Autorenbild.

Philippe de Montebello

Autor von Rendez-vous with Art

20+ Werke 170 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: Philippe de Montebello [credit: vulture.com]

Werke von Philippe de Montebello

Zugehörige Werke

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide (1983) — Einführung, einige Ausgaben665 Exemplare
Monet's Years at Giverny: Beyond Impressionism (1978) — Vorwort, einige Ausgaben470 Exemplare
The Vatican Collections: The Papacy and Art (1982) — Einführung — 383 Exemplare
Metropolitan Museum Of Art (1980) — Vorwort — 318 Exemplare
Masterpieces of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1993) — Einführung — 207 Exemplare
Van Gogh in Arles (1984) — Vorwort, einige Ausgaben180 Exemplare
Canaletto : das Gesamtwerk (1989) — Vorwort — 172 Exemplare
Van Gogh in Saint-Remy and Auvers (1989) — Vorwort — 146 Exemplare
Poiret (2007) — Vorwort — 116 Exemplare
Georges Seurat, 1859-1891 (1991) — Vorwort — 98 Exemplare
Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1985) — Vorwort, einige Ausgaben69 Exemplare
Europe in the Middle Ages (1605) — Vorwort — 67 Exemplare
The Age of Caravaggio (1985) — Vorwort — 67 Exemplare
Greece and Rome (1987) — Vorwort — 60 Exemplare
Enamels of Limoges: 1100-1350 (1995) — Vorwort — 60 Exemplare
The Renaissance in the North (1987) — Vorwort — 55 Exemplare
Geheime Visionen: Frühe Malerei aus Zentraltibet (1998) — Vorwort — 52 Exemplare
The Islamic world (1987) — Vorwort — 52 Exemplare
The Renaissance in Italy and Spain (1988) — Vorwort — 48 Exemplare
The Art of Medicine in Ancient Egypt (Metropolitan Museum of Art Series) (2005) — Director's Foreword — 46 Exemplare
Europe in the Age of Monarchy (1987) — Vorwort — 46 Exemplare
The Pacific Islands, Africa, and the Americas (1987) — Vorwort — 41 Exemplare
Asia (1987) — Vorwort — 37 Exemplare
Greek Art of the Aegean Islands (1979) — Vorwort — 33 Exemplare
Europe in the age of enlightenment and revolution (1987) — Vorwort — 33 Exemplare
Early Indonesian textiles from three island cultures : Sumba, Toraja, Lampung (1989) — Vorwort, einige Ausgaben31 Exemplare
The United States of America (1987) — Vorwort — 31 Exemplare
Modern Europe (1987) — Vorwort — 27 Exemplare
Splendid Isolation: Art of Easter Island (2001) — Vorwort — 25 Exemplare
Arts of Korea (1998) — Vorwort — 25 Exemplare
Caspar David Friedrich : Moonwatchers (2001) — Vorwort — 23 Exemplare
Adorning the world : art of the Marquesas Islands (2005) — Directior's Foreword — 20 Exemplare
Treasures from the Kremlin — Vorwort — 12 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

contains some slides of Rubens paintings
 
Gekennzeichnet
New_Geneva | Aug 14, 2021 |
it was interesting to visit museums with a museum boss. i prefer reading about art with pictures because like them i get tired. i remember better what i read(maybe). i find it very tiring to look at arvheological art but it's my favourite thing to read about.
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
mahallett | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 14, 2017 |
I liked this book; I found it companionable where I had expected it to be snobby - and I especially like that the rooms through which Philippe de Montebello and Martin Gayford wander as they talk about art are exactly the rooms with which many of us, not necessarily great connoisseurs, are familiar. I like that they tire; I like that they find it impossible to see through the throngs of people massing round the highlights; I like particularly that they seem to spend so much time at lunch. In that sense their experience of museum visiting reminds me of my own.
While some of Martin Gayford's questions strike me as a little bit elitist, I am almost always impressed (and sometimes delighted) by Philippe de Montebello's answers: I like that he describes exactly the thrill which any of us feels at the first view of one of the very greatest works of art; I like that he is frequently ready to stop and give special attention to less well-known pieces not least when - just like you or me - he is unable to get anywhere near the real crowd-pullers; or when he has simply run out of energy on his way to them.
This is a really intelligent book about developing a slightly more attentive eye; about taking art slowly, and not trying to see too much at any one time; about listening to one's own responses and nurturing them better; and about learning to cherish beauty wherever we happen to find it.
Both Philippe de Montebello and Martin Gayford have what might be called a rather traditional view of the 'canon' of 'Great Art', although Philippe de Montebello, especially, is as attentive to the intellectual and affective impact of a piece of African art which once he would have overlooked as he is to that of the exquisite Duccio Madonna for which he paid $45 million, and over which he delightedly drools. He writes with lovely humanity about frescoes at Santa Croce in Florence; about Velazquez in the Prado; Fragonard in the Wallace Collection; Assyrian lions in the British Museum - reminding me, at least, of what it feels like to wander the same spaces seeing the same things, but now primed to do so again with just a bit more attentiveness and care. He is magnificently frank about his blind-spots (which include a lot of the most exalted Dutch painting): I, in turn, am heartened to feel less shame about the lapses in my own taste too.
This book is a commentary on museum visiting by which I think any thoughtful person ought to be encouraged and occasionally even inspired; and it is extremely elegantly illustrated.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
readawayjay | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 14, 2014 |

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Statistikseite

Werke
20
Auch von
65
Mitglieder
170
Beliebtheit
#125,474
Bewertung
4.1
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
13
Sprachen
2

Diagramme & Grafiken