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On view in the âRoman Art from the Louvreâ exhibition, âBust of a Young Gaul,â circa 200 AD, fine grained marble, 24¾ by 17¾ by 11 inches, Musée du Louvre. ©AFA/ Musée du Louvre/Anne Chauvet 2006.
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From :Symbols of Power,â Henry Auguste (1759â1816), âThe Empressâs Nef,â 1804, gilded silver, Musée National du Château, Fontainebleau; on deposit from the Mobilier National Paris.
2 cuts requested 9-5 keri at AFA
Photos downloaded from e-m link sent 9-6
FOR 9/14
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS SPONSORS âSYMBOLS OF POWERâ AND âROMAN ARTâ w/2 cuts
avv/gs set 9/5 #711373
NEW YORK CITY â The American Federation of Arts (AFA)Â is organizing several new exhibitions, including âSymbols of Power: Napoleon and the Art of the Empire Style 1800â1815,â now on view at the Saint Louis Art Museum through September 16 and opening at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, October 21; and âRoman Art from the Louvre,â which opens September 23 at the Indianapolis Museum of Art.
Both exhibitions offer an opportunity for American museum visitors to see rarely traveled masterworks from renowned French collections.
âSymbols of Powerâ is the first definitive exhibition on the Empire Style, so named because it was designed to promote the First French Empire â Napoleonâs rule of France. Drawn from the holdings of the Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris, and prominent public and private collections in France and the United States, the exhibition includes some of the most important works of the Empire period.
Highlights include furniture, silverware, porcelain, bronzes, jewelry, architectural studies, clothing textiles, wallpapers, metalwork and sculpture.
âSymbols of Powerâ provides an overview of a sophisticated and highly influential decorative style, as well as insight into the political, social and economic forces behind its development and evolution.
Drawn from the vast collection of the Musee du Louvre, âRoman Art from the Louvreâ is an unprecedented exhibition that examines aspects of Roman art within artistic, historical and socio-cultural contexts, exploring the themes of religion, urbanism, war, imperial expansion, funerary practices, intellectual life and family.
Nearly 200 examples of Roman art are on view, including a variety of monumental sculptures, sarcophagi, marble busts, reliefs, bronze and terra cotta statuettes, jewelry, silver pieces, glass and metal vessels, mosaics and frescoes.
âRoman Art from the Louvreâ will be on view at the Indianapolis Museum of Art through January 6 and travel to the newly expanded Seattle Art Museum and then will be on view at the Oklahoma City Museum Art.
This fall will mark the opening of other AFA exhibitions, including: âColor as Field: American Painting, 1950â1975,â âWhen Gold Blossoms: Indian Jewelry from the Sudan L. Beningson Collectionâ and âComing of Age: American Art, 1850s to 1950s.â
Founded through an Act of Congress in 1909, the AFA is one of the nationâs oldest not-for-profit organizations devoted to the public exhibition of art. The AFA initiates and organizes a program of exhibitions that range in content from ancient to contemporary art, and travel to national museums and abroad. The ADA also publishes exhibition catalogs and offers educational programs to enrich the publicâs experience and understanding of art and culture.
The federation is at 305 East 47th Street, Tenth Floor. For information, 212-988-7700 or www.afaweb.org.