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Metropolitan Museum of Art |
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Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, founded in 1870. The Metropolitan Museum is the foremost repository of art in the United States. It opened in 1880 on its present site on Central Park facing Fifth Ave. The building was designed by Calvert Vaux and J. W. Mould and expanded by Richard Morris Hunt and by McKim, Mead, and White during the early 1900s. It is owned by the city, which contributes a certain sum yearly for upkeep, but otherwise the museum is supported by private endowment and income from memberships and admission fees that are requested as voluntary contributions. The museum's most outstanding collections include European paintings and sculpture of the Renaissance, baroque, and modern periods; pastels; watercolors; miniatures; and a vast number of drawings and graphic art works. The Egyptian wing has the mastaba of Perneb (erected c.2460 B.C.), rebuilt here in its original form. Much of the extensive and remarkable medieval art collection is housed in the Cloisters Cloisters, the, museum of medieval art, in Fort Tryon Park, New York City, overlooking the Hudson River. A branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, it was opened to the public in May, 1938.
..... Click the link for more information. , a separate building in northern Manhattan erected from various medieval components in 1938. The collection of armor is outstanding. The museum houses a great number of works of art from the Middle East and Asia in many media. The American collection shows the development of painting, sculpture, furniture and the decorative arts from the colonial period through the 20th cent., with many objects arranged in period settings. The print collection includes woodcuts and engravings, dating from the 15th cent., and etchings and lithographs. The Costume Institute provides a practical source of inspiration and reference for designers through its collection of thousands of authentic costumes and accessories, international in scope and covering four centuries. The museum houses an important exhibition of antique and primitive musical instruments. Its hundreds of examples of Greek pottery and its Greek and Roman sculptures are among the finest such collections in the world. In the early 1970s the museum acquired the Egyptian Temple of Dendur, the Michael C. Rockefeller collection of primitive art, and the extensive Robert Lehman collection of European art. Additional exhibition space became available (1987) with the opening of the Lila Acheson Wallace wing for 20th cent. art, designed by Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates. In 1980 the museum acquired the André Meyer collection of 19th cent. European art. Walter Annenberg has announced his bequest of his private collection to the museum. BibliographySee C. Tomkins, Merchants and Masterpieces (1970, rev. ed. 1989); two guidebooks, The Cloisters, (3d ed. 1963) and Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide (ed. by K. Howard, 4th ed. rev. 1987). Metropolitan Museum of ArtMost comprehensive collection of art in the U.S. and one of the foremost in the world. It was incorporated in New York City in 1870, and the present building in Central Park on Fifth Avenue was opened in 1880. The Metropolitan was built with the private fortunes of businessmen; today it is owned by the city but supported mainly by private endowment. Its outstanding Egyptian, Mesopotamian, East Asian, Middle Eastern, Greek and Roman, European, pre-Columbian, and U.S. collections include—in addition to paintings, sculpture, and graphic arts—architecture, glass, ceramics, textiles, metalwork, furniture, arms and armour, and musical instruments. It also incorporates a Costume Institute and the Thomas J. Watson Library, one of the world's greatest art and archaeology reference collections. Much of the medieval collection is housed at The Cloisters in Manhattan's Fort Tryon Park; its building (1938) incorporates parts of medieval monasteries and churches. Metropolitan Museum of Art the principal museum in New York City: founded in 1870 and housed in its present premises in Central Park since 1880 Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the largest art collection in the United States. Founded in 1870, the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened in 1872. The museum is situated in Central Park and has a branch in Fort Try on Park. Much of the collection consists of formerly private collections, which were donated to the museum. The museum has departments of American painting and sculpture, arms and armor, ancient Far Eastern and Near Eastern art, ancient Egyptian art, Greek and Roman art, Islamic art, Medieval art (a branch), musical instruments, engravings and lithographs, European painting, and 20th-century art, as well as a book museum, a children’s museum, and a costume institute. The Metropolitan’s collection of masterpieces of world art include Euphronius’ calyx krater depicting Sarpedon, Cellini’s Rospigliosi cup, Raphael’s Madonna and Child Enthroned With Saints, Titian’s Venus and the Lute Player, Vermeer’s Sleeping Girl, El Greco’s View of Toledo, Rembrandt’s Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer, F. Hals’ Hille Babbe, and J. Watteau’s Le Mezzetin. The Metropolitan Museum of Art publishes the periodicals The Bulletin, Calendar of Events, and Annual Report. WORKSLerman, L. The Museum: One Hundred Years and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York [1969.]I. A. ANTONOVNA Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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