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2,949 results for hooked rug 1890

Image for Post-Revolutionary America: 1800–1840
Essay

Post-Revolutionary America: 1800–1840

April 1, 2007

By David Jaffee

… although Americans had begun to identify themselves as a nation, they were divided by sectional interests that deepened with rapid industrialization and the question of slavery.
Image for Auguste Rodin (1840–1917)
Essay

Auguste Rodin (1840–1917)

October 1, 2004

By Clare Vincent

The increasingly erotic character of Rodin’s sculpture in the 1880s can be explained by his preoccupation with two highly charged literary sources. These were Dante’s Inferno and Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil.
Image for Augustin Pajou: Royal Sculptor, 1730–1809
This groundbreaking publication is the first major study of the French Neoclassical sculptor Augustin Pajou (1730–1809) in almost a century, and it is the only work about him in English. Less known outside his native land than his contemporaries Pigalle, Clodion, and Houdon, he is fully as worthy of attention. Here the artist's work is discussed and illustrated in depth, and the artistic, courtly, and aristocratic circles in which he worked are considered in detail. This fresh examination concentrates on the beginnings of Neoclassicism and explores the philosophical and scientific underpinnings of the Enlightenment, in which Pajou played an important part. A number of major themes are sounded. Pajou's devotion to Greco-Roman art, fostered by his youthful studies in Rome at the Académie Française, was evident throughout his long career. Antique images and themes sustained him, but his transforming genius was always evident. Very much a man of his time, Pajou participated in the official art world of royal and aristocratic patrons; he flourished in the arena of privilege and power, greatly respected by his peers. Pajou was praised for his designs for the elaborate funerary monuments that were so popular in the eighteenth century. Among his masterpieces in this genre are those that memorialized Anastasia Ivanovna, princess of Hesse-Homburg, and Marie Leszczynska of Poland, which are authoritatively discussed here. Pajou is perhaps most renowned for his portraits, both busts and full-length commemorative statues. All display immense spirit and extraordinary verisimilitude. The reader can hardly fail to be moved by his over-lifesize depiction of Buffon, one of the most fascinating of the philosophes. In the thoughtful essay on this statue, which brings it out of its long obscurity, Buffon lives as a thinker and as a personality. The celebration of Great Men, a quintessential part of eighteenth-century French patronage, is here examined with lively insight. This publication, which accompanies a major exhibition at the Musée du Louvre, Paris, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, presents to both the scholar and the general reader a great artist who has at last received his due. The volume is lavishly illustrated and contains a detailed chronology, a short history of the artist's critical reputation, an exhaustive bibliography, and a complete index.
Image for Mapungubwe (ca. 1050–1270)
Essay

Mapungubwe (ca. 1050–1270)

October 1, 2001, revised December 1, 2017

By Alice Apley

Mapungubwe is the earliest known site in southern Africa where the leaders were spatially separated from their followers, reflecting the evolution of a class-based society.
Image for Exhibition Tour—Look Again: European Paintings 1300–1800
Join curators Stephan Wolohojian, Adam Eaker, David Pullins, and Anna-Claire Stinebring along with their special guests as they guide you through the newly reopened galleries dedicated to European Paintings from 1300 to 1800.
Image for The New Art: American Photography, 1839–1910
This exhibition presents a bold new history of American photography from the medium’s birth in 1839 to the first decade of the 20th century. Drawn from The Met’s William L. Schaeffer Collection, major works by lauded artists such as Josiah Johnson …
Image for Confronted Animal Rug

Date: 14th century
Accession Number: 1990.61

Image for Rug
Art

Rug

Ilonka Karasz (American (born Hungary) Budapest 1896–1981 New York, New York)

Date: ca. 1928
Accession Number: 1983.228.3

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: ca. 1850
Accession Number: 61.108

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: 1800–1900
Accession Number: 68.129.2

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: 1800–1900
Accession Number: 68.129.1

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: 1850–1900
Accession Number: 30.120.107

Image for Hooked Rug

Elizabeth Stowell (1765–1861)

Date: ca. 1790
Accession Number: 40.93

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: 1850–1900
Accession Number: 30.120.103

Image for Hooked Rug

Lucy Trask Barnard (1800–1896)

Date: ca. 1860
Accession Number: 61.47.2

Image for Hooked Rug

Date: 1850–1900
Accession Number: 30.120.106