Friday, December 12, 2025

Greece in Rome

 


Capitoline Museums, Villa Caffarelli
November 29, 2025 - April 12, 2026

On display are over 150 original Greek masterpieces that made ancient Rome shine: an immersive journey retraces the encounter between two extraordinary civilizations, protagonists of a dialogue that shaped Western taste and aesthetics.

On display is a refined and precious selection of over 150 masterpieces—sculptures, reliefs, ceramics, bronzes — all original Greek works, some exhibited for the first time and others returned to Rome after centuries of dispersion . This is the distinctive feature of the event, which offers the exceptional opportunity to admire, in a unique and prestigious museum space like Villa Caffarelli, such a rich and authoritative collection of originals, brought together to restore the magnificence of Greek art and exalt its beauty and material purity. Seeing these works side by side also allows us to reconstruct the history of the meanings they have acquired over time: objects born as votive or funerary objects become political symbols, entering aristocratic homes to represent culture, prestige, and power. The exhibition project also reflects this transformation, highlighting how each work has had multiple lives, multiple uses, and multiple interpretations; they are therefore not only aesthetic testimonies but objects that, in their passage from Greece to Rome, changed function and contributed to shaping the Roman artistic language .

The exhibition "Greece in Rome" traces the arrival of Greek art in Rome through three key stages: the first imports , the period of Mediterranean conquests , and the age of collecting . Alongside the three distinct phases of the narrative arc, it explores the contexts in which the works were used: public spaces, sacred spaces, and private residences. This latter period marked the rise of private collecting , when Neo-Attic art developed with the production of furnishings commissioned by the city's elite: the artifacts became instruments of self-representation and status symbols.

Among the numerous masterpieces on display, the large Capitoline bronzes , exceptionally reunited, stand out, alongside key monuments such as the magnificent stele from the Abbey of Grottaferrata and the sculptures of Niobids from the Horti Sallustiani , which were dispersed between Rome and Copenhagen. A return of strong symbolic value is represented by a female acroterial sculpture from the Al Thani collection in Paris, which was in Rome in the 17th century. Also on display are previously unseen artifacts , such as the Attic ceramics discovered in recent archaeological excavations near the Colosseum.

The exhibition "Greece in Rome" is striking not only for the magnificence of the many original masterpieces on display, but also for the effectiveness of its narrative. The exhibition is enriched with multimedia content that guides visitors on an immersive journey through architectural reconstructions, ceremonial settings, and decorative elements . This integrated approach, combining archaeology and digital technologies, offers both an engaging visitor experience and the opportunity to contextualize the works in their original setting, introducing the public to the most recent interpretations and modern techniques for studying and restoring ancient artifacts.

In addition to works from the Rome Capital System  —the Capitoline Museums, the Antiquarium, the Centrale Montemartini, the Giovanni Barracco Museum of Ancient Sculpture, the Museum of Roman Civilization, the Ara Pacis Museum, the Theatre of Marcellus, the Sacred Area of ​​Largo Argentina, and the Museum of the Imperial Fora— and from important Italian institutions , such as the National Roman Museum , the Uffizi Galleries in Florence , and the Archaeological Museum of Naples , the exhibition boasts loans from the world's most famous museums, including the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Vatican Museums , the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the British Museum in London, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Budapest. The exhibition also features works from private collections, particularly the Fondazione Sorgente Group in Rome and the Al Thani Collection in Paris.

THE EXHIBITION PATH

The exhibition is divided into five sections that guide visitors along a narrative that traces the development of the profound artistic and cultural fusion between Rome and the Greek world. Through numerous material testimonies, the public can understand how permeable Roman society was to Greek influences and how the adoption of the Greek artistic model contributed to defining its identity, as well as to the city's urban transformation.

A graphic map that previews the exhibition's structure welcomes visitors.

