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RE: TRIUMPH OF MARRIAGE: New Scholarly Exhibition at the Gardner Museum: PRESS PREVIEW EVENT: Tomorrow/Wednesday, October 15th 5:30-6:30 pm

 

 


Terracotta is so much more than a clay pot we use for planting Geraniums!

Find out more about this intriguing, though oft’ overlooked, aspect of the Italian Renaissance with a new exhibition opening February 24th at the Gardner Museum  

 

 

On View February 25 through May 23, 2010 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston  

 

 

Join Us! for an exclusive 

PRESS PREVIEW RECEPTION with advance access to the exhibition and curator Alan Chong

next Wednesday,  February 24th   9:00–10:30 AM
____________________

Rooted in scholarship and conservation, this exhibition unveils new discoveries about Isabella Gardner’s terracotta sculptures, including their uniquely emotive quality, remarkable condition (many with their original 500--year-old paint!), and even some fakes and forgeries—while reaffirming the importance of a previously obscure Rrenaissance sculptor, Giovanni de Fondulis, notable for his highly emotionally painted terracottas.

 

 

Please refer to the invitation, above here, and RSVP to: Katherine Armstrong at:  karmstrong@isgm.org or 617 278 5107.
[Click
here to view a PDF of the invitation online.]

 

____________________

 

MORE ABOUT “MODELING DEVOTION”

 

A Press Release with additional details about the exhibition follow
(and is available oneline at: http://www.gardnermuseum.org/press_releases/2009/historic/modeling_devotion/presskit.pdf).

 

An Advance Look….

Modeling Devotion: Terracotta Sculpture of the Italian Renaissance

  • Reveals  new discoveries about terracotta sculpture, an innovative artform developed during the Italian Renaissance—including their highly emotive qualities, remarkable condition, and even a glimpse at some of Gardner’s  fakes and forgeries, created in the late 19th century to fuel a growing interest in Renaissance art;
  • Reaffirms the importance of Giovanni de Fondulis, a previously obscure Renaissance sculptor, whom scholars have only recently recognized as a leader in highly emotional painted terracottas during this period—by showcasing one of his only twenty known artworks (the Gardner’s Deposition of Christ and Carlotta of Lusignano, ca. 1480);
  • Is rooted in scholarship and conservation—through detailed study and research (made possible by a grant from the Sherman Fairchild Foundation) and detailing the remarkable condition of the Gardner’s collection of terracotta artworks (one of America’s largest, especially of large, multiple-figure compositions)—with a large number presenting their  original paint - dating from move than 500 years ago!
  • & More…

 

This exhibition is also expected to be the last that will be presented in the Gardner’s historic special exhibition gallery space
in anticipation of the new exhibition hall that will be in the Museum’s new Renzo Piano-designed wing (expected to be completed in late 2011).

 

I hope you will consider reviewing or covering this exhibition—and its important contributions to the study of art history and our appreciation for this lesser-known art form of the Italian Renaissance.

Please let me know if you will be able to join us next week and/or during the run of the show. Thank you in advance for your consideration – and kind regards,

 

Katherine

// the press office at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

 

 

PRESS RELEASE | Also avaliable online via http://www.gardnermuseum.org/information/press.asp 

 

 

 

 

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Presents

Modeling Devotion: Terracotta Sculpture of the Italian Renaissance

 

Exhibition Rooted in Scholarship and Conservation Highlights New Discoveries about Isabella Gardner’s Terracotta Sculptures

—Including their Attribution, Condition, Technique, and Fakes and Forgeries


Matteo Civitali, Virgin and C
hrist Child, ca. 1480

   A Touching Portrayal of Reciprocal Adoration

Giovanni Bastianini, Bust of a Woman, ca. 1860   A Forgery   

 

 

February 25 through May 23, 2010   Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Organized by Alan Chong, William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection, and Valentine Talland, Senior Objects Conservator

BOSTON, MA FEBRUARY 18, 2010   In Italy during the Renaissance (around 1400 to 1600), an innovative form of sculpture was developed using fine clay that was shaped and modeled before being fired in a kiln. Called terracotta in Italian, meaning “baked earth,” this type of sculpture often has been overlooked by scholars in favor of the more commonly known Renaissance sculptures carved in marble or cast in bronze.

