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9,879 results for Pygmalion and Galatea

Image for Max Klinger's _Galatea_ Sculpture | MetCollects
video

Max Klinger's Galatea Sculpture | MetCollects

May 20, 2019

By Denise Allen

Curator Denise Allen discusses Max Klinger’s _Galatea_ and its provenance.
Image for A New Goddess in the Galleries: Max Klinger's *Galatea*
editorial

A New Goddess in the Galleries: Max Klinger's Galatea

January 15, 2019

By Alison Hokanson

A major new acquisition was recently installed in the galleries of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century European paintings and sculpture: a statue of the sea goddess Galatea, made in 1906 by the leading German artist Max Klinger.
Image for Opera Lafayette: Les Indes Galantes
In 1725 a group of Native Americans performed for King Louis XV, and inspired Rameau's Les Indes Galantes, or The Amorous Indies.
Image for Classical Art and Modern Dress
Essay

Classical Art and Modern Dress

October 1, 2003

By Harold Koda

In depicting details of the distinctive modes of ancient Greek attire, subsequent artists and designers have changed, as much as preserved, the actual qualities of ancient garb.
Image for The Salon and the Royal Academy in the Nineteenth Century
Essay

The Salon and the Royal Academy in the Nineteenth Century

October 1, 2004

By Jason Rosenfeld Ph.D.

From the late eighteenth century, such institutions had a virtual monopoly on public taste and official patronage.
Image for Like Life: Sculpture, Color, and the Body
Since before the myth of Pygmalion bringing a statue to life through desire, artists have used sculpture to explore the physical materiality of the body. This groundbreaking volume examines key sculptural works from thirteenth-century Europe to the global present, revealing new insights into the strategies artists deploy to blur the distinction between art and life. Three-dimensional renderings of the human figure are presented here in numerous manifestations, created by artists ranging from Donatello and Edgar Degas to Kiki Smith and Jeff Koons. Featuring works created in media both traditional and unexpected—such as glass, leather, and blood—Like Life presents sculpture by turns conventional and shocking, including effigies, dolls, mannequins, automata, waxworks, and anatomical models. Texts by curators and cultural historians as well as contemporary artists complete this provocative exploration of realistic representations of the human body.
Image for Art of the Hellenistic Age and the Hellenistic Tradition
Essay

Art of the Hellenistic Age and the Hellenistic Tradition

April 1, 2007

By Colette Hemingway and Séan Hemingway

Hellenistic kings became prominent patrons of the arts, commissioning public works of architecture and sculpture, as well as private luxury items that demonstrated their wealth and taste.
Image for Art and Activism: Environmental Protection and Contemporary Indigenous Art
Join featured artists and the curator of the exhibitions “Water Memories” and “Art of Native America: The Charles and Valerie Diker Collection” for a conversation exploring the significance of water to diverse Indigenous peoples and Nations in the United States, as expressed through historical, modern, and contemporary art. Delve into the artists’ artistic processes while examining the ongoing work to protect water and land, aesthetic activism, and the unique challenges contemporary Indigenous artist-activists face.
Image for Watteau, Music, and Theater
Focusing on both the visual and performing arts, Watteau, Music, and Theater explores the rich connections between painting and theater at a time when Louis XIV had reigned in France for some six decades. Its contents will engage admirers of the art of Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684–1721) and that of other early eighteenth-century French artists. The fascinating developments in music and theater that took place in Paris during the early years of the eighteenth century, after the young Watteau arrived in the vibrant French capital, are the subject of this volume. An introductory essay by Pierre Rosenberg de l'Académie française, Honorary President-Director of the Museé du Louvre, Paris, opens the publication. A second essay by Georgia J. Cowart, Professor of Music at Case Western Reserve University, furnishes instructive background information on the period's cultural milieu. A chronology of Watteau's life reveals the few facts known about this intriguing and somewhat mysterious artist. Brief biographies of the other artists represented are also included. Fifteen major paintings by Watteau and a number of his drawings demonstrate the ways in which the painter's vision reflects his involvement with actors, musicians, and the stage. The works discussed range from enchanting single figures to animated assemblages of players from the French and Italian theatrical tradition. You will meet Mezzetin, a stock character of the commedia dell'arte; Harlequin, garbed in the traditional black mask and a diamond-patterned costume; the cheerless and egotistical manservant Crispin, a leading stock comic character of the French stage; and Pierrot, a French charmer in his loose "clown" costume and pointed hat. The first of the sixty-three entries that examine individual works of art is Watteau's The Island of Cythera, an early canvas from about 1709–10, associated with the finale of Florent Carton Dancourt's play Les Trois Cousines, in which French villagers undertake a pilgrimage to the temple of Venus's son Cupid in search of love. Among the additional paintings by Watteau are Italian Comedians, in which the huge assemblage of players suggests the bows at the end of a performance, and French Comedians, which represents several aspects of tragi-comic French theater. The performing arts in Paris are also addressed in paintings by Nicolas Lancret (1690–1743), Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Pater (1695–736), and the Venetian Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (1727–1804). Dance before a Fountain, a canvas by Lancret, is a classic fête galante in which young and fashionable characters in their garden world play out the drama of love. The Fair at Bezons, one of Pater's largest and most ambitious canvases, shows the artist in full command of the new genre of the fête galante. A number of appealing drawings and prints by Watteau and other eighteenth-century artists as well as porcelains and musical instruments are also examined. Examples include Watteau's delightful studies of men and women that served as the sources for his depictions of theatrical characters. Watteau, Music, and Theater was edited by Katharine Baetjer, Curator in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Department of European Paintings, and it accompanies an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum honoring Philippe de Montebello, Director Emeritus.
Image for Pygmalion and Galatea

Auguste Rodin (French, Paris 1840–1917 Meudon)

Date: modeled 1889, carved ca. 1908–9
Accession Number: 10.31

Image for Pygmalion and Galatea

Jean-Léon Gérôme (French, Vesoul 1824–1904 Paris)

Date: ca. 1890
Accession Number: 27.200

Image for Galatea

Max Klinger (German, Leipzig 1857–1920 Großjena)

Date: 1906
Accession Number: 2018.25a, b

Image for Study for Galatea

Auguste Rodin (French, Paris 1840–1917 Meudon)

Date: modeled ca. 1889, cast before 1912
Accession Number: 12.12.2

Image for Pygmalion and Galatea

François Boucher (French, Paris 1703–1770 Paris)

Accession Number: 60.176.1

Image for Pygmalion and Galatea

Anonymous, Spanish, School of Seville, 17th century

Date: 17th century
Accession Number: 56.235.75

Image for Pygmalion and Galatea as Infants

French Painter , 18th century

Date: 18th century
Accession Number: 07.225.310

Image for Pygmalion

Joachim von Sandrart (German, Frankfurt 1606–1688 Nuremberg)

Date: 1662
Accession Number: 1996.414

Image for Wall painting: Polyphemus and Galatea in a landscape, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase

Date: last decade of the 1st century BCE
Accession Number: 20.192.17

Image for Galatea

Roy Lichtenstein (American, New York 1923–1997 New York)

Date: 1990
Accession Number: 2003.597