8 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2016
    1. Whistler’s room anticipates Art Nouveau, but without that style’s rote longueurs. Credit Photograph by JOHN TSANTES / COURTESY FREER GALLERY OF ART, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION In 1876-77, James McNeill Whistler altered the décor of the London dining room of his patron Frederick Leyland, a Liverpool shipowner who used the room’s wall shelves to display his vast collection of blue-and-white Chinese porcelains. A mania for things Asian raged in England then, in concert with the aestheticist movement—a reaction, exalting unalloyed beauty, against the moralistic constraints of Victorian taste. Whistler was the trend’s leading light. The result was one of the most intoxicating decorative ensembles in the world: “Harmony in Blue and Gold: The Peacock Room,” which, since 1923, has been the star attraction of the Freer Gallery, a museum rich in Asian and Islamic art, in Washington, D.C. Charles Lang Freer, an American railroad-car manufacturer and globe-trotting connoisseur, bought the room, after Leyland’s death, from a London dealer, in 1904, and had it installed at his home, in Detroit. Upon Freer’s death, in 1919, his will endowed the Freer Gallery, which opened, four years later, as the first of the Smithsonian art museums. Last week, the Freer débuted a temporary reinstallation of the Peacock Room, by the curator Lee Glazer, which re-creates the way it appeared in photographs from 1908—adorned not with the porcelains (Leyland’s collection was long gone by then) but with two hundred and fifty-four of Freer’s own Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Middle Eastern earthenware and stoneware ceramics, which he left to the museum. For two years, they will replace the room’s usual, limited number of blue-and-white pieces similar to Leyland’s. The effect is wonderful. Leyland and his wife, Frances, championed Whistler in England. (She is the subject of my favorite of his paintings, “Symphony in Flesh Color and Pink,” from 1871-74, which is now in the Frick.) Their dining room was already superb. The gifted architect and designer Thomas Jeckyll had lined it with latticed walnut shelving, in a style that was notionally Oriental, to accommodate Leyland’s porcelains, and had hung, over the fireplace, his early Whistler painting of a celebrated beauty of the day, Christina Spartali, as “The Princess from the Land of Porcelain” (1864-65). Leyland agreed to pay Whistler a thousand guineas to emend Jeckyll’s scheme, but later, unconvinced of the job’s worth, he delivered the sum in the lesser denomination of pounds. Whistler, infuriated, then painted a satirical mural, in the finished room, representing the artist and his patron as warring peacocks. The Leyland bird is pompous and hectoring, with a breast of gold and platinum coins, windmilling wings, and an immense explosion of tail feathers; the Whistler bird poignantly droops, raising one wing in feeble defense. Leyland lived with this burlesque until his death, in 1892, but his relationship with Whistler had ended in 1879—as had his marriage to Frances, perhaps partly owing to her at least emotional closeness to the artist. Further ancient gossip holds that Thomas Jeckyll was driven mad by Whistler’s overhaul of his design, but it seems that the architect’s mental illness was organic. (He died in an asylum, in 1881.) Where Jeckyll had envisioned a sun-dappled Chinese pavilion—with walls covered in embossed and floral-patterned, bright-yellow leather—Whistler contrived a chamber of the night. He closed the room’s three sets of tall shutters, and painted them and the walls Prussian blue and resonant blue-greens, gilded the shelving, covered the neo-Gothic ribbed ceiling (nearly fourteen feet high) in overlapping petals of Dutch metal (brass oxidizing to green and gold), and filled every incidental surface with freehand abstract patterns and images of peacocks in gold and blue. The whole plainly anticipates Art Nouveau, but without that style’s rote longueurs. It realizes a synesthetic fusion of dazzling spectacle and intimate touch, evoking music and something like a subliminal, ambrosial perfume. Seeing the room as the reinstallation was being completed, with the shutters open, I got to gauge the impact when they were closed. It was like the onset of a deep bass chord out of Wagner. Illuminated by eight pendant ceiling fixtures (which I wish could be gaslights again, as they were in 1877), the room seemed at once to fall asleep and to come fully alert, vividly dreaming.

      Influenced by oriental culture, it reflects the importance of cultural communication from the historical perspective.

    1. One of the most complex restoration and reframing projects in the history of the Metropolitan Museum of Art has collided with a 9-foot-3-inch-high doorway. The doorway won.That is because the heroic and stupendously popular 1851 “Washington Crossing the Delaware,” familiar to generations of schoolchildren, is one of the largest paintings in the museum, measuring 21 feet wide and 12 feet high.

      the largest scale oil and iconic museum

    2. American history, when on Christmas night in 1776 George Washington crossed the Delaware River with 2,500 troops in a surprise attack on Hessian soldiers.

      2500 troops surprise attack on hessian soldier

    3. 以去除清漆绘画的第一面洁层几十年。目前,图像是黄色的; 在灰尘和碎屑蓝天血块地表明鸟类不存在的羊群。并预言晨星华盛顿上面隐约可见。 继续阅读主要的故事 广告 广告 继续阅读主要的故事 同时,在长岛市皇后区,主木雕,费利克斯·特兰,已经完成了从布雷迪照片blowups帧的精心鹰冠的两英尺长的试雕。

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    4. 其中最复杂的恢复和重新规划项目中的历史中的 大都会博物馆艺术 相撞W¯¯ 第i 一个9英尺3英寸高的门口。 在门口赢了。这是因为英雄和多产的流行的1851年 “ 华盛顿穿越特拉华州, ”熟悉的小学生代,是在一个博物馆最大的油画,尺寸为21英尺,宽12英尺高。

      characteristic of the museum