SECTION I

The first section, entitled " Rome Meets Greece," explores the first contacts between Rome and the Greek communities—as early as the 8th and 7th centuries BC—facilitated by the city's strategic position on the banks of the Tiber and at the center of Mediterranean trade routes. It was through these channels that refined artifacts, predominantly ceramics, arrived in the city, destined to be placed in prestigious contexts such as sanctuaries and tombs. Significant examples include some pottery fragments from the Euboea region in Greece, found in the Sacred Area of ​​Sant'Omobono, and the so-called Group 125, discovered on the Esquiline Hill, a rich aristocratic funerary trousseau with fine ceramics imported from Corinth. The openness to Greek products is evident not only in trade but also in the early identification of Greek and Roman deities, as evidenced by the fragment of a krater depicting the god Hephaestus on a mule found in the Roman Forum.

Despite the profound changes that affected Rome between the 6th and 5th centuries BC—from the fall of the monarchy to the establishment of the Republic in 509 BC—the desire to assimilate Greek forms, models, and rituals did not cease. On the contrary, it intensified with a growing importation of objects of all kinds: bronze votive statuettes, marble artifacts, and cups used in sacred rituals.

SECTION II

From importation to appropriation. The essence of the second section of the exhibition, Rome Conquers Greece , is based on this shift in Rome's attitude toward Greece—by then subjugated during the 2nd century BC. With its domination of the eastern Mediterranean, statues, paintings, and precious metal artifacts arrived in the city, reshaping its urban face and enriching temples and public buildings. The room in this section provides an idea of ​​the artistic loot transferred to Roman territory, mostly consisting of bronze artifacts such as the famous krater with a dedication to King Mithridates Eupator , recovered from the seabed off Nero's villa at Anzio.

SECTION III

The next step after appropriation is integration. The third section, Greece Conquers Rome , shows how many of the works of art that arrived from Greece in the wake of the victorious generals were inserted into the city's public spaces – squares, porticoes, temples, and libraries – helping to transform their appearance and nourish the Romans' growing passion for Hellenistic culture, now considered an essential part of the education of every cultured man. The transfer of these objects entailed their repurposing: artefacts born as votive offerings or as monuments celebrating Greek sovereigns were displayed as symbols of Roman power, taking on new functions and new values ​​within the city. A fitting example is the Templum Pacis , the large complex commissioned by Vespasian after the victory in Judea (75 AD), which perfectly encapsulates the subtle boundary between power and art: born as a symbol of re-established peace, the temple soon became a sort of museum of Greek art in the heart of the Empire.

This section hosts the technological heart of the exhibition, a spectacular video installation that allows visitors to rediscover—through a video projection with synchronized lighting— the lost world to which many of the works belonged. Thanks to this digital reconstruction, visitors can observe how the sculptures interacted with ancient spaces and explore complex processes such as the recomposition of sculptural fragments.

SECTION IV

Not only public places, but also private homes could be enriched by works of Greek art. The fourth section, “ Greek Works of Art in Private Spaces , ” is divided into two subsections, grouping the works by area of ​​provenance. First, it presents the Greek sculptures that decorated the horti , the sumptuous residential complexes immersed in the greenery of nymphaeums and fountains on the outskirts of central Rome. Thus, between the Pincian Hill and the Quirinal Hill, the Sallustian Gardens stretched , famous for the vast collection of sculptures that adorned them—a selection of masterpieces, exceptionally brought together here, can be admired. Among them, the pediment sculptures stand out, depicting the myth of the slaughter of Niobe's children, killed by Apollo and Artemis. These sculptures have long been compared to those depicting the Amazonomachy from the Temple of Apollo Sosianus , for stylistic reasons. Also present are significant finds from the gardens of Maecenas and Lamiani, which extended across the Esquiline Hill. The second grouping includes works connected to Imperial-era villas, mostly located in the suburbs, a sign of the Romans' enduring admiration for Hellenic art, considered a symbol of prestige and cultural refinement.

