WHAT’S ON May - August 2015
WATERCOLOUR
Elements of nature opens 16 June
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A Message From the Director
Medieval English ecclesiastical painting emerges to public view after years of painstaking restoration by conservators at the Hamilton Kerr Institute.
This summer, we celebrate the Museum’s collections with seven exhibitions and seven displays. Highlights include Treasured Possessions featuring some 300 beautiful and thought-provoking objects, many from our reserves and unseen for years, which tell us about the tastes and aspirations of their original owners from the Renaissance to the dawn of the Enlightenment. Watercolour: Elements of nature also delves into our stores, presenting the fragile masterpieces of the watercolour technique, ranging from jewel-like portrait miniatures of Elizabethan courtiers, to rarely seen works by J. S. Cotman and Paul Cézanne. This is complemented by a separate show of dazzling watercolours from the Museum’s collection by J.M.W. Turner. The display of the Rothschild bronzes continues to pull people in, following their recent attribution to Michelangelo. We invite you to make your own mind up in the gallery and to carry on this fascinating debate in the lead up to the international conference on 6 July at Downing College, Cambridge. This season we’re also pleased to have been able to re-display a selection of masterpieces in the Twentieth-Century Gallery (11), and we’re delighted to be able to present, for the first time, The Kiss of Judas in the Rothschild Gallery (32). Acquired following a public appeal in 2011, this mysterious masterpiece of late
Just before Christmas 2014 the Fitzwilliam Museum was the successful bidder in a London auction for a luxurious, seventeenth-century, collector’s cabinet which will go on display in the Flower Paintings Gallery (17) from May. The ebony cabinet was made in Augsburg in south-west Bavaria, Germany, around 1660. Its design is that of a miniature classical temple, enriched with silvergilt mounts and panels set with precious stones. Its many drawers and ingenious secret compartments were probably once intended to contain precious natural and man-made curiosities. It is not known how many secret drawers and compartments there are – a new one was discovered just the other day. Another recent acquisition are five rapidly executed sketches by Frank Auerbach sent as birthday cards to his friend, the painter Lucian Freud, each annotated with personal messages. The allocation of these drawings from the Freud Estate has come through the Acceptance in Lieu scheme administered by Arts Council England, which has allocated 35 works from Freud’s collection to museums and galleries across the UK. These charming birthday sketches can be seen in the redisplayed Twentieth-Century Gallery (11) and join our collection of fifty-one works by Auerbach, which includes an important painting, sketchbooks and a complete set of his prints.
Tim Knox Director and Marlay Curator
Contents
Booking for Events Tel: 01223 332904 Email: education@ fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk
Group Visits All groups must book at least 10 days in advance. Groups of children ages 16 and under must be supervised by an adult at all times.
General Enquiries Tel: 01223 332900 Email: fitzmuseumenquiries@lists.cam.ac.uk
Concessions
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Major Exhibitions
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Poussin on Tour 8 Special Events 9 Tours 11 Families 12 Young People 15 Exhibitions & Displays
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Concessionary prices are available to Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum, 65+, students and those in receipt of benefit.
Talks 22
Location Key
Music 26
35 Seminar Room 36 Studio 12 Adeane Gallery 10 Octagon Gallery 13 Mellon Gallery 14 Shiba Gallery 16 Charrington Print Room 28 Arts of the Far East 17 Flower Paintings Gallery 7 Italian Art Gallery 27 European Pottery
Adults 24
Lectures & Conferences 28 University of Cambridge Museums 29 Visitor Information
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Support the Fitzwilliam
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3 British Art Gallery 33 Arts of the Near East
The Fitzwilliam Museum
@FitzMuseum_UK
Cover image: Samuel Palmer (1805-1881), The Magic Apple Tree, 1830 (detail)
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Exhibitions
Exhibitions
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WATERCOLOUR
Ruskin’s Turners
16 June – 27 September
16 June – 4 October
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Stunning landscapes, exquisite portrait miniatures and delicate flower drawings - the collection of watercolours in the Fitzwilliam Museum, by painters including Samuel Palmer and Paul Cézanne, is one of the finest in the world.
