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3,052 results for finial

Image for Caravaggio's Final Days
editorial

Caravaggio's Final Days

June 22, 2017

By Keith Christiansen

Curator Keith Christiansen outlines the intriguing series of events that comprise the final years of Caravaggio's life.
Image for Li Kung-lin's Classic of Filial Piety
The figure painter Li Kung-lin, who lived in China from about 1041 to 1106, was the leading exponent of the Northern Sung scholar-official aesthetic. One hundred seven of his works were recorded in the great government catalogue of the imperial collection of paintings a few years after his death. Sadly, today only three of his works still exist. The handscroll of the Hsiao-ching, or Classic of Filial Piety, a classic of the orthodox canon of Confucianism, is one of those three. It is among the preeminent monuments of Chinese cultural and art history. A slight volume composed of eighteen chapters, the Classic of Filial Piety takes the form of a dialogue between Confucius and his disciple Tseng-tzu on the meaning and application of filial piety in the affairs of the individual and of the state. The text dates to the period between 350 and 200 B.C., long after either Confucius or his immediate disciples lived, but its subject, the governing of relationships among men and the rules of conduct by which society is made secure, was for centuries before and for centuries to come the keystone of Chinese society. Before Li's time, the art of painting had been a public and imperial art, conveying the images, ideas, values, and propaganda of the imperial court, the powerful hereditary families, and the great temples. In the eleventh century, under the inspiration of Li Kung-lin and a few others, painting was transformed into a formal mode of expression, which, like poetry, could serve to convey the mind of the artist as well as the emblems of those who controlled his life. For Li, art was a tool, a moral vehicle that allowed him to set out his views of the institutions, ideas, and conflicts of his time. Richard M. Barnhart, Professor of the History of Art at Yale University, in his beautifully written text, guides the reader through the symbolic world of Li Kung-lin, elucidating the significance of the Classic of Filial Piety in the context of Chinese art and cultural history, providing an exegesis of each of the eighteen chapters and revealing the artist's beliefs, his thoughts and emotions. Professor Barnhart's contribution is augmented by a biography of the artist by Robert E. Harrist, Jr., Associate Professor of Art and East Asian Studies at Oberlin College; an analysis of Li Kung-lin's calligraphy by Hui-liang J. Chu, Assistant Curator of Painting and Calligraphy at the National Palace Museum, Taipei; and a detailed account of the handscroll's conservation and mounting by Sondra Castile and Tekemitsu Oba, both of the Department of Asian Art Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Image for Non Finito
editorial

Non Finito

March 6, 2013

By Karl

Teen Advisory Group Member Karl invites readers to apply Matisse's "non finito" technique to aspects of their own lives.
Image for Final Touches
editorial

Final Touches

May 28, 2013

By Keith Christiansen

The last work installed for the New European Paintings Galleries the afternoon before the opening was the famous birth salver created in 1449 for Lorenzo de' Medici (known to later generations simply as Lorenzo the Magnificent).
Image for Teens Take the Met: Final Call
editorial

Teens Take the Met: Final Call

June 2, 2015

By Sage

TAG Member Sage reminds teens ages 13 to 18 about Teens Take the Met, happening this Friday, June 5.
Image for Three Final Weeks for the Exhibitions *Picasso* and *American Woman*
Summer visitors to the Met have only three more weeks—through Sunday, August 15—to view the popular exhibitions Picasso in The Metropolitan Museum of Art and American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity.
Image for The Conservation of the Jabach Portrait: Almost There!
editorial

The Conservation of the Jabach Portrait: Almost There!

May 11, 2015

By Michael Gallagher

Michael Gallagher shares before and after photographs of the final retouching of the extraordinary Jabach portrait.
Image for Metropolitan Museum Reached 5.24 Million Annual Attendance, Highest Since 2001, at End of Fiscal Year
Attendance at The Metropolitan Museum of Art reached 5,240,000 visitors during the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2010.
Image for Finial
Art

Finial

Date: ca. 1550–1295 B.C.
Accession Number: 00.4.57

Image for Finial in the Form of a Parrot

Date: 17th–18th century
Accession Number: 19.135.3

Image for Ewer with Wildman Finial

Date: late 15th century
Accession Number: 53.20.1

Image for Figure Finial

Date: 12th–15th century
Accession Number: 1987.394.249

Image for Ewer with Wild Man Finial

Date: ca. 1500
Accession Number: 53.20.2

Image for Hazomanga finial

Sakalava artist

Date: 17th–late 18th century
Accession Number: 2001.408

Image for Finial
Art

Finial

Date: possibly 12th–13th century
Accession Number: 2000.596

Image for Finial
Art

Finial

Date: 13th–11th century BCE
Accession Number: 1985.214.38

Image for Finial
Art

Finial

Date: late 18th century
Accession Number: 91.1.2124

Image for Finial
Art

Finial

Date: 4th–7th century
Accession Number: 25.10.24.13