SECTION V

Beginning in the 2nd century BC, many Greek sculptors immigrated to Rome and set up thriving workshops there, specializing in the creation of cult statues in the classicist style for Roman temples. Later, in the 1st century BC, the growing demand for Greek art encouraged the establishment of workshops, mostly active in Delos and Athens, specializing in refined creations in an eclectic style. This production is described in the fifth and final section, “ Greek Artists in the Service of Rome .” The works often drew on traditional mythological or Dionysian subjects, as depicted in the monumental fountain in the shape of a drinking horn ( rhyton ), decorated with Maenads and signed by the artist Pontios. Rather than simply creating copies, the aim of Neo-Attic art was to rework Greek models, adapting them to the new, predominantly decorative, functions in the public and private spaces of the Roman world. Greek art had by now become a flexible instrument bent to Roman needs : the profound religious sentiment that permeated the best artistic production of the archaic and classical ages had been lost in favor of the aesthetic quality of the work of art.



TATUA DI NIOBIDE FERITA Da Roma, presso il ninfeo degli Horti Sallustiani Marmo pario lychnites | 430 a.C. circa Roma, Museo Nazionale Romano, Palazzo Massimo


CAVALLO DI BRONZO Bronzo, V sec. a.C. Roma, Musei Capitolini


STATUA COLOSSALE DI ERCOLE Da Roma, Foro Boario Bronzo dorato II-I secolo a.C. o età imperiale Roma, Musei Capitolini


LEONE CHE ATTACCA UN CAVALLO Marmo pentelico, con restauri in marmo lunense Roma, Musei Capitolini

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming


Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut 

Through May 10, 2026

Exhibition: “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming


Significance: One of the most influential sculptors working today, Ursula von Rydingsvard (American, b. Germany, 1942) is renowned for her monumental cedar sculptures and labor-intensive process. “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” surveys the last 20 years of the artist’s five-decade career, revealing themes of vulnerability and open-endedness. The exhibition is the first to explore the artist’s improvisational approach and long-standing practice of returning to sculptures or deliberately reworking them years later. 

The exhibition also acknowledges von Rydingsvard’s deep roots in Connecticut, where she moved as a child when her family immigrated to the United States following World War II.

Content: “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” features 15 powerful sculptures and wall reliefs along with a selection of 19 paper pulp works. Together, they illustrate the tensions between intuition and methodology in von Rydingsvard’s practice as well as the aesthetic and emotional power of her materials.

The exhibition also chronicles the subtle yet perceptible shift in the artist’s approach over the last 20 years. The construction of von Rydingsvard’s works has grown increasingly complex and she has repurposed parts of her sculptures with greater frequency, sometimes reconfiguring them to create an entirely new work of art. This exhibition sheds light on the unique ways in which her works come into fruition — their stages of becoming — and how the constant evolution of her ideas and practice leads to emotionally resonant and highly experimental art.

Artistic Process: Ursula von Rydingsvard has experimented with a wide variety of mediums including bronze, copper, animal intestines and polyurethane resin. Since the mid-1970s, she has worked primarily with cedar, a soft, malleable material that can be easily manipulated to produce abstract shapes. This choice of medium also evokes childhood memories of the wooden barracks at refugee camps she and her family lived in after World War II.

Von Rydingsvard’s work exemplifies technical mastery and conceptual depth. She begins each sculpture by drawing a chalk outline on the studio floor. Within this desired shape, she and her studio assistants stack four-by-four cedar beams, one plank at a time, and painstakingly cut, assemble and glue them into place. Each cumulative layer is an intuitive response to the one before. The artist has embraced intuition and feeling as fundamental elements of her practice, noting that each sculpture “is at least partially determining its own destiny.” The final sculpture often resembles geological and primordial forms found in nature, elements of the body or utilitarian objects such as shovels and bowls.

In the last two decades, von Rydingsvard has expanded her sculptural vocabulary, collaborating with the papermaking studio Dieu Donné to produce highly dimensional works cast from abaca and handmade linen paper embellished with cotton, lace, silk and other organic materials. With their soft edges and frayed threads, these pieces embody a sense of elusiveness similar to that elicited by her large-scale sculptures.