In 1861, the Museum’s collection of watercolours and drawings was transformed by the gift of twenty-five watercolours by J.M.W. Turner from the writer and critic John Ruskin, Turner’s most fervent champion. Ruskin selected the works to reflect the range of Turner’s achievement; accordingly, this exhibition features drawings made for engraving, book illustration and vignettes, as well as landscape watercolours painted throughout his career. The terms of Ruskin’s gift prevent these watercolours from being lent outside the Museum. This exhibition offers a rare opportunity to view Ruskin’s collection of watercolours by the man he considered ‘the only perfect landscape painter whom the world has ever seen.’
Elements of nature
Rarely exhibited and in superb condition, the works have been selected to highlight the extraordinary versatility of the medium, showing how it was used from the Middle Ages onwards to paint portrait likenesses, accurately record botanical detail and to capture fleeting moments of nature. Drawn exclusively from the Fitzwilliam’s outstanding collections, the exhibition will include portrait miniatures by Nicholas Hilliard and Isaac Oliver, botanical drawings by Georg Ehret and Pierre-Joseph Redouté, as well as a series of magnificent landscape watercolours by John Constable, Peter de Wint, John Sell Cotman, Samuel Palmer, J. M. Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Paul Cézanne, Camille Pissarro and Paul Nash. It will be complemented by an exhibition in the Shiba Gallery of superb watercolours by J.M.W. Turner. For complementary events see pages 22 & 25 A selection of works from the exhibition are available to purchase via our custom print site: www.fitzwilliamprints.com
For complementary talk see page 23
Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), Venice, storm at sunset, c. 1840-1842 (detail)
Exhibitions
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Until 6 September 12 A dazzling journey through the decorative arts: from the hand-crafted luxuries of the Renaissance to the first stirrings of mass commerce. Each of the 300 beautiful and engaging objects on display was once a treasured possession, revealing the personal tastes and aspirations of its owner, and preserving precious memories. Taken together, they offer a fascinating insight into our changing relationship with the things that we wear on our bodies and keep in our home. The exhibition is the result of a collaboration between curators, conservators, academics and students from the Museum, Hamilton Kerr Institute and Cambridge University’s Faculty of History, as well as other outside experts. Complementary events on pages 9, 10, 14, 23, 24, 25 & 28 Also look out for the special exhibitions and events leaflet The catalogue is available to buy from the Museum and online shop (£24.99 paperback, £39.95 hardback). OBJECT OF THE MONTH Throughout the exhibition learn more about some of the fascinating objects within the show, each month, by visiting the exhibition page on the Fitzwilliam Museum website. Exhibition generously supported by
The Monument Trust and other charitable trusts and individuals
Pair of shoes, English, c.1700-30
Exhibitions Close-up and Personal: Eighteenth-century gold boxes from the Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection Until 6 September 10 Fashionable among both men and women, these exquisite and elegant containers were one of the most popular accessories in eighteenth-century Europe. They were often used to hold snuff (a scented preparation of powdered tobacco) or sweetmeats. The most lavish and precious boxes were the choice present of royalty and exemplify court culture and fashion en miniature. Presented here is a selection of nearly sixty boxes from the fine collection of Sir Arthur Gilbert (1913-2001) and his first wife, Rosalinde (1913-1995). For complementary events see pages 22 & 28
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A Young Man’s Progress Until 6 September Courtyard Entrance & staircase, leading to 13 Mellon Gallery landing An impressive display of five modern photographic recreations – printed to large scale – telling the fictional story of Matthew Smith, a young man from North London, who is obsessed with clothes. The modern photographs are based upon images commissioned between 1520 and 1560 by Matthäus Schwarz, one of the most committed fashion innovators of his time. See old and new images juxtaposed, along with a creation made in response to Schwarz’s Renaissance dress. A Young Man’s Progress is a collaboration between sisters, artist photographer Maisie Broadhead and fashion designer Bella Newell (Burberry); and Professor Ulinka Rublack, cultural historian at Cambridge University. For complementary events see pages 9 & 22
Snuffbox engraved with sunburst and scrolls, France, Paris, 1753-54, Jean-François Breton, The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
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Poussin on Tour
Nicolas Poussin's Extreme Unction on tour In 2012 the Fitzwilliam Museum made headlines after raising the final £3.9 million to acquire Nicolas Poussin’s masterpiece Extreme Unction (c. 1638-40). Now this majestic painting will be going on tour to three collections across the country so it can be enjoyed across the nation. The painting will be travelling to the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (6 March – 7 June), Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh (12 June – 13 September), and the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (18 September – 13 December) – all of which have works by this artist in their collection, and are free to enter.
