Dates:
Location:
Shaw Ruddock Gallery, Boyd GallerySelected Works
About
This exhibition represents a significant contribution to our understanding of the rich visual culture of mortality in Renaissance Europe. The appeal of the “memento mori,” featuring macabre imagery urging us to “remember death,” reached the apex of its popularity around 1500, when artists treated the theme in innovative and compelling ways. Exquisite artworks—from ivory prayer beads to gem-encrusted jewelry—evoke life’s preciousness and the tension between pleasure and responsibility, then and now.
We offer our heartfelt thanks to the many generous funders of this exhibition and catalogue, without whom this undertaking would not be possible. We are deeply grateful for contributions on the part of the Stevens L. Frost Endowment Fund, The Roth Family, Class of 1976 and 2013, the Becker Fund for the ϳԹվ College Museum of Art, The Devonwood Foundation, Caroline and Edward Hyman P’10, the Class of 1976 Art Conservation Fund, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the Shapell Family Art Fund, the Sylvia E. Ross Fund, Robert Judd and Dr. Cristle Collins Judd, The Cowles Charitable Trust, The Robert Lehman Foundation, the Lowell Innes Fund, Mary K. McGuigan and John F. McGuigan Jr., Thomas ’06 and Hannah Weil McKinley ’08, Svetlana and Eric Silverman ’85, P’19, the Peter M. Small Professorship Fund, the Friends Fund of the ϳԹվ College Museum of Art, the Maine Humanities Council, Lady Jill Shaw Ruddock ’77 CBE and Sir Paul Ruddock CBE, Lindsay R. ’95 and Peter Stavros, and the Roy A. Hunt Foundation.
Events
Please enjoy the following coverage of The Ivory Mirror
Multimedia Resources
Watch the keynote address, " delivered by Stephen Perkinson, Peter M. Small Associate Professor of Art History and guest curator for The Ivory Mirror, on June 24, 2017.
Watch the panel discussion, " presented at ϳԹվ College on September 13, 2017. Speakers included Stephen J. Knewly Jr., '72, Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP; Genevieve LeMoiong, curator, Peary MacMillan Arctic Museum, ϳԹվ College; and Stephen Perkinson, Peter M. Small Associate Professor of Art History and guest curator for The Ivory Mirror.
Watch by Thomas Laqueur, Fawcett Distinguished Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. Presented at ϳԹվ College on September 27, 2017.