Category Archives: Exhibitions

New Art for the A Floor

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While many of the students and faculty were driving home for Thanksgiving, we used the quiet time to hang a few more paintings on the A floor of Firestone Library.

Here you see Elizabeth Aldred, registrar for the Princeton University Art Museum, completing a condition report on Jean-Paul Riopelle’s untitled painting before it was packed up and returned to the museum for conservation.

In its place, the museum kindly offered a beautiful 1960s painting by the New York artist Loren MacIver for the Cheng Family Reading Room.
hanging nov4 MacIver was a primarily self-taught artist, known for semi-abstract landscapes, cityscapes, and close views of natural forms, many of them ensconced in a hazy fog, lending them a dreamlike aura.

”My wish is to make something permanent out of the transitory,” MacIver wrote in 1946. ”Certain moments have the gift of revealing the past and foretelling the future. It is these moments that I hope to catch.”

MacIver befriended many American poets, including Elizabeth Bishop, E. E. Cummings, and Marianne Moore. See also the catalogue prepared to honor the artist at her death: Loren MacIver: A Retrospective (New York: Tibor de Nagy Gallery, 1998). Marquand Library (SA) Oversize ND237.M165 B287 1998q
hanging nov9Loren MacIver (1909–1998), Byzantium, ca. 1965. Oil on canvas. Gift of Thirteen Friends (Mrs. Harold Hochschild, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hochschild, Mrs. R. Wolcott Hooker, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Kelleher, Mr. Frank Kissner, Mr. and Mrs. John McAndrew, Miss Dorothy C. Miller, Mrs. J. D. Rockefeller III, Mr. James T. Soby, Miss Eleanor D. Wilson). Princeton University Art Museum.

 

hanging nov3This was followed by the hanging of a monumental painting titled Hippolytus by Princeton University alumnus Cleve Gray, Class of 1940. While at Princeton, Gray studied in the department of Art and Archaeology, completing a thesis on Yuan Dynasty landscape painting with George Rowley (1892-1962).

After serving in Europe during World War II, Gray remained in Paris to receive informal art training from a number of French artists. His paintings from the 1960s, including this one, graft impulsive gestures derived from Abstract Expressionism onto a more or less solid armature, a fusion that hints at the competing tensions at play in painting in the 1960s.
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hanging nov8Cleve Gray, Class of 1940  (1918–2004), Hippolytus, 1963. Oil on canvas. Gift of the artist. Princeton University Art Museum.
hanging nov11For more on Hippolytus, see Princeton University’s “Phaedra project” website:

“Born to Minos, King of Crete, and Pasiphaë, immortal daughter of Helios, the Sun, Phaedra became the second wife to Theseus, the founder-king of Athens. Theseus’s son Hippolytus (by his first wife Hippolyta) was a virginal devotee of Artemis, and spurned Aphrodite. In revenge for his disregard, Aphrodite made Phaedra fall in love with Hippolytus. In some accounts, it is the nurse who reveals Phaedra’s burning passion for her stepson, while in others it is Phaedra herself. When Hippolytus vehemently rejects his step-mother’s desire, Phaedra falsely accuses him of rape. Believing his wife, Theseus curses his son, prompting Poseidon to send a sea monster (or in some accounts Dionysus to send a wild bull), to terrify Hippolytus’s horses and to plunge his chariot over a cliff, sending him to his doom. As many versions of the story have it, Phaedra, upon hearing of her beloved Hippolytus’s death, takes her own life.” — “Myth in Transformation: The Phaedra Project”  http://www.princeton.edu/~phaedra/index.html

Invitation to Graphic Passion

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Princeton University students are invited to a free viewing of the exhibition Graphic Passion: Matisse and the Book Arts, along with other shows at the Morgan Library this Thursday evening, November 12, 2015. The Graphic Arts Collection just received the catalogue to this collection, which offers three scholarly essays with new insight into the works of this well-known artist. In addition, 47 books illustrated by Matisse between 1912 and 1954 are illustrated and described in detail. “Each of these projects,” writes curator John Bidwell, “large and small, reveals something about his deep appreciation for the printed word.” Hopefully, our students will take advantage of this wonderful opportunity.

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Print 100

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A panel discussion entitled Printmaking Now was held today at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in honor of the centenary of Philadelphia’s Print Center (1614 Latimer Street). Sarah Suzuki, Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Museum of Modern Art, led a discussion exploring the inventive uses of print with artists Rirkrit Tiravanija and Elizabeth Peyton, along with David Lasry of Two Palms Press.