Extreme Unction (or ‘Final Anointing’) was acquired by the Fitzwilliam Museum through the HM Government’s Acceptance in Lieu scheme, with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Art Fund, and numerous charities and public donations. The painting is one of a set of seven scenes representing the sacraments of the Catholic Church, painted in Rome for Poussin’s friend and patron, Cassiano dal Pozzo. It is the most important old master painting to enter the Museum’s collection for over a century, and makes a notable addition to the permanent collection of seventeenth-century French paintings. The painting’s tour across the country will enable even more people to see this masterpiece than ever before.
Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), Extreme Unction, c.1638-40 (detail)
Special Events
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Museums at Night Friday 15 May • Open until 21.00 • FREE • Drop-in Come and explore the world class collections of the Fitzwilliam Museum and its exhibitions after hours. There will be a variety of special events to choose from throughout the evening, listed below, and the Courtyard Café and Shop will be open late, with refreshments and cakes available from the Café until 20.30. 16.00, 17.00, 19.00 & 20.00
The Imagination Museum Allow us to introduce you to Mildred, Henry and Harriet, three eccentric tour-guides who will bring to life a series of Museum artefacts through words and movement. The Imagination Museum has been created with choreography by Katie Green, in collaboration with writer Anna Selby, with original music by Max Perryment. It will awaken everyone’s curiosity and desire to explore the nooks and crannies of the Museum space.
Image © Chris Nash
Admission is by timed ticket released on the day, in batches, from the Museum’s Courtyard Entrance.
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David Kindersley – Alphabetician • The Hidden Face of Lettering An illustrated talk by Lida Kindersley, to complement the Museum display. 35 18.30
A dedicated follower of fashion: Fashion aficionados from the seventeenth-century and today A talk with Ulinka Rublack, Maisie Broadhead and Isabella Newell, to complement the display A Young Man’s Progress. 3 19.30
New oysters, fresh oysters! A performance of sung street cries from the seventeenth and eighteenth-centuries by Caius Consort, to complement the Treasured Possessions exhibition. 3
Special Events
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Personal belongings from Renaissance to Enlightenment c.1450-1800 Saturday 9 May KS2 • Ages 7 – 11 11.00 – 12.30 KS3 • Ages 11 – 14 13.30 – 15.00 35 Cambridge University’s History Department will be hosting two sessions at the Fitzwilliam Museum, looking at the Treasured Possessions exhibition and thinking about the significance of personal belongings. Aimed at school pupils interested in history, more information can be found on: www.hist. cam.ac.uk/events/historyfor-schools-2014-2015
Art and English Secondary teacher’s INSET
SAVE THE DATE Writing Lives and Treasured Possessions
Saturday 4 July 10.30 – 13.00
Thursday 3 September 18.30 – 20.00 Doors open at 18.00
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3 A specially devised morning for Art and English secondary teachers to meet and share ideas on using art and objects as stimulus for enriched gallery and classroom learning. With a launch of the new A level sessions on Visionaries and Romantics, Shakespeare’s World, The Modernists and an insight to combining the sister arts: Art and Language. Plus a chance to create your own studio based work. £10 booking essential
Join us for a gala reading of works produced by the Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy, award winning writer Ali Smith and novelist, broadcaster and critic Sarah Dunant, in response to the Fitzwilliam’s Treasured Possessions exhibition. The evening also includes a panel discussion with the writers and a final opportunity to view the exhibition after hours. £10 £8 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum Price includes a glass of wine or soft drink
Booking Essential For further information and to book, tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk unless otherwise stated
Centrepiece, 1780-1800 (detail), English. Leeds Pottery
Tours
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Guided tours Saturdays 14.30 Enjoy a one-hour introductory tour of the Museum with a Blue Badge Guide. Meet in Courtyard Entrance. £6
Guided tours for private groups are also available through Cambridge Tourist Information Centre, tel: 01223 457574 or email: tours@cambridge.gov.uk
Touch and Descriptive Tours for blind and partially sighted visitors Discover the Fitzwilliam Museum’s collections through object handling/audio description in a one hour introductory tour, led by a trained member of the Museum’s education team. To find out more, and to book, tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk Image © Martin Bond
Families
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Join in a range of creative workshops designed to promote family learning, giving both adults and children the opportunity to explore the Museum collections together. Booking essential, unless otherwise stated. To register your interest please tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk. Places will be confirmed on receipt of payment. Children must be accompanied by an adult throughout the whole duration of the workshop.
