Collections / Explore the Collection
Today at the Museum

May 23, 2013

Thinking Globally: Exploring the MIA's Indian and Southeast Asian Art Collection

7 – 8 p.m.
Pillsbury Auditorium

Presenter: Risha Lee, the MIA's Jane Emison Assistant Curator of South and Southeast Asian Art. The MIA's Indian and Southeast Asian art collection contains many gems of art, produced in a variety of times and places. In an introduction to the collecti...

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Title:Head
Artist:Amedeo Modigliani
Date:1911-1912
Creation Place:Europe, Italy
Credit Line:Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John Cowles
Accession Number:62.73.1
Fifty years ago the MIA acquired two works of art that have much in common although they were produced over 4000 years apart. Amedeo Modigliani was a painter who concentrated on the human figure, primarily portraits and nudes. In 1909, he became interested in trying his hand at sculpture and became a student of Constantin Brancusi, the Romanian minimalist sculptor whose Golden Bird can be seen in Gallery 369. Modigliani preferred not to reduce form to the extreme that Brancusi did; instead he choose to continue his exploration of the essence of humanity. He looked to Egyptian, African, and above all archaic Greek art -specifically from the Cyclades islands in the Aegean Sea-for the shorthand glyphs that they used for the representation of human features. The balance of curves and angularities of the MIA's Cycladic figure (adjacent) are remarkably similar, and it could be argued that Modigliani's art was one of the main reasons that modern art collectors in the 20th century avidly sought Cycladic sculpture.