Tuesday, June 4, 2013

The Curator - The MET

Project #5 / Field Trip Reaction #6
The Metropolitan Museum Of Art


           18th century furniture pieces at the Metropolitan Museum of Art



         The Metropolitan Museum of Art from NYC is one of the greatest museums of the world. Its permanent collection contains more than two million works of art. From this two million, I chose for this presentation ten that really impressed me. I liked very much the fully furnished hotel rooms from around 18th century.
        You can find a whole wing only with these big rooms. Some of them are dining rooms, living rooms and also bedrooms. I was amazed of the detail of the furniture. You can see that all the pieces looked complex and had their unique design. I selected tree rooms that really impressed me and I will start with a dining room from a hotel in the Cours d’Albert, Bordeaux, France. This is a small dining room with red furniture. Hanging in the middle of the room you can see candle chandelier. And under the chandelier it is a small table set up for breakfast. In the background surprised me to find a sculpture of a woman. The next room that attracted my attention was this bedroom with a huge bed. Is this big bed like 4 or 5 feet high and has a canopy close to the ceiling. This is a room from the Hotel Lauzun. A chandelier is present also over here with some crystals hanging from. And the last but not least is a very fancy living room from the Hotel Varengeville. The room has high ceilings and a very sparkling chandelier. The room has a table in the middle and is surrounded by arm chairs. On the back wall is a huge mirror with a fireplace under.

        I can talk about many others but this three attracted my attention the most. All rooms are from hotels or castles from around the world (mostly France) and the complexity of them is amazing.


The Rooms

Room from a hotel in the Cours d'Albret, Bordeaux 
Carving attributed to Barthélemy Cabirol (1732–1786)

Date: ca. 1785, with later additions

Accession Number: 43.158.1
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Boiserie from the Hôtel Lauzun

Date: ca. 1770, with one modern panel

Accession Number: 1976.91.1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Boiserie from the Hôtel de Varengeville

Date: ca. 1736–52, with later additions

Accession Number: 63.228.1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Dining room from Lansdowne House
After a design by Robert Adam (British, Kirclady, Scotland 1728–1792 London)

Date: 1766–69

Accession Number: 32.12
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Dining room from Kirtlington Park
John Sanderson

Date: 1748

Accession Number: 32.53.1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Boudoir from the Hotel de Crillon
Pierre-Adrien Paris (1747–1819)

Date: ca. 1777–80

Accession Number: 44.128
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Grand Salon from the Hôtel de Tessé

Contracted by Louis Le Tellier (ca. 1700–1785)

Date: 1768–72, with later additions

Accession Number: 42.203.1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Boiserie from the Palais Paar, 30 Wollzeile, Vienna, Austria
Designed by architect Isidor Canevale (1730–1786)

Date: ca. 1765–72, with later additions

Accession Number: 63.229.1
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Tapestry Room from Croome Court
Room after a design by Robert Adam (British, Kirclady, Scotland 1728–1792 London)

Date: 1763–71

Accession Number: 58.75.1–.22
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Boiserie from the Hôtel de Cabris, Grasse

Date: ca. 1774, with later additions

Accession Number: 1972.276.1
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boi·se·rie

  [bwah-zuh-ree]  Show IPA
noun
sculptured paneling, especially that of French architecture in the 18th century.

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