It’s Magic!
Mapping the Museum
Wednesday 6 May & Tuesday 7 July 10.00 – 11.30 2 – 5 yrs Meet in Courtyard Entrance
Saturday 23 May 10.30 – 12.30 5 – 7 yrs Meet in Courtyard Entrance
Looking at art can be magical. Explore work in the collections and make art of your own in the studio to take home. £3 per child
Walk through the galleries and travel through time and space linking artefacts to locations throughout the world. Then work with artist Caroline Wendling to create your very own map of the Museum using drawing and collage.
Baby Magic
£8 per child
Tuesday 12 May & Wednesday 8 July 10.00 – 11.00 0 – 2 yrs Meet in Courtyard Entrance
Drawing Together Eduardo Paolozzi: Drawing and collage
This gently structured session allows babies to discover aspects of our collection through sensory exploration of colour, shape, texture, sound and movement. We will enjoy the galleries together and then get creative in the studio. £3 per child
Street cook with stove, c.1757–60 (detail)
Lavish people
Wednesday 27 May 12.00 – 16.00 All Ages • FREE • Drop-in 33 Drop-in and draw at the Museum with activities and inspiration available from the Fitz Family Welcome Point.
Saturday 27 June 10.30 – 12.30 8 – 12 yrs Meet in Courtyard Entrance Join artist Esther CooperWood to explore Treasured Possessions through discussion and drawing, then use mixed media to create your own portrait based on objects found within the exhibition. £8 per child
Families
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Free Family Resources Available at both entrances
Gallery Trails Choose from a selection of themed gallery trails.
Connecting pieces Saturday 18 July 10.30 – 12.30 8 – 12 yrs Meet in Courtyard Entrance Explore linked or linking objects with artist Jason Ions. Working as a team create interconnecting sculptural artworks based on objects in the Fitzwilliam collection. Image © Martin Bond
£8 per child
Fitz Kits
Family art week
Discover our range of Fitz Kits with games and puzzles to take you on a journey around the Museum. The new Fitz Kit A Box of Treasures draws upon themes within the Treasured Possessions exhibition.
Tuesday 4 –Thursday 6 August Drop-in any time between 11.00 – 13.00 & 14.00 – 16.00 All Ages • FREE Front lawn, weather permitting Create your own works of art to take home or add to our group installation. On each day we will be exploring and experimenting with a different art material, using the Museum’s collections for creative inspiration.
Story Starters 2 – 6 yrs
Pick up a satchel containing a picture book and activities to help youngsters explore the galleries.
Baby Play Mat 0 – 2 yrs Collect a play mat full of carefully selected resources that connect with themes and objects in the collection. Available at Courtyard Entrance only.
Families
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Family First Saturdays On the first Saturday of each month visit our Fitz Family Welcome Point in Gallery 33 and collect drawing materials, activities and trails to use throughout the Museum, exploring a variety of themes. Saturdays • 14.00 –16.00 • FREE • Drop-in 2 May
Treasured Possessions: Beautiful boxes 6 June
Meet Fitz and Will Help the mischievous Cambridge Cats find feline friends around the Museum. Fitz and Will are co-developed by Laura Robson Brown and Katherine Mann and illustrated by Jia Han. There will be Fitz and Will storytelling at 14.30 and 15.30. 4 July
Treasured Possessions: Personal tastes 1 August
Antiquities: Sculpture
Images © Martin Bond, except Fitz and Will illustration © Jia Han
Young People
ReSource 13 – 18 yrs
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Work experience taster day
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Thursday 28 May 10.00 – 16.30
Enjoy art and want to develop your own ideas and projects? Join us in our art studio with a different guest artist each month. These sessions are specifically designed for young people.
