"New at the Morgan: Acquisitions Since 2004" Exhibition
The Morgan Library & Museum
This event has ended.
Presenting over one hundred works that underscore the great scope of the Morgan's collecting interests, the exhibition includes old master and modern drawings, literary and musical manuscripts, illuminated texts, and rare printed books and bindings. The selections were drawn from more than 1,200 works acquired since 2004 and include seminal figures from various genres. The earliest work on view is a treatise in praise of poetry, dating to ca. 1300; the most recent, a drawing by Alexander Ross, dates to 2007. Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts are represented by, among other objects, the jewel-like Prayer Book of Queen Claude de France and the Book of Hours of the scribe Guillaume Lambert. Drawings include sheets by Rembrandt, Degas, Sargent, and Matisse. The show also features manuscripts and letters by Robert Frost, Vincent van Gogh, Henry James, Dylan Thomas, and Oscar Wilde. A large group of first edition music scores that came to the Morgan as part of the James Fuld Collection are also on view, notably a sketch by Beethoven for his Seventh Symphony and a set of proofs of Wagner's opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. A highlight of the exhibition is the prominence of works by contemporary artists, a recent area of interest for the Morgan. In addition to the work by Alexander Ross, on view are drawings by Helen Frankenthaler, Red Grooms, Robert Morris, and Bruce Nauman, among others. Modern photography is also represented with works by Irving Penn and Diane Arbus.
[Image: Alexander Ross "Untitled" (2007) Colored pencil on paper 30.25 x 22.75 in. Purchased as the gift of Whitney B. Armstrong and on the Young Associates Fund for Twentieth-Century Acquisitions; Photography by Kevin Noble, courtesy of David Nolan Gallery, NY.]
Media
Schedule
from April 17, 2009 to October 18, 2009
Artist(s)
Guillaume Lambert, Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn, Edgar Degas, John Singer Sargent, Herni Matisse, Robert Frost, Vincent van Gogh, Henry James, Dylan Thomas, Oscar Wilde, Ludwig van Beethoven, Wilhelm Richard Wagner, Alexander Ross, Helen Frankenthaler, Red Grooms, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Irving Penn, Diane Arbus et al.