National Gallery of Art

The Met’s Main Event: Brilliant Art Dealer Vollard

<i>Flagellation of Christ</i> (c. 1280), by Cimabue (c. 1240-1302)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Flagellation of Christ (c. 1280), by Cimabue (c. 1240-1302)

How predictable is the Met’s fall schedule?  read more »

Standing at the Altar: Raphael Reconstructed

Raphael
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Raphael

At a symposium a few years back, a critic of some note insisted that art lovers should dedicate thei  read more »

My Crumb Collection Goes to Vassar— But Is It Art?

Considering all the trouble cartoons have caused in the world lately, it was with some trepidation t  read more »

France Shows Off Its Favorite Genre:Sex and Ironing

French painting from the 18th century is justly famous for its preoccupation with the pursuit of ear  read more »

Romare Bearden Tied His Work to Race, But Was a Cubist

With certain exhibitions, this writer finds himself in a position not so much to "review" them as to  read more »

At Last, Vuillard: Mammoth Collection of Painter's Epochs

We've had to wait a very long time to see a full-scale retrospective devoted to the work of the Fren  read more »

Meet Goya's Women: They Hang in D.C., In From Madrid

It's been said of the Spanish painter Francisco Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828), whose work is currentl  read more »

After All These Years, Henry Moore Is Great

The big retrospective devoted to Henry Moore (1898-1986), whichhas now come to the National Gallery  read more »

Why Give So Much Space To Lightweight Twombly?

When was the last time you saw a major American museumdevote 10 large galleries to the sculpture of  read more »

Yes, Vermeers Are Here, In a Dense Delft Show

A mere five years after the great Vermeer exhibition at theNational Gallery of Art in Washington, D.  read more »

Majestic Stieglitz Show Charts Modernist Course

Of the many things to be said about the extraordinary exhibition called Modern Art and America: Alfr  read more »

Art Nouveau Was Neither, Vast Exhibition Shows

The exhibition of Art Nouveau, 1890-1914 , organized by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and  read more »

Pious Medieval Sculptures Land in Fallen New York

Visitors to the Metropolitan Museum of Art who approach the current Tilman Riemenschneider exhibitio  read more »

Titian? Nice. But Where's the Gift Shop?

This space rarely, if ever, runs service pieces.  read more »

Rembrandt Painted Himself With Total Lack of Vanity

It is unlikely that the arguments still circulating about Rembrandt's motives in producing so many s  read more »

Perfect Ingres Portraits, Down to the Buttonholes

There are times when it is the curious fate of an artist to achieve his greatest work as a consequen  read more »

Rush Hour at the Museums! The Impressionists Return

Of the mounting of exhibitions devoted to the masters of Impressionism there appears to be no end.  read more »

Saluting Alexander Calder, American Painter in Paris

In the retrospective devoted to Alexander Calder: 1898-1976 at the National Gallery of Art in Washin  read more »

Pious French Paintings in Sinful New York City

When it comes to renouncing the vanities of worldly life, most of us are quite content to leave such  read more »

Obscure Venetian Misfit Deserves a Lotto Praise

It cannot have been easy to work in the shadow of Titian, especially if-like Lorenzo Lotto (circa 14  read more »