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Sunday, September 14, 2025 |
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Image as Homage: Portrait of the Artist at the Smart |
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Anders Zorn, Prince Paul Troubetzkoy I (sculpting a bust), 1908, Etching. Smart Museum of Art, Gift of the Children of Leopold and Birdie Metzenberg,
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CHICAGO.- The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art opens the exhibit The Image as Homage: Portrait of the Artist through April 8, 2007. In the nineteenth century, the Romantic myth of creative genius endowed artists painters, sculptors, writers, and musicians with almost godlike status. Portraits of such artists often amounted to hymns of praise that stood, like the artists own work, as permanent sites of remembrance and veneration, even after the artists death. At times affectionate, servile, or even satirical, the spirit of such portraits varied greatly. So too did the form. Some examples in this exhibition evoke the portrayed artists own style, while others might focus on the artists hands and working tools, or even substitute the artists home in lieu of direct portraiture. Highlighting European and American works on paper and two sculptures from the Smart Museums collection, Image as Homage considers the challenges that arise when one artist tries to commemorate another, and the many forms such portraits take.
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