This was only one of 100 exhibitions, publications, and programs scheduled over the next few months to celebrate Print 100. Founded in 1915 as the Print Club, the Center was one of the first venues in this country dedicated to the appreciation of prints. The organization was established to support the “dissemination, study, production, and collection of works by printmakers, American and foreign.” In 1942, The Print Center donated its collection of prints to the Philadelphia Museum of Art forming the core of their fledgling print department.

A digital guidebook to events is available here.

The list of activities begins with events at The Print Center:

1. Gabriel Martinez: Bayside Revisited
2. Recollection: Group Exhibition
3. New Website for The Print Center
4. The Print Center Timeline
5. Print Center Stories – Personal Recollections
6. The Print Center 100 Announcement Poster
7. The Print Center 100 Guidebook
8. Gala
9. Street Party
10. Centennial Portfolio
11. WHYY Friday Arts Feature
12. The Legacy of The Print Center, Lecture
13. Kayrock Screenprinting, Pop-up Shop
14. BYO Social, The Print Center Publications
15. Book Launch, Printeresting’s Ghost
16. Writer’s Workshop with artblog & The St. Claire
17. PECO Crown Lights
18. Open Door, Philadelphia Sketch Club
19. Artists Takeover of The Print Center’s Instagram
20. Neighborhood Social with Center City Residents Association

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Mildred Dillon, The Print Club, Serigraph, 1944. Print and Picture Collection, Free Library of Philadelphia

21. Emerging Collectors Event
22. Centennial Members Closing Party
23. Centennial Publication
24. New Commission: Amze Emmons
25. New Commission: Julia Blaukopf
26. New Commission: Henry Horenstein
27. New Commission: Dina Kelberman
28. New Commission: Ken Lum
29. New Commission: Dennis McNett
30. New Commission: Critical Writing

Numbers 31-60 are on view in The Print Center’s first floor gallery September 18 to December 19, 2015. The exhibition highlights art, ephemera and objects drawing out their history, mission and evolution from a club to an internationally recognized voice in printmaking and photography.

Numbers 61-100 are exhibitions, programs, and projects presented as part of The Print Center 100 by their partners in the Philadelphia region and beyond.

Scoop

lyon2La Liberté de la presse, 1797. Engraving. (c) Lyon MICG

scoopThe Musée de l’imprimerie et de la communication graphique (Lyon’s Museum of Printing and Graphic Communication) has a new exhibition documenting 400 years of history of the press. http://www.imprimerie.lyon.fr/imprimerie/sections/fr/expositions

Seven years ago, Bernard Gelin, a local bibliophile, donated a collection of around 30,000 newspapers from France and other countries. Only the French papers have been catalogued so far but this represents a remarkable 5,473 titles. Highlights include the very first French newspapers, rich coverage of the revolutions of 1789 and 1848, the Paris Commune, and the First World War.

Drawing on this newly acquired collection, Scoop: A Graphic History of the Press documents the history of paper newspapers in France, from the smallest (La Dépèche) to the largest (Le Grand Journal, Paris). Open to the public until January 21, 2016, the show focuses on the historical design, layout, and printing of the paper page, with special attention to illustrations as they were printed first from wood engravings and then, from photographs.

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The exhibition catalogue should be on Princeton Library shelves soon. For more information about the remarkable gift, the museum has posted this interview with the donor:

Motley at the Cultural Center

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From 1897 to 1991, Chicago’s Center Public Library was located on Michigan Avenue in a building designed by A.H. Coolidge, associate of the firm Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge (a precursor of Shepley Bulfinch, which is renovating Princeton’s Firestone Library). Today, the building is the Chicago Cultural Center, housing a variety of organizations, performances, and exhibitions.

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“The center of this building, now known as Preston Bradley Hall, contains a dome and hanging lamps designed by Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company of New York. The Washington Street entrance, grand staircase and dome area contain inscriptions of 16th century printers’ marks, authors’ names and quotations that praise learning and literature in mosaics of colored stone, mother of pearl and favrile glass.”

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The Center’s current exhibition, Archibald Motley: Jazz Age Modernist, celebrates the life and work of Archibald J. Motley, Jr. (1891-1981), a major contributor to the Harlem Renaissance. A Chicago native, Motley spent time in Paris and the show also highlights Jazz Age Paris of the 1920s. The exhibition originated at the Nasser Museum of Art at Duke University, where several videos were created to help interpret Motley’s career:

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culture7Archibald Motley: jazz age modernist, edited by Richard J. Powell (Durham: Nasher Museum of Art, [2014]). Marquand Library (SA) ND237.M8183 A4 2014

 

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Audubon has flown

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John James Audubon (1785-1851). Yellow-throated Vireo, 1827. Pen and wash drawing. Graphic Arts Collection, Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library. Gift of John S. Williams, Class of 1924.

