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15,136 results for sword

Image for *Book from the Sky*: A Story with No Words
editorial

Book from the Sky: A Story with No Words

February 7, 2014

By Natalee, Brooke, and Tiffany

Teen Advisory Group Members Natalee, Brooke, and Tiffany discuss Xu Bing's Book from the Sky, a piece in the exhibition Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China.
Image for Catalogue of European Court Swords and Hunting Swords Including the De Dino, Riggs, and Reubell Collections
This volume describes and illustrates the group of court swords and hunting swords that form part of the collection of arms exhibited by The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The text describes the different types of swords and daggers and provides useful charts and illustrations that promote an understanding of the objects in their original context.
Image for The Sword Awarded to Revolutionary War Hero Colonel Marinus Willett
editorial

The Sword Awarded to Revolutionary War Hero Colonel Marinus Willett

December 16, 2014

By Elizabeth Mankin Kornhauser

Betsy Kornhauser, Alice Pratt Brown Curator of American Paintings and Sculpture, discusses a sword in the exhibition Arms and Armor: Notable Acquisitions, 2003–2014 that appears in a portrait of Revolutionary War hero Colonel Marinus Willett.
Image for The Artist Project: Swoon
video

The Artist Project: Swoon

December 7, 2015
Artist Swoon reflects on Honoré Daumier's _The Third-Class Carriage_ in this episode of The Artist Project.
Image for A Story within a Story: The Three Bears, Santa Claus, and the Circus in *Printing a Child's World*
Jane A. Dini, former associate curator of paintings and sculpture, details some of the printed works for or about children that are featured in the exhibition Printing a Child's World.
Image for The Academy of the Sword: Illustrated Fencing Books 1500–1800
The Academy of the Sword centers on an assemblage of rare illustrated books devoted to the subject of fencing and dueling, drawn (with one exception) from the library of the Arms and Armor Department of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The title is taken from Girard Thibault's Académie de l'Éspée (Leiden, 1628), the most lavish fencing book ever produced, which was kindly lent by the Museum's Thomas J. Watson Library. Accompanying the books and giving vivid impact to their illustrations are a selection of swords, rapiers, parrying daggers, bucklers, and other accoutrements, which follow the chronology of, and changes in, fighting styles depicted in the books. These weapons were frequently treated not only as sidearms, but also as fashionable costume accessories. The decoration of hilts, scabbards, and belts often exemplifies the prevailing artistic styles of a given period, from Renaissance and Mannerism through Baroque and Rococo to Neoclassical. Hilts were designed by well-known engravers such as Hans Sebald Beham and Virgil Solis, leading goldsmiths including Wenzel Jamnitzer and Luigi Valadier, and major artists from Hans Holbein and Giulio Romano to Jacques Louis David. Today the term "fencing" calls to mind familiar images of a competitive sport, but in the past, rather than a sporting event, "fencing" referred to practical methods of self-defense. Early books on fencing, prior to about 1800, were concerned with the proper handling of weapons, which was an integral part of the education of European noblemen. Formalized training in the use of arms was also widely practiced by sons of the middle class—burghers, merchants, and craftsmen. This democratization of martial skills was due in part to the dissemination of illustrated fencing books, written by the foremost Masters of Arms—highly regarded professionals who were skilled in the use of weapons. The earliest book included here is a sixteenth-century manuscript copy of a fifteenth-century treatise, which deals principally with judicial single combat between armored opponents equipped with a variety of weapons. Most fencing books of the sixteenth century are concerned with bouts between unarmored duelists but continue to include the use of several different weapons: sword and rapier used alone or in tandem with a dagger, shield, or even a cloak in the left hand; the use of the two-handed sword, spear, halberd and quarter-staff; and methods of unarmed combat. By the early seventeenth century the rapier, a long, slender thrusting sword, began to dominate as the gentleman's weapon of choice, and most books of the period become increasingly devoted to the use of the rapier alone or with a left-hand dagger. During the course of the century, as civilian fencing techniques became more specialized and refined, the rapier developed into a light, trimmed-down weapon known by about 1700 as the smallsword. The smallsword, often richly decorated, remained an integral part of a gentleman's wardrobe until the wearing of swords in civilian settings went out of fashion at the end of the eighteenth century, at which time pistols were replacing swords as the weapons most frequently used in personal duels. During the early nineteenth century swordsmanship progressively diverged between military training and sporting practice, from which modern competitive fencing developed. Between 1500 and 1800 fencing was known as "the art and science of defense." The books and weapons included in The Academy of the Sword offer an overview of ways in which fencing was taught and the arms with which it was practiced during these three centuries.
Image for _Immaterial_: Wood
audio

Immaterial: Wood

August 27, 2024
The most musical tree in the world.
Image for World War I and Contemporary Art
video

World War I and Contemporary Art

December 10, 2017
Art historian Robert Storr moderates a discussion with artists Sue Coe, Suzanne McClelland, and James Siena about the artistic influence of the First World War.
Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Date: ca. 1400
Accession Number: 32.75.225

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Date: 13th century BCE
Accession Number: 54.46.8

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Date: 5th–4th century BCE
Accession Number: 12.37.145

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Hart and Wilcox (active ca. 1805–7)

Date: 1805–7
Accession Number: 33.120.498a

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Edward Winslow (1669–1753)

Date: 1725–50
Accession Number: 33.120.500

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Date: 1795–1810
Accession Number: 67.262.7

Image for Sword
Art

Sword

Date: ca. 1550–1458 B.C.
Accession Number: 16.10.453

Image for Congressional Presentation Sword and Scabbard of Major General John E. Wool (1784–1869)

Samuel Jackson (American, Baltimore, active 1833–70)

Date: 1854–55
Accession Number: 2009.8a–c

Image for Hunting Sword with Scabbard

Grip attributed to Joseph Deutschmann (German, Imst 1717–1787 Passau)

Date: ca. 1740
Accession Number: 26.145.243a, b

Image for Rapier of Prince-Elector Christian II of Saxony (1583–1611)

Hilt by Israel Schuech (German, Dresden, active ca. 1590–1610)

Date: dated 1606
Accession Number: 1970.77