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Saturdays 11.00 – 13.00 9 May
Improve your drawing skills and experiment with graphite techniques 13 June
Print making and collage, inspired by examples from MOONSTRIPS 11 July
Painting and pattern £5 per session Booking essential. Tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk
Stitching workshop with Fine Cell Work Saturday 16 May 14.00 – 16.00 Ages 10+ See page 24
Are you in secondary education and interested in a career in museums? The University of Cambridge Museums has organised a one day event to give students an understanding of the variety of jobs available through Museums. With visits to two museums and talks from several professionals, the event is free and lunch is provided. Booking essential. For more information, and to sign up please provide your name and the school you attend to opendoor@hermes.cam.ac.uk The University of Cambridge Museums offer a variety of volunteer, work experience, apprenticeship and internship opportunities. For the most up to date information, please visit: www.cam.ac.uk/museums/ getinvolved
Free drop-in events at a glance
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Location Key 35 Seminar Room 13 Mellon Gallery 33 Arts of the Near East
36 Studio
May 2 Sat Family First Saturday 14.00 –16.00 • Drop-in 33 3 Sun Music Chamber music 13.15 –14.00 3 6 Wed Exhibition Talk The Georgians in coins and medals 13.15 –14.00 35 Image © Martin Bond
3 British Art Gallery
10 Sun Music Classical songs 13.15 –14.00 3 13 Wed Exhibition Talk Re-constructing Renaissance fashion 13.15 –14.00 35 15 Fri Museums at Night Open until 21.00 • Drop-in Fitzwilliam Museum 17 Sun Music Guitar and cello 13.15 –14.00 3 19 Tue Art Speak 13.15 –13.45 • Drop-in Courtyard Entrance 20 Wed Talk Objects for cooking and eating 13.15 –14.00 35 24 Sun Music Piano 13.15 –14.00 3 27 Wed Exhibition Talk Snuff-taking, fashion and accessories 13.15 –14.00 35 27 Wed Drawing Together 12.00 –16.00 • Drop-in Courtyard Entrance 31 Sun Music Clarinet and piano 13.15 –14.00 3
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June
July
6 Sat Family First Saturday 14.00 –16.00 • Drop-in 33
1 Wed Exhibition Talk From design to gold box 13.15 –14.00 35
7 Sun Music Harp 13.15 –14.00 3
4 Sat Family First Saturday 14.00 –16.00 • Drop-in 33
10 Wed Exhibition Talk Rococo enamelled snuffboxes 13.15 –14.00 35
8 Wed Exhibition Talk Ruskin’s Turners 13.15 –14.00 & 14.30 –15.15 14
16 Tue Art Speak 13.15 –13.45 • Drop-in Courtyard Entrance
14 Tue Art Speak 13.15 –13.45 • Drop-in Courtyard Entrance
17 Wed Talk Hogarth’s Before and After: How paintings tell a story 13.15 –13.45 35
15 Wed Exhibition Talk Objects of devotion 13.15 –14.00 35
24 Wed Exhibition Talk A curator’s introduction to Watercolour 13.15 –14.00 13
August 1 Sat Family First Saturday 14.00 – 16.00 • Drop-in 33 4 Tue – 6 Thu Family Art Week 11.00 - 13.00 & 14.00-16.00 Drop-in 36
Image © Martin Bond
Exhibitions & Displays
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MOONSTRIPS Eduardo Paolozzi and the printed collage 1965-72 Until 7 June 14 Eduardo Paolozzi’s use of found images and words cut from popular magazines and scientific journals played a formative role in the development of British art in the 1950s and 60s. He adapted the technique of collage to printed media in spectacular sets – often seen as highlights of Pop Art – such as Moonstrips Empire News (1967), General Dynamic F.U.N. (1970), Cloud Atomic Laboratory (1971) and Bunk! (1972). With the writer J.G. Ballard, his collaborator on the innovative Ambit magazine, Paolozzi formulated a dazzling visual and verbal accompaniment to the space-age.
Modern Heroism: Printmaking and the legacy of Napoleon Bonaparte Until 28 June 16 An exhibition to mark the 200th Anniversary of Napoleon’s defeat at the Battle of Waterloo. Napoleon spread liberal reform across Europe and to his supporters his legacy was that of a modern hero. Post-Napoleonic France was characterised by constant unrest and political upheaval which coincided with a revolution in printmaking as the new technique of lithography flourished. Quick and cheap to issue in large numbers, lithography became the medium through which a new generation of artists was able to disseminate their art and political views to the masses. Auguste Raffet (1804-1860), 1813 (detail)
The Silken world of Michelangelo from Moonstrips Empire News Volume 1 Screenprint, 1967 © The Trustees of The Paolozzi Foundation
Exhibitions & Displays
Bird Language Until 31 May 28
Designed to Impress: Highlights from the print collection 7 July – 27 September 16 This exhibition features a selection of some of the Fitzwilliam's most spectacular prints from the fifteenth to the twenty-first centuries, giving visitors an insight into the extraordinary breadth of the collection. See works by some of the greatest Old Master printmakers, including Rembrandt and Dürer, hanging alongside prints by later artists such as Canaletto, Blake and Munch.