Our colleagues Laura Giles, Heather and Paul G. Haaga Jr., Class of 1970, Curator of Prints and Drawings and Karl Kusserow, John Wilmerding Curator of American Art have kindly included a number of works from the graphic arts collection in their beautiful summer exhibition Painting on Paper: American Watercolors at Princeton.

On view at the Princeton University Art Museum until Sunday, August 30, 2015, the show is both sensuous and serious, illuminating the distinct qualities of watercolors “in which color and line combine to produce effects of unparalleled nuance and suppleness.”

As their text explains, the museum collection was assembled initially under the pioneering directorship of Frank Jewett Mather Jr. (1922–46), the collection today offers insight into broad trends in American art across two centuries while also affording a comprehensive overview of the nation’s rich tradition in watercolor painting.

We are thrilled to have our Yellow-Throated Vireo (1827) as one of the first works the audience sees as they enter the galleries. Painted by John James Audubon (1785-1851), this watercolor study was adapted and later engraved by Robert Havell, Jr. (1785-1878) for the monumental publication The Birds of America (Rare Books: South East (RB) Oversize EX 8880.134.11e). Also on loan for the exhibition are works by William Constable; William Glackens; Augustus Koellner; John H. B. Latrobe; and Alfred Jacob Miller.

For more information on the exhibition, see: http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/1653

 

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Versailles on Paper closing July 19

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John Vanderlyn (1775-1852), Panoramic View of the Palace and Gardens of Versailles, 1818-1819. Oil on canvas. ©Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Gift of the Senate House Association, Kingston, 1952.

20150628_122128_resizedThe exhibition Versailles on Paper at Princeton University is in its final weeks, closing on Sunday, July 19, 2015. Until then, the gallery will be open free of charge, 8:30 to 4:30 Monday to Friday and noon to 5:00 on the weekends.

In addition, you may want to visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art where John Vanderlyn’s painted panorama of the palace and gardens are on view in a specially designed room within the American wing.

Invented in Great Britain in the 1780s, panoramas were displayed within the darkened interior of a cylindrical building or room. According to the Met’s commentary, this 12 x 165 ft. (3.6 x 49.5 m) painting is a rare survivor of a form of public art and entertainment that flourished in the 19th century.

A native of Kingston, New York, Vanderlyn studied historical painting in Paris during the Napoleonic era and conceived his panorama project after seeing the American artist and inventor Robert Fulton establish a panorama theater on the Boulevard Montmartre.

20150628_121946_resizedVanderlyn’s Versailles was drawn between 1814 and 1815, then mounted in 1818 in a building behind the City Hall in lower Manhattan. The scene depicts a sunny afternoon between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. in September 1814. King Louis XVIII can be seen on the center balcony of the palace.


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 John Vanderlyn (1775-1852), Description of the panoramic view of the palace and gardens of Versailles, painted by Mr. Vanderlyn [electronic resource] (New-York: Printed by E. Conrad, 1819). Series:, Early American imprints. Second series ; no. 49975.

The Panoramic view of the palace and gardens of Versailles painted by John Vanderlyn: the original sketches of which were taken at the spot, by him, in the autumn of 1814 (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1956). Marquand Library (SA) ND237.V19 P36

Princeton University Library Chronicle double issue

versailles chronicleThe exhibition “Versailles on Paper: A Graphic Panorama of the Palace and Gardens of Louis XIV,” on view in the Main Gallery of Firestone Library until July 19, 2015, is accompanied by a special double issue of the Princeton University Library Chronicle (Volume LXXVI, numbers 1 & 2, autumn 2014–winter 2015). The volume’s 296 pages offer 8 scholarly essays with 77 black and white illustrations.

Friends of the Princeton University Library (FPUL) will receive a copy in the mail very soon and others who would like to join the FPUL, can still receive a free copy of the Chronicle with their membership. To join, see: http://www.fpul.org/chronicle/index.html. Single issues are $30 plus postage.

