The Morgan presents new exhibition series showcasing highlights from its collections
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The Morgan presents new exhibition series showcasing highlights from its collections
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860–1935), The Yellow Wall Paper. Cover by Elisha Brown Bird (1867–1943). Boston: Small, Maynard & Company, 1899. The Morgan Library & Museum, New York. Purchased on the Gordon N. Ray Fund. Photo: Graham S. Haber.



NEW YORK, NY.- The Morgan Library & Museum is home to some of the world’s greatest collections of medieval manuscripts, printed books, literary manuscripts, private letters and correspondence, and original music. Now, visitors have the opportunity to view a changing selection of works drawn from these collections in Treasures from the Vault, an ongoing exhibition series displayed in the sumptuous setting of Pierpont Morgan’s 1906 Library. This season’s selection, which includes everything from Machiavelli’s warnings of a mercenary revolt to the first complete edition of Alexander Pope’s The Rape of the Lock, will be on view January 15–May 5, 2013.

HIGHLIGHTS
Despite its selling over thirty million copies today, The Hobbit was not an immediate success when it was first published in 1937. In a letter to his friend G. E. Selby, J. R. R. Tolkien describes—in his ornate handwriting—the genesis of his novel, joking that the manuscript “was discovered (in a nunnery).” Tolkien went on to say that his children, for whom he originally created the story, “do not wholly approve of their private amusements being turned to cash…[That was the hope. Actually I have ear[n]ed ₤25 so far…].”

In 1910 villagers digging for fertilizer at the site of the destroyed Monastery of Archangel Michael of the Desert in Egypt uncovered buried treasure—a trove of Coptic manuscripts that tenth-century monks had placed in a stone vat for safekeeping. The precious ninth- or tenth-century pages on view mark the beginning of the Homily to be delivered on the Wednesday after Easter.

Opera grew out of the desire to recreate the way in which Greek tragedy was declaimed. On display is Jacopo Peri’s Euridice, the earliest opera to have survived with all its music. The work, composed for the celebration of the marriage of Maria de’ Medici and King Henry IV of France, dates to 1600.

One year following Tolkien’s letter, in 1938, John Steinbeck lamented the state of his current project—the draft of The Grapes of Wrath. Writing to his friend, the filmmaker Pare Lorentz, Steinbeck admitted getting “pretty low about this book sometimes. It just seems lousy,” before concluding, “I do hope this god damn book is some good. It’s been hard enough work.”

In The Yellow Wall Paper, Charlotte Gilman dramatized the dangers of “restorative” confinement, the cover’s bold printed pattern and grotesque color scheme alluding to the heroine’s afflicted mental state. Gilman’s novel appeared in a decade when eye-catching dust jackets and bindings became selling points for many books, their covers essentially acting as their own advertisements.

On October 17, 1781 General George Washington received a letter from Lord Cornwallis that would effectively end the Revolutionary War. In it, Cornwallis proposed “a cessation of hostilities for twenty four hours” in order “to settle terms for the surrender of the posts of York & Gloucester.” The absolute surrender of Yorktown took place two days later, marking the culmination of the Yorktown campaign and the last major land battle of the War.

A magnificent twelfth-century illuminated manuscript on display depicts the life, passion, and miracles of St. Edmund, who was crowned king of East Anglia before being tortured and ultimately decapitated by the Danes in 870. The manuscript’s thirty-two illustrations are executed in the distinct Romanesque style characterized by attenuated figures and two-dimensional space.

Pierpont Morgan was not an avid music collector, but he was always on the look-out for amazing finds. When Morgan was alerted to book dealer Leo Olschki’s acquisition of Beethoven’s long-lost tenth, and last, violin and piano sonata manuscript, he seized the opportunity and purchased the score.

Edward Curtis’s The North American Indian, one of the most ambitious ethnographic and photographic projects of modern American publishing, was financed in part by Pierpont Morgan and his son. For more than a quarter century, Curtis studied, photographed, and recorded the languages, history, and customs of native North Americans. The pages on view represent a fraction of Curtis’s final output of twenty volumes of texts and twenty portfolios of photogravures.










Today's News

January 15, 2013

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The Morgan presents new exhibition series showcasing highlights from its collections

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Dr. Janne Sirén will become next Director of Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo

Shard, Olympic cauldron, and a non-stick ketchup bottle: Design Museum 2013 Designs of the Year

New cemetery endangers Egypt's more than 4,500-year-old pharaonic necropolis

Kraftwerk's Robots: Photographs by Peter Boettcher at NRW-Forum Düsseldorf

Fernand Léger work brings peace to Russian tiger girl at Bonhams Impressionist and Modern Art sale

New York City's Grand Central Terminal, the country's most famous train station, marking 100 years

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Labor mural removed by Maine Governor Paul LePage back on display at Maine State Museum

Master Paintings Week and Master Drawings London come together to create London Art Week

Fresh and beautiful, the dolls came out to play at Morphy's $480,000 auction

Dallas tears down ex-home of JFK assassin Oswald

Ground formally broken for new David H. Koch Plaza at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Israel investing in disputed West Bank sites

Ed Atkins and Naheed Raza present "Tomorrow Never Knows" at Jerwood Visual Arts

New York heart art made with boardwalks damaged by Sandy




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