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7,242 results for tarot

Image for Before Fortune-Telling: The History and Structure of Tarot Cards
Curator Tim Husband reveals the origins and structure of two tarot decks featured in the exhibition The World in Play: Luxury Cards, 1430–1540.
Image for _Immaterial_: Bonus Episode, Tarot
audio

Immaterial: Bonus Episode, Tarot

September 14, 2022
Grab a cup of tea and join us for a bonus episode on tarot.
Image for _Immaterial_: The Tarot Reader
editorial

Immaterial: The Tarot Reader

September 28, 2022

By Alexander Chee

“At first glance, this Irving Penn photo looks like it could be its own tarot card.”
Image for It’s in the Cards (Catalog)
editorial

It’s in the Cards (Catalog)

July 7, 2021

By Maria Schurr

Explore the tarot cards of The Met’s Watson Library
Image for _Immaterial_: Bonus Episode, Tarot Transcript
Read the complete episode transcript
Image for Corot
Publication

Corot

Two hundred years after the birth of Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796–1875), 163 of the French artist's finest paintings have been brought together in an important exhibition that allows a public on both sides of the Atlantic to rediscover the riches and pleasures of his art. Corot, an original painter who produced a body of work of exceptional range, has been many things to many viewers. His silvery landscapes were adored by nineteenth-century collectors, and his sparkling sketches painted in plein air were later hailed as precursors of Impressionism. Art lovers have prized his figures paintings, the least well known and perhaps the most modern of all his works. Corot's long and prolific career coincided with major artistic developments: the flourishing of Neoclassical, Romantic, and Realist tendencies; the Barbizon school; the rise of Impressionism. Although he has been claimed at various times for each of these movements, Corot defies categorization. His art was fueled by a profound love of the natural world, and the vision he pursued was his own. This catalogue of the exhibition recounts the engrossing progress of his life and art. Corot's traditional education took him to Italy, where he painted crystalline outdoor oil studies and dedicated himself to mastering the art of classical landscape painting—a fascinating apprenticeship that is here carefully described. On his return to France he sought out views of great diversity and was among the first artists to frequent the forest of Fontainebleau. Working from his open-air studies he composed ambitious historical and mythological landscapes to exhibit at the Salons, but for some time these drew little favorable response. Undaunted, Corot continued to paint landscapes and to people them with figures of his own imagining, evolving a distinctive, poetic style. Both the critics and the public eventually grew enthusiastic, and in his later years Corot was a revered master, inundated by requests for pictures and instruction. A more private part of his oeuvre consists of the remarkable figure paintings, often depicting women in pensive attitudes, that the artist produced during this late period. Their purity and power have been admired by subsequent generations of artists. Hearty, generous, beloved, Corot was a man of good cheer but a painter of deep emotion and delicacy. Each painting catalogued in this book is accompanied by a full art-historical discussion. Three major essays chronicle Corot's life and the development of his art; additional essays elucidate the vexed subject of forgeries and describe the collecting of his works. The volume contains much original new scholarship, a full review of the scholarly literature, a chronology, and a concordance, and it is meticulously documented throughout. This book is published in conjunction with the exhibition "Corot," held at the Grand Palais, Paris, from February 27 to May 27, 1996; at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, from June 21 to September 22, 1996; and at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, from October 22, 1996, to January 19, 1997.
Image for William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877) and the Invention of Photography
Talbot conceived and brought about a wholly new way of making pictures, perfected the optical and chemical aspects of photography, and learned to use the new medium to make complex images for the botanist, historian, traveler, and artist.
Image for Takht-i Sulaiman and Tilework in the Ilkhanid Period
Essay

Takht-i Sulaiman and Tilework in the Ilkhanid Period

October 1, 2003

By Qamar Adamjee and Stefano Carboni

The presence of human figures, animals, and inscriptions quoting Persian poetry suggests that the tiles were employed in leisure palaces and abodes erected for affluent members of the Ilkhanid elite.
Image for Meet the Artist — Carol Bove on The séances aren’t helping
Go behind the scenes with the artist who made The Met’s 2021 facade commission.
Image for Rayyane Tabet/Alien Property
This Bulletin accompanies Rayyane Tabet's site-specific installation, which responds to four carved stone reliefs from the ancient site of Tell Halaf, in modern Syria. Now in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the ancient carvings traveled here under the aegis of the World War I–era Alien Property Act. Approaching this complex history from three perspectives, the text includes a historical discussion of the reliefs—from ancient times to their journey to The Met—by Kim Benzel, Curator in Charge of The Met's Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art; a personal account by Rayyane Tabet that chronicles the experiences of his great-grandfather, who worked for Max von Oppenheim, the original excavator of Tell Halaf; and an essay that explores Tabet's installation in the context of twentieth- and twenty-first-century artistic practice by Clare Davies, Assistant Curator in The Met's Department of Modern and Contemporary Art. Tabet's work and the three narratives presented in the Bulletin highlight the entangled, complex histories of cultural artifacts in museum collections while emphasizing their power to educate audiences about the ancient world. The Met's connection to Tell Halaf and its artifacts surfaces important contemporary conversations about the evolving role of encyclopedic museums.
Image for Niki de Saint Phalle tarot cards

Niki de Saint-Phalle (American (born France) Neuilly-sur-Seine 1930–2002 La Jolla, California)

Date: 2002
Accession Number: N6853.S255 S25 2002

Image for Mountain Dream Tarot: A Deck of 78 Photographic Cards

Bea Nettles (American, born Gainesville, Florida, 1946)

Date: 1975
Accession Number: 1977.556.2

Image for Uncut Sheet of Tarot Cards

Date: 15th century
Accession Number: SL.19.2016.9.7

Image for Partners and Projects

See a list of partner institutions and their projects supported by NICS.

Image for The Tarot Reader (Bridget Tichenor and Jean Patchett), New York

Irving Penn (American, Plainfield, New Jersey 1917–2009 New York)

Date: 1949, printed 1984
Accession Number: 2024.4.14

Image for The Cloisters Playing Cards

Date: ca. 1475–80
Accession Number: 1983.515.1–.52

Image for The World in Play
Exhibitions

The World in Play

Only three decks of European hand-painted playing cards are known to have survived from the late Middle Ages. These include The Cloisters Playing Cards, which will form the core of this small exhibition highlighting one of the more intriguing works of secular art from The Cloisters Collection.

On view January 20–April 17, 2016