The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Europe in the Age of Monarchy
Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1987 | ISBN: 0870994492/0870994506 | English | PDF | 160 pages | 40.49 Mb
Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1987 | ISBN: 0870994492/0870994506 | English | PDF | 160 pages | 40.49 Mb
Europe in the Age of Monarchy reproduces over 125 works of art in every genre and medium from the collections of the Metropolitan Museum. They give a breathtaking picture of a turbulent and exciting epoch, which was at once the Age of Monarchy and a Golden Age of art. Just as its kings and queens are still exemplars of glorious majesty and shrewd statesmanship, so the artists of that century remain for us the Old Masters of European art: Caravaggio, Bernini, Tiepolo, Guardi; El Greco, Velázquez; Rubens, van Dyck; Hals, Rembrandt, Vermeer, van Ruisdael; de La Tour, Poussin, Claude, Watteau, Boucher, Chardin. In every medium, the clash and complicity of the traditional Classical style and the newer Baroque vision bequeathed us a rich treasure.
As befitted an age where splendor bespoke power, kings, courtiers, and burghers all demanded furnishings appropriate to their station. Thus workers in stucco, wood, and marble crafted rooms of splendid proportions and exquisite detail. Goldsmiths and porcelain designers produced objects that epitomize luxury. And in France, where the Sun King demanded unparalleled splendor, the weavers at Beauvais, the porcelain factories at Sèvres, and the royal cabinetmakers at Versailles developed the grand gout—a style forever associated with France in her "splendid century."
John T. Spike has provided an introduction to this volume in which he explores the ways in which artists confronted the Classical tradition they inherited and the Baroque style they formulated, and the influence exercised by the new patrons of art. Mr. Spike has been a guest curator and consultant at several museums throughout the United States. Among the exhibitions he has organized are Giuseppe Maria Crespi and the Emergence of Genre Painting in Italy for the Kimbell Art Museum, and Baroque Portraiture in Italy for the John and Mable Ringling Museum. In addition to preparing catalogues for the exhibitions he has organized, Mr. Spike has written extensively in scholarly journals in the United States and abroad.