William Blake (1757-1827), Frontispiece to The Book of Ahania, 1795 Etching and colour printing
A small installation of four birdcages by contemporary artist Xu Bing. The birdcages are formed by metal words in both English and Chinese – questions and answers about the artist’s work. Make a noise around the artworks and the toy birds inside will revolve and emit sound in response. Xu Bing was the former President of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, and has previously exhibited works at The British Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum and the Ashmolean Museum. Display sponsored by CRASSH © Xu Bing Studio
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Exhibitions & Displays
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The Georgians Until 31 May 17 The Royal Family’s long association with Germany began in 1714, when George I became the first Hanoverian king. These coins and medals illustrate the main characters in the Georgian Royal Family, their struggle with the rival Stuart dynasty, and the creation of a world empire. For complementary talk see page 22
David Kindersley carving a stone wall whilst apprenticed to Mr Eric Gill, 1934-36
Highlights from Kettle’s Yard From 14 August 27 See a slice of Kettle’s Yard’s unique collection of modern art, natural objects and furniture recreated in the Fitzwilliam Museum. Watch out for special talks and events for all ages inspired by the display.
David Kindersley Alphabetician The Hidden Face of Lettering Until 14 June Museum Courtyard A display to mark the centenary of David Kindersley, letter carver and typeface designer of great originality and skill, whose work includes the iconic British Library gates and street sign lettering across the length and breadth of Britain. The exhibits on display at the Fitzwilliam are the starting point for a special Kindersley Walking Tour through Cambridge, culminating at Kettle’s Yard. Pick up a free guide at the Museum. For complementary talk see page 9
Exhibitions & Displays
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Rothschild bronzes Until 9 August 7 See two magnificent metre-high bronze male nudes astride two ferocious panthers, recently attributed to Michelangelo. If the attribution is correct, they are currently the only surviving bronzes in the world by his hand. Decide for yourself and cast your vote in the gallery. There will be a special conference on Monday 6 July at Downing College, Cambridge, to discuss additional evidence in this ongoing debate and to provide further context for these masterpieces. More information to be announced on the Museum’s website.
Bangle: ‘Well, Well, Well*’* © David Poston
Rosthchild bronze
Necklace for an Elephant & Other Stories: The working lives of David Poston 1 July – 13 September 27 Described as a ‘restless non-conformist’, David Poston’s career has seen him in many guises as an avant-garde jeweller, political activist, photographer, author, engineer and inventor, to name just a few. This display of Poston’s jewellery spans four decades and focuses on a selection of exuberant and thought-provoking pieces.
Talks
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Enjoy a variety of free lunchtime talks by members of staff and guest speakers. Talks take place on Wednesdays from 13.15 - 14.00 in the Seminar Room 35 (space is limited), unless otherwise stated. Admission is by token, 1 per person, available at the Courtyard Entrance from 12.45 on the day of the talk. Induction loop available.
The Georgians in coins and medals 6 May Martin Allen, Senior Assistant Keeper, Coins and Medals
Re-constructing Renaissance fashion 13 May Professor Ulinka Rublack, Professor of Early European History
From mortars to teaspoons: What changes and what stays the same with objects for cooking and eating?
François Boucher on enamelled snuffboxes: The art of adapting Rococo engravings 10 June Mélodie Doumy, Assistant Curator of The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection, V&A
Hogarth’s Before and After: How paintings tell a story 17 June Liz Rideal, Artist and author of How to Read Paintings
20 May
A curator’s introduction to Watercolour
Bee Wilson, Food writer and historian
24 June
Snuff-taking, fashion and accessories
Jane Munro, Keeper of Paintings, Drawings and Prints
27 May Dr Tessa Murdoch, Deputy Keeper of Sculpture, Metalwork, Ceramics and Glass incl. The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection, V&A
Inside a Paris goldsmiths’ workshop: From design to gold box 1 July Dr Heike Zech, Senior Curator of The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection, V&A
Talks
Paul Nash (1889-1946), Bright Cloud, 1941 © The Estate of Paul Nash. Tate images, London 2015
Ruskin’s Turners
Objects of devotion
8 July • 13.15 & 14.30
15 July
14 Ian Warrell, Independent curator specialising in British art of the nineteenth-century
Dr Mary Laven, Reader in Early Modern History
Art Speak Tuesdays 19 May, 16 June, 14 July 13.15 • FREE • Drop-in Meet in Courtyard Entrance Enjoy half an hour looking at and talking about art.
