Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Eye of Napoléon

click image to enlarge












I could have fallen off my chair when I read an email from a friend.  They wondered if I knew about a Napoleon Exhibition....an hour away from where I live.  
 
NO.  I DID NOT!!!  

Thank goodness people know I love Napoleon and send me little notes!

There is a fascinating Napoleon experience waiting for me at the Art Gallery in Hamilton, Ontario.

For all of his military exploits as the great conqueror of modern times, Napoléon was equally astute as a cultural imperialist, bringing French art and industry to a new flowering that aimed to surpass the achievements of antiquity while serving to cement his power and advance his geopolitical ambitions. Drawn from the Chalençon Collection (Paris, France), perhaps the world’s foremost private collection of Napoléonic material, The Eye of Napoléon presents some 200 rare objects that together provide insight into Napoléon’s aesthetic interests, private life, and the remarkable achievement of French painters, draftsmen, and decorative artists working in the Empire Style.

The exhibition’s exceptional quality and range of materials and techniques demonstrates how Napoléon nurtured and harnessed the glories of French art and craftsmanship, always with a special understanding of how things would be interpreted out in the world. From the period’s most renowned artists—painters such as Antoine-Jean Gros and Jean-Baptiste Regnault, and sculptors Jean-Antoine Houdon and Antonio Canova—Napoléon commissioned signal works that imaged the pomp of his reign and diffused his likeness, while gesturing to the cultural authority of the antique. Recalling from his readings in history that every great ruler pervaded an era, Napoléon likewise sought to impress his mark on every domain of the decorative arts, exemplified in the exhibition through magnificent examples of Sèvres porcelain, jewellery and elaborate personal effects.

click image to enlarge Also featuring personal items, including Napoléon’s hat, snuffbox and collapsible campaign bed, the exhibition affords us a glimpse of Napoléon the man and functions as an object lesson on how the things with which we surround ourselves define our public identity. 



The Eye of Napoléon
On view November 10, 2012 to May 5, 2013
Organized by Exhibits Development Group, USA, in cooperation with the Chalençon Collection, Paris, France

Founded in 1914, the Art Gallery of Hamilton is Ontario’s third largest public art gallery and owns one of the finest collections of art in Canada, featuring over 9,500 works of art including historical European, historical Canadian and contemporary art. Its renovated and award-winning premises present exhibitions that change three times a year, plus visitors can enjoy the always-tempting Shop at AGH and Café at AGH.  

3 comments:

James Fisher, FINS said...

Hi Carmi, I have just 'discovered' your blog courtesy of a link on Scott Armstrong's Napoleon In Russia blog. Always great to find people interested in the Napoleonic period; and they are numerous! It sounds like this exhibition has at least some of the same items as the one that was in Australia (Melbourne) from June to October this year. I put a post about that on our blog (http://avonnapoleonicfellowship.blogspot.com.au/2012/07/still-no-news-of-la-perouse.html) and there's another on Rostbif's great blog, but then I have just noticed that you alerted him to it! James

James Fisher, FINS said...

Hi Carmi, I have just 'discovered' your blog courtesy of a link on Scott Armstrong's Napoleon In Russia blog. Always great to find people interested in the Napoleonic period; and they are numerous! It sounds like this exhibition has at least some of the same items as the one that was in Australia (Melbourne) from June to October this year. I put a post about that on our blog (http://avonnapoleonicfellowship.blogspot.com.au/2012/07/still-no-news-of-la-perouse.html) and there's another on Rostbif's great blog, but then I have just noticed that you alerted him to it! James

Carmi said...

I will be going to your blog and welcome to mine! I am dying to get to this exhibit...hoping I can sneak there next week for sure!