About the artist: Von Rydingsvard’s work is represented in the permanent collections of more than 40 museums including the Art Institute of Chicago, Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Storm King Art Center and the Whitney Museum of American Art. She has been the recipient of many honors, including a Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in the Arts from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (2019), a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Sculpture Center (2014), an Academy Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1994) and fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation (1983) and the National Endowment for the Arts (1979, 1986). A documentary feature about the artist’s practice “Ursula von Rydingsvard: Into Her Own” was produced in 2019. She lives and works in New York City.

Quotes: “In recent years, Ursula von Rydingsvard has relied increasingly on her instinct, both in terms of the making and meaning of her work. ‘states of becoming’ explores in depth von Rydingsvard’s intuitive and iterative approach to making works in cedar and paper, revealing the constant evolution of ideas across her practice.”
— Margarita Karasoulas, curator or art, Bruce Museum.

“I am happy to show my sculptures and drawings together and see them in one space as they are in my head and to have my pieces shown in Connecticut, where I came as a small child with my family. My sculptures, my pieces, come from somewhere deep inside me. I try to not explain why I’m doing anything as I’m working — not to question the actions — and instead trust where each piece will take me and where I will take each piece.”
— Ursula von Rydingsvard

“Ursula von Rydingsvard’s sculptures and paper pulp works show us what happens when artistic practice melds open-ended curiosity and knowledge-seeking across disciplines — when years of patient experimentation with materials yield discoveries that could emerge no other way.”
— Mary-Kate O’Hare, the Susan E. Lynch director and CEO of the Bruce Museum.

Organizer: “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” is organized by the Bruce Museum and curated by Margarita Karasoulas, curator of art, with Jordan Hillman, assistant curator.

Publication and Audio Guide: The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue featuring contributions by Karasoulas, Nora Lawrence, Robert S. Mattison and an interview with von Rydingsvard. An audio guide in “states of becoming” features the voices of contemporary artists — including Diana Al-Hadid, Leonardo Drew, Judy Pfaff, Martin Puryear and Kiki Smith  — offering personal perspectives on von Rydingsvard’s artistic legacy and influence.

 

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 

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Installation view of “Ursula von Rydingsvard: states of becoming” at the Bruce Museum. Photo by Joshua Simpson Photography (@joshuasimpsonphoto).

 


Friday, December 5, 2025

ART AROUND 1800

 Hamburger Kunsthalle

5 December 2025 to 29 March 2026

ART AROUND 1800 revisits the legendary exhibition cycle of that name at the Hamburger Kunsthalle. That series, presented in nine parts from 1974 to 1981, examines the impact of art in the »Age of Revolutions«, launching seminal debates on the social relevance of art that continue to resonate today. The current show critiques the historical displays created under then director Werner Hofmann from a contemporary perspective, updating their approach to classifying and ordering things. Over 50 paintings, books and works on paper dating to the era around 1800 from the Kunsthalle's collection are supplemented by 70 selected loans and works by five contemporary artists. Around 100 artists are represented.

Like the original series, the current exhibition is being shown in the rotonda on the upper floor of the new museum wing inaugurated in 1919. In the 1970s, this area served as a central »space for contemplation« and for curatorial experiments. Arranged in ten stations, ART AROUND 1800 unfolds a panoramic survey of an epoch, looking at themes such as the Enlightenment, violence, dreams, the political landscape and industrialization as well as revolution and notions of freedom – from today's point of view. The historical exhibition series revised European art-historical narratives by focusing on themes and artists that broke with the conventions of their time: Ossian, Caspar David Friedrich, Johann Heinrich Füssli, William Blake, Johan Tobias Sergel, William Turner, Philipp Otto Runge, John Flaxman and Francisco Goya. ART AROUND 1800 now highlights aspects that were lacking or which received little attention in the 1970s exhibition cycle: feminism, women artists, the Jewish Enlightenment, slavery, abolitionism and the Haitian Revolution.

