Visiting The Met? The Temple of Dendur will be closed through Friday, May 9.

Search / All Results

1,645 results for victorian womens jacket

Image for Women's Work: Albums and Their Makers - The Art of Victorian Photocollage
Sixty years before the embrace of collage techniques by avant-garde artists of the early twentieth century, aristocratic Victorian women were already experimenting with photocollage.
Image for The Market for Modernism | MetSpeaks
video

The Market for Modernism | MetSpeaks

June 11, 2021

By Christel Force, Jennifer Thompson, Yaëlle Biro, Vérane Tasseau, MaryKate Cleary, Frances Fowle, Julia May Boddewyn, and Michael FitzGerald

Between 1850 and 1950, when art collecting in France stalled due to the devastating effects of two world wars, revolution, and economic uncertainty, it accelerated internationally, gaining interest from foreign collectors. In this discussion, curators, scholars, and experts in provenance research consider the historical market for modern art as the root of the globalized art world of today.
Image for Edward Burne-Jones: Victorian Artist-Dreamer
"In the palace of art there are many chambers, and that of which Mr. Burne-Jones holds the key is a wondrous museum. His imagination, his fertility of invention, his exquisiteness of work, his remarkable gifts as a colourist—all these things constitute a brilliant distinction." With these words the American critic and novelist Henry James, in 1877, sang the praises of Edward Burne-Jones (1833–1898), the British painter and designer whose work was creating a sensation at the recently opened Grosvenor Gallery in London. A pupil of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and a protégé of John Ruskin, Burne-Jones belonged to the second generation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, creating a narrative style of romantic symbolism steeped in medieval legend and fused with the influence of Italian Renaissance masters that was to have widespread influence on both British and European art. Within the sophisticated culture of the late Victorian period Burne-Jones's star rose rapidly, and by the 1880s he had become the establishment artist par excellence, one of the most admired and sought-after painters in Europe. By the 1890s, however, Burne-Jones was ceding popularity to the growing taste for abstraction, and until recently he was all but ignored. Today, one hundred years after his death, in what John Christian, the leading authority on the artist, in this volume terms a "critical somersault," Burne-Jones is once again considered the greatest British painter of the nineteenth century—after only Turner and perhaps Constable. Edward Burne-Jones, Victorian Artist-Dreamer is the catalogue for the first exhibition in the United States devoted to this painter. The works in the exhibition, organized under the auspices of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery, England, and the Réunion des musées nationaux, Musée d'Orsay, Paris, were selected by Stephen Wildman, Curator of the Ruskin Library at Lancaster University, England. A prodigiously productive artist, Burne-Jones, in addition to being a successful and innovative painter, was also an important force in the Arts and Crafts movement, working closely with his lifelong friend William Morris in the production of such decorative arts as ceramic tiles, stained glass, large-scale tapestries, and illustrated books to be printed at Morris's renowned Kelmscott Press. Examples of works in all these media are presented in the exhibition, with full-color and black-and-white reproductions of each of the 173 works included in the catalogue. Arranged chronologically, the volume is divided into eight sections, each introduced by a vibrant and broadly informative text by John Christian, followed by catalogue entries written by Mr. Wildman and Mr. Christian. An essay by the British scholar Alan Crawford explores Burne-Jones's contribution as a decorative artist, and an essay by Laurence des Cars, Curator at the Musée d'Orsay, Paris, deals with the artist's reputation and influence in France and Belgium.
Image for From Queen to Empress: Victorian Dress, 1837–1877
This lively, illustrated book about Victorian costume during the first part of Queen Victoria's reign is a delightful introduction to a particularly rich era in costume history. From Queen to Empress vividly evokes fashionable society in Victorian England and America through paintings of the period, contemporary illustrations and photographs, and striking costume photographs taken especially for this volume. In separate chapters devoted to royal influence, underdress, evening and day wear, mourning attire, wedding clothes, and court dress, the author, a member of the staff of The Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, offers a highly readable account of the ways in which fashion influenced the dress of all but the very poorest sections of the population. By 1837, the year of Victoria's accession to the throne, the simple silhouette and printed cottons of the early nineteenth century had already begun to give way to a more elaborate style of dress. Luxurious silks and an extraordinary diversity of shapes—including huge domed skirts and elaborately molded corsets made possible by new dressmaking techniques—marked the fashionable Victorian woman by the time Queen Victoria was declared Empress of India. From Queen to Empress accompanies an exhibition opening at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in December 1988.
Image for Met Museum Presents Spring Ticket Sweepstakes on Facebook
editorial

Met Museum Presents Spring Ticket Sweepstakes on Facebook

April 8, 2014

By Taylor Newby

Online Community Manager Taylor Newby highlights a selection of upcoming events featured in the Met Museum Presents Spring Ticket Sweepstakes.
Image for Victorian Masterpieces from the Museo de Arte de Ponce, Puerto Rico
Past Exhibition

Victorian Masterpieces from the Museo de Arte de Ponce, Puerto Rico

October 8, 2022–February 4, 2024
This special installation will feature five Victorian masterpieces from the collection of the Museo de Arte de Ponce in Puerto Rico. The exceptional loans include the iconic Flaming June by Frederic Leighton, John Everett Millais’s The Escape of a …
Image for A Raffle Ticket to Win a "Michelangelo"?
editorial

A Raffle Ticket to Win a "Michelangelo"?

January 19, 2018

By Femke Speelberg

Associate Curator Femke Speelberg recounts the interesting tale of a painting based on a cartoon by Michelangelo that was almost given away by raffle in 1735.
Image for The Legacy of Jack Whitten
video

The Legacy of Jack Whitten

January 14, 2019

By Kelly Baum, Julie Mehretu, Odili Donald Odita, and Adam Pendleton

Explore the influence of Jack Whitten's practice on acclaimed artists.
Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Fortuny (Italian, founded 1906)

Date: 1920s
Accession Number: L.2018.61.30

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Elsa Schiaparelli (Italian, 1890–1973)

Date: winter 1934
Accession Number: 2009.300.152a, b

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Maison Margiela (French, founded 1988)

Date: spring/summer 2006
Accession Number: 2017.116a–c

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Paul Poiret (French, Paris 1879–1944 Paris)

Date: 1912
Accession Number: 2005.203

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Claire McCardell (American, 1905–1958)

Date: ca. 1945
Accession Number: 2009.300.330

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Charles James (American, born Great Britain, 1906–1978)

Date: 1948
Accession Number: 2009.300.177

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Charles James (American, born Great Britain, 1906–1978)

Date: 1956
Accession Number: 2018.137.4

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Charles James (American, born Great Britain, 1906–1978)

Date: 1956
Accession Number: 2018.137.5

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Charles James (American, born Great Britain, 1906–1978)

Date: 1947–48
Accession Number: 2009.300.790

Image for Jacket
Art

Jacket

Charles James (American, born Great Britain, 1906–1978)

Date: 1951
Accession Number: 2009.300.207