MFA Boston Will Present'El Greco To Velézquez'Celebration Of Spanish Works Opens April 20
MFA Boston Will Present
âEl Greco To Velázquezâ
Celebration Of Spanish Works Opens April 20
2 cuts requested 3-19
set both at 1½ col
Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velázquez (Spanish 1599â1660), âLuis de Gongóra y Argote,â 1622, oil on canvas, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, exhibition organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University.
El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulus, (Greek, active in Spain, 1541â1614), âView of Toledo,â oil on canvas, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, H.O. Havermeyer Collection, bequest of Mrs H.O. Havermeyer, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, exhibition organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University.
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MFA BOSTON WILL PRESENT âEL GRECO TO VELAZQUEZâ w/2 cuts
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BOSTON, MASS. â The vibrant age that served as a backdrop both for the end of El Grecoâs brilliant career and the beginning of Velazquezâs is the focal point of the groundbreaking exhibition, âEl Greco to Velazquez: Art during the Reign of Philip III,â debuting at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), on April 20, and on view through July 27.
Organized by the MFA and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University in Durham, N.C., the exhibition will shed new light on this little known period of 23 years (1598â1621) during which Philip III ruled Spain. Featured are more than 60 paintings, among them 11 works by El Greco and seven by Velazquez, including two masterpieces from the MFAâs own collection, El Grecoâs âPortrait of Fray Hortensio Felix Paravicino,â 1609, and Velazquezâs âLuis de Gongora y Argote,â 1622.
âEl Greco to Velazquezâ is curated by the MFAâs Ronni Baer (Mrs Russell W. Baker senior curator of paintings, art of Europe) and the Nasherâs Sarah Schroth (Nancy Hanks senior curator).
âEl Greco to Velazquezâ offers an in-depth study of Spainâs art in the context of the political, religious and social history from 1598 to 1621, a period bookended by the original late style of El Greco and the emergent naturalism in the work of the young Velazquez. It focuses not only on the achievements of Spainâs greatest painters, but also introduces to the American public outstanding works by lesser known yet highly accomplished artists, among them Juan Bautista Maino, Juan Sanchez Cotan, Luis Tristan and Gregorio Fernandez.
âThis internationally important exhibition provides an unprecedented opportunity to illuminate the reign of one of Spainâs most understudied kings, Philip III,â said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund director of the Museum of Fine Arts. âThe MFA is pleased to sponsor new scholarship that will lead to a better understanding of this period, and to bring to Boston masterpieces by some of Spainâs greatest painters.â
The exhibition gathers together the best examples of painting and sculpture made between 1598 and 1621 in order to show the accomplishments of a key group of Spanish artists in creating a new visual language that addressed and expressed the demands of their time. In addition to paintings from the MFAâs collection, works included in the exhibition represent important national and international loans from, among others: the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; the Museo Nacional del Prado; the Musee du Louvre; the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna; and the National Gallery in London. Works on loan (many of which have never previously traveled abroad) also are drawn from private collections and churches in Spain.
A reevaluation of the importance of the reign of Philip III to the history of art is the goal of âEl Greco to Velazquez.â To achieve this, the exhibition is divided into thematic sections: Late El Greco, Portraiture, Religion and the Court, Still Life and the Bodegon, and the Duke of Lermaâs camarin.
Included in âEl Greco to Velazquezâ are two of the artistâs most famous paintings, which reflect this dramatic new direction: âView of Toledoâ (around 1600, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and âLaocoonâ (around 1610â14, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.).
âEl Greco to Velazquez,â accompanied by a catalog, charts the birth of a new style, which formed the basis of the art created during Spainâs subsequent âGolden Age,â and explores the artistic environment in which the severe, mannered works created under Philip II gave way to a more luxurious, ornamental and naturalistic art that would be the hallmark of Philip IIIâs reign.
The museum is at 465 Huntington Avenue. For information, www.mfa.org on 617-267-9300.