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This bronze bust was originally created for Rodin’s Monument to Victor Hugo as part of an allegorica
It’s an early 20th century version of Realism. In the 1920s, some artists continued to work in
Jeju! French Moderns: Monet to Matisse, 1850–1950 is making its overseas debut at Jeju Museum of Art
Next month we mark the 100th anniversary of Auguste Rodin’s death with an installation of 58 r
The Brooklyn Museum is proud to share news of the Diversity Mentorship Initiative (DMI), a partnersh
Watercolor is defined as a pigment—mixed with a binder like gum arabic—that dissolves in water. Earl
Wichita! Monet to Matisse: French Moderns from the Brooklyn Museum, 1850-1950 opens today at the W
The della Robbia workshop’s formulas for their glazed terracotta remained a family secret for
Before modern paper, small artworks were made on parchment: thin sheets of animal skin treated with
Many European artists in the later nineteenth century began to turn away from the naturalism that ch
By the eighteenth century, Europe was awash in printed images that delighted large, diverse, and eag
To be etched, a polished, metal plate is first coated with a ground—an acid-resistant material
Technical innovations and revivals, creative exploration in all mediums, and a growing market for al
Lithography is a complex, multi-step process that relies on chemical reactions to create a transfera
There is an immediacy and intimacy to works on paper that seems to bring us especially close to an a
Charcoal has been used by artists for tens of thousands of years; the oldest surviving examples are
The human body was at the heart of Rodin’s sculptural practice. Rather than depicting static,
Winnipeg! French Moderns: Monet to Matisse, 1850-1950 opens today and will be on view unt
“I speak for myself and my department, the Digital Lab, that Giovanni della Robbia’s
Perhaps the most overt reference to antiquity is in della Robbia’s naturalistic rendering of f
Here’s a little BLUESDAY inspiration from our European art collection, currently on view
It’s the early days of September and summer is not the only thing that is giving us its last embrace
Artist Nina Katchadourian joins us this Thursday to discuss her explorations of public space, the ro
If you frequent our Tumblr, you know the Museum’s been celebrating women artists this March for Wome
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