The publication Art around 1800. Curating as a scientific practice. The Hamburger Kunsthalle in the 1970s (Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2024, hardcover, in German, 440 pages, 395 illustrations) accompanies the exhibition. Edited and with essays by guest curators Petra Lange-Berndt and Dietmar Rübel as well as David Bindman, Johannes Grave, Charlotte Klonk, Jenny Nachtigall, Richard Taws and Monika Wagner, among others, the volume documents all the exhibitions in the original series ART AROUND 1800. The authors take a critical look at the decade after 1968 and offer new perspectives on that era of experimentation. The catalog is available at a bookstore price of 48 euros at the museum shop or at www.freunde-der-kunsthalle.de .

Participating artists : Giacomo Aliprandi, Saul Ascher, Inigo Barlow, Robert Bénard, Benedict Heinrich Bendix, Pierre-Gabriel Berthault, William Blake, Louis-Simon Boizot, Henry Winsor Bond, François Bonne-ville, Edward Francis Burney, Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki, Jacques-Simon Chéreau, John Heaviside Clark, Jacques-Louis Copia, George & Isaac Cruikshank, Louis Darcis, Erasmus Darwin, Jacques-Louis David, François Séraphin Delpech, Charles Melchior Descourtis, Auguste Desperet, Claude-Louis Desray, Mark Dion, Richard Earlom, Edmund Evans, Charles Fernique, John Flaxman, Maria Flaxman, Caspar David Friedrich, Johann Heinrich Füssli, Henry Gastineau, Jean Baptiste Gautier, François Gérard, James Gillray, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Francisco Goya, Anton Graff, William Hackwood, Isidore-Stanislas Helman, Thomas Higham, William Hogarth, Thomas Holloway, Jean-Pierre-Marie Jazet, Angelika Kauffmann, Carl Wilhelm Kolbe, Samuel Lacey, Philibert-Benoît de La Rue, Moses Samuel Loewe, Philip James de Loutherbourg, Joseph Wilson Lowry, Thomas Lupton, William Lutwyche, James Macpherson, John Martin, Johann Wilhelm Meil, Moses Mendelssohn, Franz Xaver Messerschmidt, Scipio Moorhead, Jean-Michel Moreau, James Nasmyth, Friedrich Perthes, George Pickering, William Pickett, Tommaso Piroli, Sigmar Polke, Jean-Louis Prieur, Marcus Rainsford, Thomas Rowlandson, William Read, Jean-Baptiste Regnault, Philipp Otto Runge, Auguste Sandoz, Piat Joseph Sauvage, Frédéric-Jean Schall, Marten Schech, Johann David Schubert, Johan Tobias Sergel, Thomas Spence, John Gabriel Stedman, Jean-Joseph François & Jean Pierre Antoine Tassaert, Albert Teichel, Suzanne Treister, Joseph Mallord William Turner, John Walker, Kara Walker, Josiah Wedgwood, Moses Wessely, Phillis Wheatley, Loeser Leo Wolf, Joseph Wright of Derby and Johann Zoffany.Tsade





Auguste Desperet (1804–1865) Dritter Ausbruch des Vulkans von 1789, 1833
Lithographie, 260 × 330 mm Privatsammlung, Hamburg
© Foto: Petra Dwenger


Thomas Rowlandson (1757–1827) Procession to the Hustings after a Successful Canvass, 1784 Radierung, 260 × 355 mm Privatsammlung, Hamburg © Foto: Petra Dwenger


Anonym Ein Schnellverfahren des französi- schen Volkes, um einen Aristokraten von seinem Hab und Gut zu befreien, um 1790 Radierung, 170 × 120 mm Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstich- kabinett © Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Christoph Irrgang


Maria Flaxman (1768–1833) Traum: Eine Feengestalt, 1803 Kupferstich: William Blake
in:
William Hayley: The Triumphs of Temper. A Poem ..., London, 12. Auflage, 1803 Privatsammlung, Hamburg © Foto: Petra Dwenger


Angelika Kauffmann (1741–1807) Jugendliches Selbstbildnis als Zeichnerin, um 1770
Feder in Braun, braun und grau laviert, 190 x 161 mm 
Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstich- kabinett © Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Christoph Irrgang