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This issue contains the following articles:

Audrey Adamczak, “Engraving Sculpture: Depictions of Versailles Statuary in the Cabinet du Roi”

This essay examines the presence of the sculpted object in prints that celebrated the treasures of the crown, especially those displayed at Versailles. Sculptures are well represented among the works of art selected to be engraved for the collection known as Cabinet du Roi. The most renowned works, both ancient and modern, were represented for their own sake and not just as secondary subjects. Engravings took various forms, depending upon the model and the printmaker’s technical choices. The goal of this essay is twofold: to analyze the techniques used by individual engravers to reproduce the medium of sculpture and render its effects; and to highlight the value of these prints as a graphic record of the Versailles statuary, much of which has been dispersed, destroyed, or irrevocably altered.

Hall Bjørnstad, “From the Cabinet of Fairies to the Cabinet of the King: The Marvelous Workings of Absolutism”

What do fairy-tale kings have in common with real-life absolute monarchs? If we turn to the case of Jean de Préchac’s 1698 fairy tale about King Sans Parangon (Without Equal), the answer is: quite a bit. An allegorical retelling of the life of Louis XIV, structured according to the whims of an enchanted Chinese princess named Belle Gloire, this tale is often read as mere flattery without any interest beyond the excess of its praise. However, this paper argues that a close analysis of certain key scenes of “Sans Parangon,” especially the one portrayed in the engraving illustrating the second edition of the text in 1717, will bring us surprisingly close to the inner workings of absolutism.

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Benoît Bolduc, “Fêtes on Paper: Graphic Representations of Louis XIV’s Festivals at Versailles”

In the three illustrated festival books commemorating the divertissements given by Louis XIV in 1664, 1668, and 1674, Versailles becomes a site for performing monarchical authority. The plates, designed by Israël Sylvestre, Jean Lepautre and François Chauveau, illustrating the equestrian parades, buffets of refreshments, musical entertainments, and pyrotechnical displays offered to the court, showcase the newly designed gardens of Versailles as a decorous and enchanted space where art and nature merge to the point of becoming indistinguishable. The printed account by André Félibien insists on the miraculous nature of the settings and achieves the goals of classical ekphrasis by mimicking the effects produced by the experience of the festival, leading the reader toward the sublime contemplation of the generative power of the French king.

Thomas F. Hedin, “Facts, Sermons, and Riddles: The Curious Guidebook of Sieur Combes”

The Explication historique de ce qu’il y a de plus remarquable dans la maison royale de Versailles, et en celle de Monsieur à Saint Cloud, was published by Laurent Morellet (alias Combes or Sieur Combes) in 1681, a time of euphoria and national pride: the Dutch War had ended, to French advantage, three years earlier; the château and gardens of Versailles were brimming with new works of art; the Grand Dauphin’s recent marriage held high promise of royal progeny. Combes, the chaplain to Monsieur, the King’s brother, was on hand to celebrate the joyous moment. His book contains information on Versailles found nowhere else in the contemporary literature. Offsetting his passion for documentary detail, Combes subjected some of the most prominent statues and fountains to purely fantastic, self-indulgent “explications.” Nor could he resist the temptation to treat the gardens as a pulpit, to lecture his congregation of readers, particularly the ladies of the court, on his notions of Christian morality; he often appeals to his dedicatee, the newly-wed Grande Dauphine. The researcher is advised to tread cautiously through this fascinating, meandering book.

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Betsy Rosasco, “The Herms of Versailles in the 1680s”

Following the first set of herms executed for Versailles in the 1660s, and the purchase from Nicolas Fouquet’s son in 1683 of a second set of herms designed by Nicolas Poussin for Vaux-le-Vicomte, the Versailles gardens received a third set of herms, commissioned by the Marquis de Louvois, Surintendant des Bâtiments, beginning in 1684. Consisting of literary figures (Ulysses and Circe), Olympian gods (Jupiter, Juno…), lesser deities (Faun, Bacchante…), and Greek philosophers (Plato, Diogenes…), these understudied sculptures were designed mainly by Pierre Mignard,but in two cases Charles Le Brun and Jules Hardouin-Mansart’s team, and executed by distinguished masters such as Corneille van Clève and Étienne Le Hongre. It is argued that, unlike the earlier herms – expressive of galant or Bacchic themes appropriate to rural surroundings and pleasures – these herms were didactic and intended for the education of the Duc de Bourgogne, the future dauphin of France. Suggestions are advanced about the content of the lessons and the possible use of the sculptures as a Memory Palace.

