Museum of Art MUSEUM OF ART

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Deco Japan: Shaping Art and Culture, 1920–1945

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
The nearly 200 works in this exhibit showcase the spectacular craftsmanship and sophisticated design long associated with Japan, and convey the complex social and cultural tensions in Japan leading up to World War II. In addition to the modernism that signaled simultaneously Japan’s unique history and its cosmopolitanism, the exhibit also highlights the theme of the modern girl, the emblem of contemporary urban chic that flowered along with the Art Deco style in the 1920s and 1930s.

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Christian A Johnson Memorial Gallery

Open to the Public

Comics and the Art of Visual Storytelling

Comics is finally coming of age as an artistic and literary form. Now this once-maligned medium of expression is poised for new opportunities, thanks to a mutating media environment and a potential revolution in visual education. Author and comics artist Scott McCloud shines a light on these and other fascinating trends in a fast-moving visual presentation.

To view a live feed of this event at 12:00 pm, please use the following links: If you are on campus, please go to “go/stream”. If you are off campus, please go to “go.middlebury.edu/stream”

Dana Auditorium (Sunderland Language Center)

Free
Open to the Public

Off the Wall, Discussion & Lunch: The Resistance of Otto Dix's Silverpoints

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art and Dance
James van Dyke, Assistant Professor of Modern European Art History, Department of Art History and Archaeology, University of Missouri-Columbia, will consider the meaning of the technique of silverpoint drawing in Otto Dix’s scenes of sex, violence, and sexual violence in and after 1933, in particular asking whether two portraits made and exhibited in Berlin in 1935 can be seen as sly responses to both his critics and Nazi ideology in general. Enjoy further conversation over a light lunch in the lobby. Sponsored by the Middlebury College Museum of Art and the Committee on the Arts.

Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre

Open to the Public

Building and Recycling Altarpieces in Early Renaissance Florence

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
Patrons in fourteenth and fifteenth century Italy were acutely value conscious, frequently specifying the quality of materials an artist was expected to use or the parts of a painting he must execute by himself without recourse to assistants. Frugality often extended to having old paintings restored or recycled by adding new frames or changing a few figures to suit a new context. These changes are sometimes easily recognized by the modern art historian, but sometimes they can be detected only by near microscopic analysis of a painting’s surface.

Axinn Center 229

Open to the Public

Bloom and Doom: Visual Expressions and Reform in Vienna 1900

Sponsored by:
Museum of Art
Drawn from the holdings of the Sabarsky Foundation in New York City, this exhibition-which features works by Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt, and other members of the Viennese Secession-illuminates how these individuals challenged the artistic and social establishment by rejecting the traditional academic system and turning to new means of expression, often attempting to reunify art and life in a “total work of art,” before giving into cultural pessimism and withdrawing from public life. On view September 6 through December 11. Free

Mahaney Arts Center, Museum of Art, Overbrook Gallery

Open to the Public