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Adults
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Booking essential. To register your interest please tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk. Places will be confirmed on receipt of payment.
Stitching workshop with Fine Cell Work Saturday 16 May 14.00 – 16.00 Adults & young people 10+ 36
MUSE Fridays 10.15 – 12.00 36 Discover new ways of working at this artist led workshop inspired by Museum exhibitions and collections, with different themes each month. 22 May
Print making and collage, inspired by examples from MOONSTRIPS 26 June
An introduction to watercolour techniques, inspired by examples from Watercolour: Elements of nature 17 July
Experiment with clay and mixed media, using the Museum’s permanent collection as inspiration £10 per workshop
A stitching workshop where participants will make their own treasured possession. The workshop will be led by volunteers from Fine Cell Work, a charitable organisation which teaches needlework skills in prisons, and there will be an opportunity to learn more about the amazing treasured possessions made in prisons today. No previous experience required, and all materials will be provided. All proceeds from tickets for this workshop will go towards Fine Cell Work. £8
Punch, posset and chocolate in Enlightenment Europe Saturday 6 June 14.00 – 15.30 36 A large number of the beautiful objects in Treasured Possessions were designed for serving beverages. Join Ivan Day (Food Historian, Museums and Country House Consultant) as he discusses the material culture and ritual of communal drinking, see demonstrations of original equipment, and learn how posset, chocolate and punch were made and served. £8 £5 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum
Adults
Restricted palette watercolour technique Friday 12 June 10.30 – 16.00 with an hour’s break for lunch 36 Join Royal Watercolour Society competition winner, John Wiltshire for a full day workshop. Learn how to use a five colour palette to create a harmonious painting in the manner of the Golden Age of British watercolourists such as Thomas Girtin, Peter de Wint, J.M.W. Turner and Samuel Palmer. £25 £20 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum
To Have and to Hold: Writing workshop
Treasured Possessions in different contexts A Cambridge Museums Summer School Tuesdays 7, 14, 21, 28 July & 4 August 14.00 – 15.30 Week 1: Meet in Courtyard Entrance Are treasured possessions always about personal taste and aspiration, or can they be about memories, identity or even survival? Guided by museum staff each week, explore the Treasured Possessions exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum in week one, then visit the Polar Museum, Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences and Museum of Cambridge in the subsequent four weeks. Each visit will shed new light on the understanding of what makes a possession treasured.
Saturdays 27 June & 4 July 13.30 – 15.30 Meet in Courtyard Entrance
£40 £30 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum
Enjoy a special tour of the exhibition Treasured Possessions and use the exhibits as a springboard for writing creative poetry and prose.
Enamelling workshop with artist Tamar de Vries Winter
£16 for both workshops £12 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum
Saturday 25 July 10.30 – 16.30 with an hour’s break for lunch 36 Gain an introduction to the ancient discipline of enamelling, and create your own piece to take home, in this full day workshop. All materials provided. £40 £30 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum
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Music
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Sunday Lunchtime Concerts 13.15 • FREE 3
Enjoy a series of popular lunchtime concerts, with music performed by talented musicians in the beautiful surroundings of the Museum. Admission is by token, 1 per person, available at the Founder’s Entrance desk on a first-come first-served basis from 12.00 on the day of the concert. Space is limited - no standing room available. Voluntary collection after each concert. Programmes may be subject to change. Image © Martin Bond
Music for guitar and cello 17 May Fabio Barbagallo (guitar) and Stefania Cannata (cello) perform pieces by Rossi, Mascagni, Burgmuller, Villa-Lobos and Granados.
Music for piano 24 May Patrick Hemmerlé (piano) performs Berceuse Heroique by Debussy, Sonata (1905) by Janacek and Sonata No. 6 by Prokofiev.
Music for clarinet and piano Cambridge University Instrumental Award Holders for Chamber Music 3 May A variety of works played by the best undergraduate chamber musicians. Programme to include the Schumann Piano Quintet by the Aether Quintet.
Classical songs 10 May Jessica Lawrence-Hares (soprano) accompanied by Sanae Nakajima (piano), perform pieces by Schumann, Tchaikovsky and Rorem.
