Posts tagged art
Meet the Staff: Andrew J. Gianopoulos

We landed in Evansville a few days later and I told my mom what happened. “Let’s go talk to John,” was her reply. John Streetman, Director Emeritus, and my mom served on St. Paul’s vestry together. One day after school we went to the museum, and I told John everything. He said without hesitation that I needed to be a curator. Interning for Tom Lonnberg the next three to four months further convinced me that being a curator was what I was supposed to do in life.

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The hand or the glove?

To complement the Department of Art's last blog, "The Legacy of Robert and Rena Lewin," and to continue the dialog for the exhibition, "Classical and Medieval Numismatology," this blog, "The Hand or the Glove?" by Susan Colaricci Sauls shares an intimate interpretation of one of the coins on loan from the University of Southern Indiana.

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Objects and Spells: The Book of the Dead

If one should mention The Book of the Dead, what comes to mind? If you are like me, the first initial thought is the 1999 movie, The Mummy, in which the Book of the Dead is used to unleash a 3,000-year-old Egyptian priest who wreaks havoc on the living world. While a famous quote from the film “one mustn’t read from the book!” I assure you; it is certainly safe -and encouraged- to do so.

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Eleanora di Toledo

When the picture was first examined by the Curator of Art in 2019, the picture was to be included in the 2020 exhibition, A Celebration of Women: Selected Works from the Permanent Collection. According to the picture’s museum record, the piece was titled Leonora di Toledo by Bronzino. The picture measures 25 x 33 inches and is believed to be in its original frame. Once on display, the Curator of Art sent images of the picture to a colleague, Dr. Chrystine Keener, Assistant Professor of Art History at Ringling College of Art + Design, Sarasota, Florida. Dr. Keener messaged Curator of Art indicating that the picture is not in the likeness of Leonora and asks Curator of Art if she can forward images of the picture to Pontormo and Bronzino world expert, Dr. Elizabeth Pilliod, Associate Professor of Art History at Rutgers-Camden University, Camden, New Jersey. Dr. Pilliod confirms Dr. Keener’s claim and further notes that the picture is not Bronzino. Instead, the picture is an “attribution of” or “School of Bronzino” picture.

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