Page of 15 Show 16 32 64 Per Page
Christian Marclay, "The Clock," 2010
The Clock: Christian Marclay September 16, 2011 - December 31, 2011

Extended to December 31, 2011. A compelling new work created by world-renowned artist Christian Marclay, The Clock (2010), an ode to time and cinema, comprises thousands of fragments from a range of films that create a 24-hour, looped, single-channel video. The Clock tells the accurate...

Hector Zamora, "White Noise – Shed 6 Installation (detail)," 2011
Disponible: A Kind of Mexican Show September 13, 2011 - November 19, 2011

Within Mexico’s urban setting, contemporary art and other experimental and creative practices such as architecture, design, and music flourish, forming one of the most original and intriguing art scenes in the global landscape. Taking its name from the empty advertisement billboards across...

Kawanabe Kyōsai, "Hell Courtesan," 1870s-1880s
Kawanabe Kyōsai and the Hell Courtesan September 3, 2011 - June 17, 2012

The first exhibition in our newly renovated Japanese Print gallery focuses on a recent acquisition, a monumental hanging scroll of the Hell Courtesan by Kawanabe Kyōsai (1831–1889). Known for the charm, eccentricity, and extraordinary skill of his work, Kyōsai gleefully satirized the...

Eugène Delacroix, "Royal Tiger," 1829
Passion and Precision in the Age of Revolution August 20, 2011 - May 13, 2012

European art of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is dominated by two powerful artistic movements: Neo-classicism and Romanticism. Neo-Classicism is marked by purity, austerity, clarity, and an almost abstract obsession with the linear. The style was stimulated by the recent...

Imogen Cunningham, "Sunbath (Alta on the Beach)," 1925-30
Modernist Photography: 1910–1950 July 30, 2011 - April 1, 2012

"Modernist Photography 1910–1950" features approximately 40 American modernist photographs representing highlights from the Museum's own collection as well as The Lane Collection. Complementing the work displayed in several of the other Level 3 galleries in the new Art of the...

John LaFarge, "View Over Kyoto From Ya Ami," 1886
Around the World in Watercolor, 1860-1920 July 16, 2011 - March 4, 2012

“Around the World in Watercolor, 1860-1920” features work by Americans who sought adventure and inspiration for their art. They ventured across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and traversed the American continent. Thirty watercolors from the Museum’s permanent collection by John...

Monet to Lichtenstein
Monet/Lichtenstein: Rouen Cathedrals July 3, 2011 - September 25, 2011

Roy Lichtenstein is known for his Pop art paintings derived from comic strips and advertisements, but his later work also drew on well-known masterpieces of art history. The ten paintings in this exhibition offer a rare chance to look closely at Lichtenstein’s interaction with impressionist...

Joan Miró, "Series II (Plate 5)," 1952
Europe at Mid-Century: Dubuffet, Giacometti, Picasso June 25, 2011 - January 22, 2012

Postwar Europe saw many and diverse transformations of the way in which artists depicted the human image. Figuration and abstraction were the contending elements in a dynamic dialogue boldly visible in the work of Alberto Giacometti, Jean Dubuffet, Pablo Picasso, and their many contemporaries....

Rodolphe Bresdin, "The Good Samaritan," 1861
Two Masters of Fantasy: Bresdin and Redon May 25, 2011 - January 16, 2012

"Two Masters of Fantasy: Bresdin and Redon" features the prints and drawings of two artists who explored worlds of the imagination, the inner reality of the subconscious, and of dream. The eccentric French printmaker and draftsman Rodolphe Bresdin (1822-1885) created a miniature world...

Rebecca Norris Webb, "Havana, Cuba" (detail), 2008
Violet Isle: A Photographic Portrait of Cuba by Alex Webb and Rebecca Norris Webb May 25, 2011 - January 16, 2012

This exhibition explores photographers Alex Webb and Rebecca Norris Webb’s poetic vision of Cuba, the Caribbean island that—because of the color of its soil—is occasionally known as the "Violet Isle." The couple became fascinated with the paradoxes of the place some...

Yashima Gakutei, "Woman Representing Benzaiten, from the series Allusions to the Seven Lucky Gods (Mitate shichifukujin)," 1820s
The Goddess of Music and Good Fortune May 21, 2011 - December 31, 2011

Benzaiten, the goddess of music and good fortune, has been revered in Japan from ancient times to the present. This exhibition explores the long-lasting popularity of the goddess in Japanese culture and the iconographical transformations of her image over 500 years. See her orthodox depiction as...

Community Arts Initiative, And Their Families
Community Arts Initiative: And Their Families April 23, 2011 - June 6, 2011

Under the guidance of artist Raul Gonzalez, students from eight after-school community organizations in the Boston area will create family portraits using pen, ink, and color in 11 x 17" stained paper. The project is intended to draw inspiration from paintings representing families and...

"Man's Wrapper," African, Ghana, early 20th century
Global Patterns: Dress and Textiles in Africa April 13, 2011 - January 8, 2012

This exhibition focuses on the accomplishments of African weavers, dyers, bead embroiderers, and tailors, and highlights continuities, innovation, and the exchange of ideas from within and without that mark dress and textile production in Africa. More than any other artistic expression, dress and...

2870_deYoung_TR.jpg
Chihuly: Through the Looking Glass April 10, 2011 - August 8, 2011

Over the course of his career, Dale Chihuly has revolutionized the art of blown glass, moving it into the realm of large-scale sculpture and establishing the use of glass—inherently a fragile but also magical material—as a vehicle for installation and environmental art. This...

Eunice Bourne, "Embroidered overmantel with original frame," 1745-50
Embroideries of Colonial Boston: Pictorial Embroideries April 2, 2011 - August 28, 2011

The embroideries of colonial Boston girls and women have long been treasured family possessions and are now much sought after by collectors. The charm and craftsmanship of the Adam and Eve samplers, pastoral pictures with leaping stags and galloping hunters, as well as crewelwork bed hangings and...

Lambert Doomer, "Two Bactrian Camels in a River Landscape," 17th century
Mirror of Holland: Drawings from the George and Maida Abrams Collection March 26, 2011 - July 31, 2011

The Maida and George Abrams Collection is one of the finest assemblages ever brought together of Dutch drawings, featuring works from the late 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. The core of the collection is the splendid range of 17th-century drawings. In the northern Netherlands, the 17th century saw...

Page of 15 Show 16 32 64 Per Page