Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of marble.

Leda, 1920

Constantin Brancusi

A work made of oil on hardboard.

Madawaska—Acadian Light-Heavy, 1940

Marsden Hartley

A work made of oil on canvas.

The Seine at Vernonnet, c. 1930

Pierre Bonnard

Blue and brown Cubist painting of Picasso with painterdz palette.

Portrait of Pablo Picasso, January–February 1912

Juan Gris

A work made of bronze, cast in 1957, from an edition of five plus one.

Working Model for UNESCO Reclining Figure, 1957

Henry Moore

A work made of oil on canvas.

Landscape, 1912

Jean Metzinger

A work made of single-channel video sculpture: thirteen television monitors and aluminum armature; color, silent. number nine of nine unique sculptures in series..

Family of Robot: Baby, 1986

Nam June Paik

A work made of oil on canvas.

The Checkered Tablecloth, 1939

Pierre Bonnard

A work made of tobacco leaves, neon, and lead.

Untitled, 1969

Pier Paolo Calzolari

Sculpture composed of irregular pieces of steel resembling a human figure.

Hero Construction, 1958

Richard Hunt

A work made of acrylic on fiberglass and plywood.

Black Panel, 1989/99

Ellsworth Kelly

Colored sculpture of the head of a light-skinned woman with closed eyes and an elaborate jeweled headdress.

Head of Pavlova, 1924

Malvina Hoffman

A work made of bronze.

The Chicken, 1944

Alexander Calder

A work made of oil on canvas.

The Circus Rider, c. 1927

Marc Chagall

A work made of bronze.

Horse and Rider, c. 1947

Marino Marini

A work made of oil on canvas.

Volunteer, 1963/64

James Rosenquist

A work made of box construction with blue glass.

Homage to the Romantic Ballet, 1942

Joseph Cornell

A work made of oil on canvas.

Still Life, 1955

Giorgio Morandi

Photograph of an orange-red abstract sculpture of thin, rounded metal sheets bent in a manner suggesting wings, with a long, thin appendage, resting on an outdoor lawn.

Flying Dragon (intermediate maquette), 1975

Alexander Calder

A work made of black pencil.

Wall Drawing #63: A wall is divided into four horizontal parts. In the top row are four equal vertical divisions, each with lines in a different direction. In the second row, six double combinations; in the third row, four triple combinations; in the bottom row, all four combinations superimposed, 1971

Sol LeWitt

<<<11121314 >>>