At The Met Fifth
Avenue
FEBRUARY 5,
2018–JANUARY 6, 2019
Beginning in the
fifth century B.C., Medusa—the snaky-haired Gorgon whose gaze turned men to
stone—became increasingly anthropomorphic and feminine, undergoing a visual
transformation from grotesque to beautiful. A similar shift in representations
of other mythical female half-human beings—such as sphinxes, sirens, and the
sea monster Scylla—took place at the same time. Featuring sixty artworks,
primarily from The Met collection, this exhibition explores how the
beautification of these terrifying figures manifested the idealizing humanism
of Classical Greek art, and traces their enduring appeal in both Roman and
later Western art.
The connection
between beauty and horror, embodied above all in the figure of Medusa, outlived
antiquity, fascinating and inspiring artists through the centuries. Medusa
became the archetypical femme fatale, a conflation of femininity, erotic
desire, violence, and death. Along with the beautiful Scylla, she foreshadows
the conceit of the seductive but threatening female that emerges in the late
nineteenth century in reaction to women's empowerment.
https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2018/dangerous-beauty
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