Nearly 400 baseball cards on show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Nearly 400 baseball cards on show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company, American, North Carolina. Photographic copyright, The Pictorial News Co. New York Giants, National League, from the "Baseball Team" series (T200), issued by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company to promote Fatima Turkish Blend Cigarettes. Baseball card, photograph, 1913. Photograph. Sheet: 2 11/16 x 4 3/4 in. (6.9 x 12.1 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Jefferson R. Burdick Collection, Gift of Jefferson R. Burdick (63.350.246.200.13).



NEW YORK, NY.- Since the mid-19th century, when the New York Knickerbockers played the first organized baseball games using modern-day rules, New York has been home to some of the sport’s most successful and beloved teams. On view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the exhibition The Old Ball Game: New York Baseball, 1887–1977 includes nearly 400 baseball cards featuring players from numerous teams, from the New York Metropolitans and the Brooklyn Bridegrooms to the Giants, Dodgers, Yankees, and Mets. All of the cards are from the collection of The Met; many are on display for the first time.

Highlights of the exhibition include never-before-shown cabinet cards of the late 19th century, such as an 1894 example picturing George Davis, the Hall-of-Famer shortstop for the New York Giants. The first six hitters in the Yankees’ famed 1927 lineup—Earle Combs, Mark Koenig, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Bob Meusel, and Tony Lazzeri, also known as “Murderers’ Row”—is being represented through cards published in the 1920s and 1930s by the American Caramel Company and Big League Goudey Gum, respectively. The legendary “Shot Heard ‘Round the World,” in which outfielder Bobby Thomson led the New York Giants to win the National League pennant against the team’s long-time rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers, with his game-winning home run in 1951, is being recognized through 1952 Picture Cards issued by Bowman Gum. Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Jackie Robinson, Reggie Jackson, and other major stars are being featured through cards published in the 1950s through 1970s.

The majority of the cards on display are drawn from the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection, the largest and most comprehensive collection of American trade cards ever assembled privately in the United States. Burdick (1900–1963), an electrician by profession, deposited more than 300,000 items at The Met between 1943 and 1963, including more than 30,000 baseball cards, for which he developed a cataloguing system that remains in use today. Since 1993, in response to the overwhelming enthusiasm of collectors and fans, The Met has put on display groupings from the Burdick Collection of several dozen baseball cards at a time, rotating them at six-month intervals.

The exhibition is organized by Allison Rudnick, Assistant Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints.

The exhibition Printing a Child’s World, on view nearby, features two works with a baseball theme: the George Luks painting Boy with Baseball (ca. 1925) and a recently donated Parian porcelain statuette, Catcher (ca. 1875–76), designed by Isaac Broome and manufactured by Ott and Brewer.










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