Volker Schröder, “Royal Prints for Princeton College: A Franco-American Exchange in 1886”

Many of the prints displayed on the walls of the main gallery of Firestone Library during the exhibition “Versailles on Paper” belong to a vast collection known as the Cabinet du Roi: copperplate engravings produced and distributed by order of Louis XIV. They came to Princeton in 1886, when the Bibliothèque Nationale sent four large boxes of books and prints to the College of New Jersey in exchange for more than three hundred volumes on the American Civil War donated by John Shaw Pierson (1822–1908), Class of 1840. The discovery of this curious transaction during the preparation of the exhibition raised a number of questions that the present essay attempts to answer: What led Pierson to act as foreign agent on behalf of his alma mater, and how did he approach the Bibliothèque Nationale? Why was the Cabinet du Roi included in the exchange, and how were these prints received and used at Princeton? While John S. Pierson’s role in the early development of Princeton’s historical collections is well known, the 1886 exchange with the Bibliothèque Nationale (and other European libraries) has been all but forgotten. It deserves to be brought back to light and calls for a broader reassessment of Pierson’s purpose as a collector and benefactor.

Alan M. Stahl, “The Classical Program of the Medallic Series of Louis XIV”

In the preface to the 1702 deluxe folio edition of the Médailles sur les principaux événements du règne de Louis le Grand, avec des explications historiques, the Abbé Paul Tallemant set out the purpose and procedures underlying the production of the volume and the medallic series which it accompanied. Like many other aspects of the culture of the court of Louis XIV, the medallic series sought both to emulate and surpass the achievements of classical antiquity, in this case the high relief coins produced by the emperors of the first two centuries of the Roman Empire. This article examines the procedures and structures of the Petite Académie (which included Charles Perrault, Jean Racine and Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux), charged with the creation of images and inscriptions for the series, and the extent to which the resulting medals achieved the stated goals and set a pattern for the future of the medium.
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Carolyn Yerkes, “The Grand Escalier at the Château de Versailles: The Monumental Staircase and Its Edges”

The Grand Escalier, also called the Grand Degré or the Escalier des Ambassadeurs, is one of the most significant architectural elements to have disappeared from the château of Versailles. Completed in 1679, this element had a hybrid function: not only was it the principal staircase of the palace, the primary means of access to the state rooms on the second floor, but it also was the official reception point for foreign dignitaries and thus a ceremonial space in its own right. The Grand Escalier was meant to be a tour de force, a display of architectural bravado that combined a relatively new form of staircase design with a lavish decorative treatment. Yet despite its spatial and functional importance, the staircase was short-lived, destroyed in 1752 under Louis XV. Its particulars are known mainly from seventeenth- and eighteenth-century prints that detail every aspect of its original appearance. These prints of the Grand Escalier mark the intersection of two trajectories in French architectural theory: the representation of the staircase as a demonstration of technical achievement and the representation of the interior as an essential component of planning and design. The prints demonstrate how the Grand Escalier departed from the Renaissance tradition of the showpiece staircase, a tradition in which a staircase’s independence from the wall as a means of support became a sign of structural daring. Instead, the Grand Escalier’s virtuosity is the way it merges with the wall, effectively incorporating the inhabitants of the room as the final elements of a complex decorative program.

Our thanks to the Friends of the Princeton University Library for their support of exhibitions and publications celebrating the superb materials in Princeton’s Rare Books and Special Collections.

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Tour Versailles on Paper

Please join us on Friday, May 29 at 11:00 a.m. for a tour of the exhibition Versailles on Paper!

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Visit from the students of the Lycée Français de New York

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It was a busy morning in our Versailles on Paper exhibition gallery. We had a visit from students from the Lycée Français de New York (LFNY), thanks to the special planning of their teachers Arthur Plaza and Brandon S. Marshall and to Nicolas L’Hotellier, Director of the Secondary School. We are grateful that they took the time and trouble to come down from New York City.

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After a brief tour of the exhibition, the students broke into groups of two and each pair studied an individual object in the gallery, composed a text, and presented a video lecture about that work for their classmates to view. Surprisingly, no one case or subject attracted the most attention but each student gravitated to his or her own specialization.
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The Lycée holds the distinction of being one of the most renowned bilingual French schools in North America. The school welcomes students from more than 50 nationalities, giving them an education based on academic excellence and personal growth. It prepares them to become responsible, dynamic citizens, capable of playing an important role in the future of the world.

Le Lycée Français de New York est l’une des écoles bilingues françaises les plus réputées en Amérique du Nord. Le Lycée prodigue une éducation fondée sur l’excellence scolaire et l’épanouissement personnel à des élèves de plus de 50 nationalités différentes. Ils apprennent à devenir des citoyens responsables, capables de jouer un rôle important dans l’avenir du monde.
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lfny7For more information on the exhibition, which continues to mid July, see:

http://libphp-dev.princeton.edu/versailles/