 

Modeling Devotion: Terracotta Sculpture of the Italian Renaissance, a new scholarly exhibition at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, on view from February 25 to May 23, 2010, draws attention to this category of art through a presentation of fifteen terracotta sculptures collected by Isabella Gardner and recently conserved. Additional works of note are on view in the historic galleries.

 

“The beauty and significance of painted terracotta sculpture of the Italian Renaissance is only now being appreciated,” says Alan Chong, the William and Lia Poorvu Curator of the Collection at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and exhibition curator. “This new attention has helped us identify the maker of one of our most impressive works, the Deposition of Christ by the almost completely unknown Giovanni de Fondulis.”

 

Rooted in new scholarship and conservation, Modeling Devotion reveals discoveries about these works and discusses their highly emotive and expressive qualities, their technique and condition, and even fakes and forgeries that were created in the late 19th century to fuel a growing market for Renaissance art.

 

In the 1890s, Isabella Gardner acquired several terracotta sculptures—including large multi-figured compositions of great rarity and that have survived in remarkable condition. “Unlike many collectors, who scraped off the worn paint to make the terracotta look more uniform, Isabella Gardner preserved their original coloring, even when not in perfect condition,” adds Chong.

 

Painted terracotta sculpture, especially large compositions of multiple figures, are rare in American museums. The Gardner Museum’s objects preserve much of their original paint.

 

“We are pleased to shine fresh light on this unexplored aspect of Gardner’s collection,” says Anne Hawley, the Norma Jean Calderwood Director of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. “This exhibition not only highlights beautiful objects that might be overlooked by visitors to our galleries, but it focuses on materials and processes that are not usually associated with the Italian Renaissance. This exhibition truly uncovers new scholarship through our collection of historical art.”

 

Modeling Devotion highlights works by Renaissance artists Matteo Civitali, Giovanni de Fondulis, Benedetto da Maiano, the workshop of Andrea della Robbia and Giovanni della Robbia. In preparation for the exhibition, extensive technical investigation and conservation treatment of several works was undertaken, revealing important information about their construction and composition. “The generous support of the Sherman Fairchild Foundation allowed our conservators to study and treat several of our most important works,” adds Hawley. Further examples of terracotta sculptures are on view on the third floor of the museum.

 

 

The title of the exhibition, Modeling Devotion, refers to the technique of shaping these sculptures in clay, as well as to their importance as an example for devotional behavior in Renaissance Italy. Terracotta sculptures of the Renaissance inspired prayer and served as models for happy family life. Terracotta sculptures were almost always colored, whether in paint or fired glazes, and because they were often three-dimensional and life-sized, they possessed a remarkable immediacy and realism. Clay can be handled easily, enabling the artist to add, remove, and shape the material as required. This freedom allowed artists not only to capture fine textures and details, but also to give their works powerful emotions. The most common subjects of such works were religious scenes meant to inspire the devotion of the faithful, or portraits that recorded individual likeness.

 

Modeling Devotion presents examples of the various processes employed by terracotta sculptors. For the larger works consisting of several figures, the artist would sculpt the entire ensemble in wet clay. The figures could be continually worked and even material added, a freedom not possible when carving stone or wood. When the clay had partially dried, the sculpture would be cut into pieces between the figures. Bulky areas of clay were hollowed out to create roughly uniform thickness. During firing, these smaller pieces would be less likely to crack.

 

Exhibition Highlights Highlights in the exhibition include:

 

Matteo Civitali, Virgin and Christ Child, ca. 1480 Painted terracotta, height 99 cm (39 in)

In the Virgin and Christ Child, the subject is an unusual presentation of reciprocal love. The Christ Child kneels on the folds of the Virgin’s mantle. He looks up at her in prayer, as she gazes down on him in the same gesture. The composition is a striking example of Civitali’s ability to create highly evocative poses and interaction among sculptural figures. The dynamic relationship between the mother and child is conveyed through their bodies which lean into each other, while also opening up to the viewer in an almost impossibly balanced arrangement. “The work is a wonderful gesture of mutual adoration—a rare element in art at this time,” says Chong. 

 

Giovanni de Fondulis, Deposition of Christ and Carlotta of Lusignano, ca. 1480 Painted terracotta, height 104 cm (49.9 in)

In contrast to the adoration seen in the Civitali, this large work further illustrates the extraordinary emotional intensity of terracotta sculpture—and of artist Giovanni de Fondulis in particular. The near life-size figures of Christ, the Virgin, and Saint John intertwine in a sinuous movement that is enhanced by an intensity of the figures’ facial expressions and gestures.