François Gérard (1770–1837) Ossian am Ufer der Lora beschwört die Geister beim Klang der Harfe, um 1810 Öl auf Leinwand, 211 × 221 cm Hamburger Kunsthalle
© Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Elke Walford

D


Johann Heinrich Füssli (1741– 1825) Der Gerächte, ca. 1806
Öl auf Leinwand, 92 x 72 cm Hamburger Kunsthalle, Dauerleih- gabe der Stiftung Hamburger Kunst- sammlungen 
© SHK / Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Elke Walford



Jean-Baptiste Regnault (1754– 1829) Freiheit oder Tod, ca. 1794
Öl auf Leinwand, 60 x 49 cm Hamburger Kunsthalle 
© Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Elke Walford


Daniel Chodowiecki (1726–1801) Göttin der Toleranz, ca. 1791
Öl auf Leinwand, 75 x 60 cm Deutsches Hugenotten-Museum, Bad Karlshafen 
© Foto: Fred Dott




Van Eyck: The Portraits


 National Gallery London

21 November 2026 – 11 April 2027

The first ever exhibition of the portraits of the Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck (active 1422–1441), will open at the National Gallery in winter 2026.

Bringing together for the first time, from across Europe, all nine of the artist’s painted portraits, Van Eyck: The Portraits (21 November 2026 – 11 April 2027) will show half of the twenty or so surviving autograph pictures by one of the supreme figures of the Northern Renaissance.

This is an artist who not only changed the genre of portraiture - but also redefined who got to be portrayed. Capturing a moment when access to art widened, the sitters van Eyck depicted were no longer only kings, queens, or aristocrats but affluent merchants, successful craftsmen and the artist’s relatives.

Exceptional reunions will see the Gallery’s own popular Arnolfini Portrait (1434), the most visited painting page on its website, displayed for the first time ever with a panel showing the same sitter, 'Portrait of a Man (Giovanni? Arnolfini)' (c.1440, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin).

Van Eyck’s newly conserved Portrait of a Man (Self Portrait?) (1433, the National Gallery) will be shown next to the portrait of his enterprising wife Margaret (1439, Groeningemuseum, Bruges), the first known portrait of a woman who was not a member of the aristocracy. For the first time in its history, Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum will allow both its paintings by van Eyck to go on loan at the same time.

Foregrounding new research on the artist’s technique, original frames and cryptic inscriptions, and addressing lingering controversies over his sitters’ identities, the exhibition’s catalogue will be the first monograph ever published on the subject of van Eyck’s portraits – surprising given the vast literature on the artist.

Emma Capron, Curator of Early Netherlandish and German Paintings at the National Gallery, says: ‘Some stories do not have a beginning. Portraiture is one of them. It bursts onto the scene fully formed in the 1430s under the brush of Jan van Eyck. None of the stylised likenesses that preceded his work would pass as a portrait today: you would not recognise their sitters if you walked by them on the street.'

'This changes with van Eyck. Pushing the possibilities of oil painting to convey a convincing illusion of reality, suddenly we are faced with individuals pulsating with life, every single detail of their appearance captured, sitters who look back at us and who speak to us through elaborate and often enigmatic inscriptions. These portraits’ ability to baffle by their precision and liveliness is intact today. Their impact belies their intimate scale. We are really proud and grateful to our lenders to be able to show van Eyck’s pioneering contribution to the rise of portraiture in this once-in-a-lifetime exhibition.’

National Gallery Director Gabriele Finaldi says: 'Van Eyck is one of the pillars of the National Gallery's collection and a foundational figure in the European history of art. The portraits reflect a remarkable sensitivity to his sitters and an astounding technical virtuosity in their execution.' 

