The Last Knight: The Art, Armor, and Ambition of Maximilian I
examines the profound significance of European armor at the dawn of the
Renaissance, through the lens of Emperor Maximilian I's (1459–1519) remarkable
life. On view only at The Met, The Last Knight coincides with the
five-hundredth anniversary of Maximilian's death, and is the most ambitious
North American loan exhibition of European arms and armor in decades. Including
180 objects selected from some thirty public and private collections in Europe,
the Middle East, and the United States, The Last Knight will explore how
Maximilian's unparalleled passion for the trappings and ideals of knighthood
served his boundless worldly ambitions, imaginative stratagems, and resolute
efforts to forge a lasting personal and family legacy.
This exhibition features many works of art on view outside Europe
for the first time, including Maximilian's own sumptuous armors that highlight
his patronage of the greatest European armorers of his age, as well as related
manuscripts, paintings, sculpture, glass, tapestry, and toys, all of which
emphasize the emperor's dynastic ambitions and the centrality of chivalry at
the imperial court and beyond.
https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2019/last-knight-art-armor-ambition-maximilian
Exhibition Overview
Félix Vallotton: Painter of Disquiet presents pivotal moments in the artist's career as a painter and printmaker. Painted portraits, luminous landscapes, and interior narratives that pulse with psychological tension join the exhibition from more than two dozen lenders. Swiss-born and Paris-educated, Vallotton (1865–1925) created lasting imagery of fin-de-siècle Paris.
Witness to the radical aesthetics that gripped Paris in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Vallotton developed his own singular voice. Today we recognize him as a distinctive artist of his generation. His lampooning wit, subversive satire, and wry humor is apparent everywhere in his artistic production. Vallotton's trenchant woodcuts of the 1890s solidified his reputation as a printmaker of the first rank while boldly messaging his left-wing politics.
For the first time ever, this exhibition displays Picasso's legendary portrait of Gertrude Stein, from The Met collection, alongside Vallotton's rendering of this formidable collector, which was painted a year later. Vallotton finished his portrait in a matter of weeks and gave it to Gertrude Stein.
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