 

These two works provide a glimpse into the extreme emotions conveyed in terracotta sculpture. The contrast between the stillness and quietude of the Virgin and Christ Child is entirely different from the anguish and despair palpably seen in the Deposition of Christ. However, the two works were made at almost exactly the same time, using the same materials.

 

The exhibition further showcases a few examples of glazed terracotta sculptures collected by Isabella Gardner: Tabernacle by Andrea della Robbia; and Giovanni della Robbia’s monumental Lamentation of Christ, on view in the historic Long Gallery of the museum. A full exhibition list and additional details about exhibition highlights are accessible as part of the full exhibition press kit, online via: www.gardnermuseum.org/information/press.asp.

 

Giovanni de FondulisIn its presentation of the Deposition, Modeling Devotion also affirms the attribution of the Gardner’s Deposition to a previously obscure Renaissance sculptor based in Padua, Giovanni de Fondulis. Specializing in highly emotional painted terracottas, de Fondulis’ importance has only recently been reconstructed by art scholars. One of twenty known examples of de Fondulis’ work, the Deposition of Christ and Carlotta of Lusignano in the Gardner Museum illustrates the extraordinary emotional intensity of terracotta sculptures. Several terracotta sculptures by de Fondulis have sold recently through Sotheby’s in New York. Recent research has uncovered new information about the artist and can confirm the attribution of the museum’s Deposition to him. The re-emergence of this innovative Renaissance sculptor is an important discovery.

 

Fakes and ForgeriesCollectors of the late 19th century craved Renaissance art of all types, terracotta sculpture being no exception. Because genuine works were rare and often in damaged condition, unscrupulous artists made objects in the style of the Renaissance to deceive unsuspecting buyers. Some of these works are in Isabella Gardner’s collection, including a Bust of a Woman by a French imitator of Renaissance work, made in painted and gilded wood and plaster, and another with the same title made of glazed terracotta.

 

That Isabella Gardner kept two of these works that were later proven to be forgeries in her world-class collection also reveals much about her as a collector and museum founder. 

 

“To our eyes, these two portraits of beautiful young women look extremely graceful and rather modern,” adds Chong. “Even after the forgeries were revealed, Gardner left the objects in place; her initial fondness for them apparently undiminished by scholarship.”

 

Scholarship and Conservation In preparation for the exhibition, detailed study and conservation of three of Gardner’s terracotta sculptures—Matteo Civitali, Virgin and Christ Child, ca. 1480; Benedetto da Maiano, Bust of John the Baptist, ca. 1480; and Giovanni de Fondulis, Deposition of Christ and Carlotta of Lusignano (details of the Virgin and Christ), ca. 1480was undertaken. Funded by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, this work focused on analysis of paint and the elemental constituents of terracotta from different regions of Italy, providing new insight into their composition and condition. This research reveals that the works by Civitali and de Fondulis preserve much of their original 15th-century paint. Benedetto da Maiano’s Bust of John the Baptist has been over-painted several times, including with a layer of black paint applied to make it appear as though it were made of bronze.

 

“What is most remarkable about these terracotta sculptures—beautiful in their own right—is that they are in such an extraordinary state of preservation,” says Valentine Talland, Objects Conservator at the Gardner Museum. “Terracotta and wood sculpture this old rarely survive to our generation with so much of their original paint. To have so many of our terracotta works presenting the majority of their original surface and paint is really unusual.”

 

Analysis also revealed new information about the method of modeling the figures, which were all done by hand, as indicated by the visible tool marks, the selective massing of the clay, and the individual expressiveness of the sculpture, and hollowed out with walls of uniform thickness. Methods of evaluation focused on X-radiography and paint cross-sections and terracotta analysis using Scanning Electron Microscopy-Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), Raman spectroscopy, thermoluminescence, and other methods of evaluation conducted by the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

 

Accompanying Programming Programming presented in conjunction with the exhibition offers visitors new ways to engage in art and ideas at the Gardner Museum through interactions with scholars and drop-in gallery talks. Highlights include an afternoon of interactive talks with museum and visiting curators providing A Closer Look on March 10th from 1 to 5 pm, and drop-in gallery for talks on weekend afternoons.