Images



NG186
Jan van Eyck
'Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his Wife'
Short title: 'The Arnolfini Portrait', 1434
oil on wood
82.2 × 60 cm
© The National Gallery, London



L1094 
Jan van Eyck
'Margaret, the Artist's Wife', 1439
Oil on oak, 32.6 × 25.8 cm
Municipal Museums Bruges, Groeningemuseum 
© Municipal Museums Bruges, Groeningemuseum. Photo: The National Gallery, London





Jan van Eyck
Portrait of a Man ('Léal Souvenir')
1432
oil on wood
33.3 × 18.9 cm
© The National Gallery, London


Jan van Eyck
Portrait of a Man (from the Arnolfini family?), about 1440
Oil on panel, 30 × 21.6 cm
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
Photo © Scala, Florence


Jan van Eyck
Baudoin de Lannoy, about 1428-1441
oil on panel, 26.6 × 19.5 cm
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin 
Photo © Scala, Florence


Jan van Eyck
Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon, about 1430
Oil on panel, 22.5 × 16.6 cm
Brukenthal National Museum, Sibiu, Romania
© Brukenthal National Museum, Sibiu, Romania


Grandma Moses: A Good Day’s Work

 Smithsonian American Art Museum 

Nov. 25 through July 12, 2026

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art

September 12, 2026March 29, 2027

"Grandma Moses: A Good Day’s Work" repositions Anna Mary Robertson “Grandma” Moses (1860–1961) as a multidimensional force in American art, whose beloved painted recollections of rural life earned her a distinctive place in the cultural imagination of the postwar era. Drawing its name from Moses’ reflection on her own life as a “good day’s work,” the exhibition reveals how Moses’ art fused creativity, labor and memories from a century-long life.

 Also see Grandma Moses at Auction

The exhibition will be on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum from Nov. 25 through July 12, 2026. It is organized by Leslie Umberger, senior curator of folk and self-taught art, and Randall Griffey, former head curator, with support from curatorial assistant Maria R. Eipert. The exhibition will travel following its premiere in Washington, D.C.

“Grandma Moses: A Good Day’s Work” is the culmination of a special collection initiative at the museum that began in 2016. The exhibition is anchored by 33 artworks from the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s collection, including many of Moses’ most celebrated paintings. The 88 works in the exhibition are drawn from the museum’s holdings and loans from 30 private collections and public museums and institutions.

This selection of objects, primarily created between the late 1930s and the artist’s death in 1961, are woven into a narrative that explores lesser-known aspects of Moses’ life, including the years she spent living, working and raising her family in post-Reconstruction Virginia. Later sections of the exhibition probe Moses’ artistic evolution as the labor of artmaking displaced the hours once dedicated to family and farming, and her personal transformation from farmwife to famous artist in Cold War America. Photographs, ephemeral objects and Moses’ own words—drawn largely from her autobiography—illuminate artworks that were deeply connected to the artist’s life.

“Grandma Moses was instrumental in bringing self-taught art to the forefront of American consciousness,” said Jane Carpenter-Rock, Acting Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. “As one of the first major museums to champion and collect works in this tradition, our museum is honored to shed new light on Grandma Moses’ practice and engage new generations by becoming a major resource for studying her art and legacy.”

“Moses was many things to many people: she was an ambassador for democratic American values, a folk hero and pop-culture celebrity, a comforting grandmotherly figure representing a bygone age, an inspiring elder reinventing herself in retirement and an untrained artist presenting what was then considered ‘modern primitivism’ as a surprisingly successful alternative to abstract art,” Umberger said. “‘A Good Day’s Work’ reconciles these disparate truths while centering on Moses’ art and the life that inspired it—one shaped by ingenuity, labor, a doggedly positive outlook and a distilled understanding of a life well lived."

In a lifetime that spanned the presidencies of Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy, the artist experienced seismic historical shifts, including the post-Reconstruction and civil rights eras and two world wars. She began painting in earnest in her late 70s and was 80 when gallerist Otto Kallir introduced her to the American public with her first solo exhibition. In her artworks, Moses melded direct observation of nature and life as she saw it, resulting in idiosyncratic, yet engaging, stories of America. “Grandma Moses” as the press would indelibly dub her, quickly became a media sensation, achieving a controversial celebrity status that surpassed the female artists of her day and remains compelling today.

