-cups

Date: ca. 510 BCE
Accession Number: 56.171.61

Image for Eye
Art

Eye

Waldo Glover Kaufer (American, Providence, Rhode Island 1906–1972 Providence, Rhode Island)

Date: 1935–43
Accession Number: 43.47.3

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.7

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.2

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.4

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.5

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.13

Image for Eye idol

Date: ca. 3700–3500 BCE
Accession Number: 51.59.9