 

Detailed information about exhibition and other programming at the Gardner is available on the museum’s website and online calendar at: www.gardnermuseum.org/exhibitions/exhibition.asp; and http://connect.gardnermuseum.org/site/Calendar/.


This exhibition has been made possible in part by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The Gardner Museum receives operating support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

 

Image Captions   Matteo Civitali, Virgin and Christ Child, ca. 1480. Painted terracotta, height 39 in.   Giovanni Bastianini (19th-century imitator of a Renaissance work), Bust of a Woman, ca. 1860.  Glazed terracotta, height 22 ½ in.) Giovanni de Fondulis, Deposition of Christ and Carlotta of Lusignano, ca. 1480 (details of the Virgin and Christ). Painted terracotta, height 49 in.

 

Building On A Legacy Modeling Devotion is the final historic exhibition to be presented in the small first-floor special exhibition gallery in the historic Museum building, in anticipation of construction of a new wing designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo Piano. The new wing will feature a new 2,000 square foot special exhibition gallery with an adjustable ceiling (adjustable to three heights), an entire north wall of glass, and a skylight with micro louvers to allow for the manipulation of special conditions and natural light.

 

The new wing will provide 70,000 square feet of additional space to the historic Gardner Museum to continue the programmatic legacy of its founder, while also enabling the Museum to restore areas of the historic Museum palace to their original orientations during Isabella Gardner’s day. Construction of the new wing is expected to be completed in Fall 2011. The new wing is anticipated to open in early 2012. Visit www.newbuilding.gardnermuseum.org for more information about the project and design of the special exhibition gallery and other areas of the new landmark building.

 

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum   280 The Fenway  Boston MA 02115    Tue.-Sun., 11 am-5 pm   admission: Adults $12; Seniors $10; Students $5; Free for members, children under 18, everyone on his/her birthday, and all named “Isabella”   “After Hours” admission: Adults $12; Seniors $10; Students $5; Free for members,    $2 off admission with a same-day Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Info Line:  617.566.1401   Box Office: 617.278.5156  www.gardnermuseum.org   Modeled after a 15th-century Venetian palazzo surrounding a courtyard garden, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum houses one of the most remarkable art collections in the world, featuring works by Rembrandt, Michelangelo, Raphael, Degas, and Sargent. Visit the Gardner online for more about special exhibitions, concerts, innovative arts education programs, and evening events.

 

#####

 



EDITORS NOTES

Media Contacts Katherine Armstrong PR Director  617.278.5107 work   617.956.2565 cell  karmstrong@isgm.org
Matt Montgomery Director of Marketing 617.278.5184 work  mmontgomery@isgm.org

JOIN US!   Press Preview Event •  Wednesday, February 24 •  9:00 to 10:30 am    Please join exhibition curator Alan Chong for an exclusive press preview of the exhibition and reception on  Wednesday, February 24 from 9:00 to 10:30 am.  FREE parking is available at the MFA garage for media guests with advance notice. Please RSVP to Katherine Armstrong in the Museum’s press office at 617.278.5107 or karmstrong@isgm.org.

Press Kit  A full press kit PDF on the exhibition, including an image/caption sheet, accompanying programming, curator bio, and exhibition wall text, is available via the Museum’s online press area at: www.gardnermuseum.org/press_releases/2009/historic/modeling_devotion_presskit.pdf. Please contact the Museum’s press office for additional information, access to the curator and director, and images.

 

 

 

 

 

Katherine Armstrong
Public Relations Director

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
w 617 278 5107 
c 617 956 2565 f 617 278 5177 karmstrong@isgm.org 
280 The Fenway, Boston MA 02115 gardnermuseum.org

Upcoming Exhibition ∙ "Modeling Devotion: Terracotta Sculpture of the Italian Renaissance" ∙  A new look at terracotta sculpture, one of the most intriguing but often overlooked art forms of the Italian Renaissance ∙ On view February 25-May 23, 2010 ∙ Press Preview Event: Wednesday, February 24, 9-10:30 AM. RSVP to karmstrong@isgm.org) 


Discover a new kind of night out “Gardner After Hours” (Third Thursdays 5:30-9:30 pm) ∙ Enjoy FREE classical music downloads at The Concert

 

 

 



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