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Calendar
December
1999
Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
121
Wall Street, 432-2977
Through January 10
"Goethe
the Scientist"
Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), author of Faust, also engaged in
scientific research throughout most of his life, including work
in the fields of comparative osteology, botany, geology, optics,
color theory, and meteorology. An exhibition of reports and notes
from experiments places Goethe's own writings among related works
by contemporary German, Swiss, French, and British scientists.
Through
December 22
"George
Washington"
An exhibition
of manuscripts, drawings, letters, books, and memorabilia, drawn
from the Library's holdings, commemorates the bicentenary of the
death of George Washington. Included is a 1789 letter from Washington
to his nephew George Steptoe Washington, as well as a selection
from the 77 letters of Washington to General Rochambeau, contained
in the Rochambeau Papers that were presented to the Library in 1992
by Paul Mellon '29.
Hours:
Monday through Friday, 8:30am-4:30pm
University
Art Gallery
1111 Chapel Street, 432-0600
Through February 13
"Changing Impressions: Marcantonio Raimondi
and 16th-Century Print Connoisseurship"
An unusual
aspect of 16th-century printmaking comes to light in this exhibition
of 20 prints. At the core of the display are four impressions of
Mars, Venus, and Cupid by Marcantonio Raimondi (c.1480-1527). All
four, printed on parchment, have been altered, either by masking
part of the plate or by rubbing the parchment to remove the ink.
Were the alterations made as experiments (unusual among 16th-century
Italian prints), or were they deliberately doctored to deceive collectors?
Using
ultraviolet and infrared photography, X-rays, microscopic examination
of surfaces, and analyses of both ink and parchment, the exhibition
explores in great technical detail the four Mars, Venus, and Cupid
impressions and others by Raimondi, as well as masterworks by contemporary
Italian engravers and Albrecht Durer. A catalog containing both
scientific and art historical essays accompanies the exhibition.
Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, 1-6pm.
Center
for British Art
1080 Chapel Street, 432-2800
January 20 through February 27
"Ruskin: Past, Present, and Future"
Artist
and art critic, teacher, social commentator, environmentalist -- John Ruskin (1819-1900) was one of the most significant figures
of the Victorian age. His influence on cultural and political thought
has endured both in Europe and in North America throughout the 20th
century.
Ruskin's
passion for art and natural history developed at an early age, under
the tutelage of watercolorists James Duffield Harding and Anthony
Vandyke Copley Fielding, and with the gift to Ruskin of a copy of
Samuel Rogers's Italy, containing engravings from designs by J.M.W.
Turner. The book, Ruskin later claimed, determined "the entire direction
of my life's energies." At Oxford Ruskin developed an interest in
drawing and published his first study of architecture, which led
to his later vocation as an art critic.
An exhibition
of watercolors, drawings, prints, books, and manuscripts examines
Ruskin's life and legacy, and documents Ruskin's formative influences,
including works by Harding, Fielding, Samuel Prout, and Turner.
On January 22, the BAC will host a symposium on Ruskin with speakers
from North America and Europe. In addition, a complementary display
at the Beinecke Library features manuscripts, drawings, letters,
books, photographs, and memorabilia drawn from the Library's holdings.
Through
January 9
"A Treasure House in Farmington"
The Lewis
Walpole Library, located in a colonial home in Farmington, Connecticut,
was given to Yale in 1979 by Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis '18, who devoted
his life to collecting the letters and works of Horace Walpole,
the noted author, collector, and man of letters. In celebration
of the 20th anniversary of this bequest to Yale, the library is
exhibiting many of its most precious possessions at the BAC, including
furniture, furnishings, and paintings. Most of the objects are on
view to the general public for the first time.
Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, 12-5pm
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