Through a series of gifts and pledges of 15 important paintings from Kallir’s family, along with gifts from several additional donors and select museum purchases, the museum is establishing a destination-collection of 33 works by Moses, balanced across styles, dates, themes and historical moments. A major asset within the museum’s internationally recognized collection of work by folk and self-taught artists, the Moses collection will comprise significant works, from her earliest extant painting, “Untitled (Fireboard)” (1918), to iconic pieces including “Bringing in the Maple Sugar” (1939), “Black Horses” (1942) and “Out for Christmas Trees” (1946), to her last completed painting, “The Rainbow” (1961), all of which are represented in the exhibition. Also on view will be the first painting donated to the museum by the Kallir family in 2016, “Grandma Moses Goes to the Big City” (1946), a rare work in which Moses includes herself in the depicted narrative. The museum will be a premier Moses repository for scholars and the public.

About Grandma Moses

Anna Mary Robertson Moses was born in Greenwich, New York, in 1860 and raised on a farm. From early in her life, she worked as a hired girl, helping neighbors and relatives with cleaning, cooking and sewing. As a child, her father had encouraged her to draw on old newsprint, and she used berry and grape juices to color her images.  

Robertson married at 27 and moved, with her new husband, Thomas Salmon Moses, to Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. There, over the course of the next 18 years, the couple raised five children and worked as dairy farmers, shaping a highly successful butter-making business. Moses did not start painting until she was in her late 70s, after her children had moved on and her husband had died, looking for something, as she put it, with which “to keep busy and out of mischief.” She made paintings that merged fact with fiction and personal with national history, drawing on her own memories as well as family and local lore. She began her foray into the limelight by presenting her pictures at country fairs, alongside her prize-winning fruit preserves.  

In 1938, a collector saw her paintings in the window of a local pharmacy and bought them all. Two years later, Kallir—an art dealer and recent immigrant who had fled the Nazi regime in his native Austria—gave Moses her first solo exhibition. In the aftermath of World War II, Moses was seen as a global ambassador for democratic American values, and her unpretentious sensibilities and the scenes of family life and holidays enchanted a populace weary from conflict and rapid change. Following a press event and presentation of her paintings at Gimbels department store, the media dubbed her “Grandma Moses.” Gradually, ‘Grandma Moses’ became a household name. In 1947, Hallmark licensed the rights to reproduce her paintings on greeting cards. Reproductions on drapery fabric, china and other consumer goods followed, along with magazine features, television and radio interviews and an Academy Award-nominated documentary. Moses died at 101 in 1961, after painting more than 1,500 images.  

Publication



A richly illustrated catalog, published in association with Princeton University Press, accompanies the exhibition. It is co-edited by Umberger and Griffey, with a foreword by Carpenter-Rock and contributions by Erika Doss, Eleanor Jones Harvey, Stacy C. Hollander, Jane Kallir and Katherine Jentleson. 


Images


Grandma Moses, It Snows, Oh It Snows, 1951, oil on pressed wood, 23 1/2 in. x 29 1/2 in. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas, Gift of the Kallir Family in Honor of Otto Kallir, 2024.59. © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY. Photography by Edward C. Robison III.

Grandma Moses, We Are Resting, 1951, oil on high-density fiberboard, overall: 24 × 30 in. (61 × 76.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Kallir Family, in Memory of Hildegard Bachert, 2019.55, © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY 

Bringing in the Maple Sugar
Bringing in the Maple Sugar from 1940 or earlier.  © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY; Museum purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment / SAAM


Grandma Moses Goes to the Big City

Grandma Moses Goes to the Big City, 1946.  © Grandma Moses Properties / Gift of the Kallir Family in memory of Otto Kallir / SAAM


Grandma Moses, Out for Christmas Trees, 1946, oil and glitter on high-density fiberboard, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Kallir Family in honor of Hildegard Bachert, © Grandma Moses Properties Co., New York