31 May Kelvin Giles (clarinet) and Lana Bode (piano) perform Premiere Rhapsody by Claude Debussy, Fantasia on La Traviata by Donato Lovreglio, Sonata by Arnold Bax, and Conversations (3rd Movement) by Paul Patterson.
Music for harp 7 June Alison Martin (harp) performs Solo violin partita arranged for harp by Bach, First arabesque and Claire de lune by Debussy, and Fantasy on a theme from Eugene Onegin by Walter Kune.
Music
Cambridge Summer Music Festival Sundays 19, 26 July & Saturday 1 August 13.15 3
Music Proms from the Cambridge Summer Music Festival For more information visit: www.cambridgesummermusic.com/events/
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Lectures & Conferences
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Booking essential. Tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk unless otherwise stated
Treasured Possessions conference Material worlds from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment
Eighteenth-century gold boxes Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection study day
Monday 11 May • 9.00 – 17.00 FREE
Friday 26 June • 10.30 – 16.30
St John’s College, Divinity School, St John’s Street, Cambridge Join scholars, curators and conservators for this day long event inspired by objects that once lay close to their owner’s hearts. Learn about the historical context of the exhibition, and the opportunity it provided for collaboration between curators, academics and makers. Key speakers include Peter Burke, Ludmilla Jordanova, Giorgio Riello and Evelyn Welch. The day closes with an early evening private view of the exhibition and drinks reception.
Robert Ward-Booth Memorial Lecture The contagion of China-fancy: Pots and their potty collectors Thursday 21 May Lars Tharp, BBC Antiques Roadshow Asian art specialist, gives a talk on the obsession with collecting Chinaware. Before the talk there will be an opportunity to view the Treasured Possessions exhibition after hours.
35 The lavish and intricate gold boxes of the eighteenth-century have been described as some of the most beautiful objects ever made by men. These delicate and refined miniature objects served a clear function, to hold snuff – powdered tobacco. The speakers of this study day will explore why these objects acquired a unique status as objects of desire and were an indispensable and highly collectible fashion item in the eighteenthcentury. The day will also include an opportunity to view the exhibition Close-up and Personal: Eighteenthcentury gold boxes from the Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection. This event is possible thanks to the generosity of the Gilbert Trust for the Arts, London. Full details of the programme can be found on the Fitzwilliam Museum website. £10
18.00 Exhibition private view 19.00 Lecture in Gallery 3
followed by drinks reception
£6 £5 concessions and Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum. Ticket includes a glass of wine or soft drink. Booking essential through City Centre Box Office (from 1 May). Tel: 01223 357851 Supported by
Snuffbox with Diana reclining, Germany, probably Augsburg, c.1750, The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Gilbert Collection on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
University of Cambridge Museums
Museums at Night Thursday 14 & Friday 15 May • FREE • Drop-in Enjoy a night out with friends at The Fitzwilliam Museum, Kettle’s Yard, The Polar Museum, Whipple Museum, Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, Museum of Classical Archaeology and Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. To find out what’s on across the different sites visit www.cam.ac.uk/museumsatnight
Summer at the Museums 19 July – 2 September Our annual programme of events for families is back! Get ready for a summer of fun with hands-on activities, trails and workshops throughout the holidays. www.cam.ac.uk/museums/summer
Big Weekend Saturday 11 July • 12.00 –17.00 FREE • Drop-in Make & Create Tent, Parker’s Piece We’re out and about - join us in our marquee and get creative!
Get involved Would you like to be part of the University of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden team? View the variety of volunteer, work experience, apprenticeship and internship opportunities we offer at: www.cam.ac.uk/museums/getinvolved For the latest information about exhibitions, events and activities across the University of Cambridge Museums, visit our website and sign up to receive the e-news. www.cam.ac.uk/museums
Cambridge University Museums
@CamUnivMuseums
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Visitor Information
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Image © Martin Bond
Education A wide and flexible range of teaching and practical sessions for pre-booked school groups.
During your visit if you have any questions or need help, please speak to a member of staff.
In-service training for teachers and pre-service training for students available. For more information tel: 01223 332904, email: education@fitzmuseum. cam.ac.uk or see website.
Courtyard Shop Visit the shop for a range of gifts inspired by the collections.
Courtyard Café 10.00–16.30 Lunches from 11.30– 15.30. For reservations tel: 01223 764402.
North Lawn Café Fresh sandwiches, salads and drinks in an al fresco setting. Open March to October, weather permitting. Image © Martin Bond
Access Please use Courtyard Entrance for street level access and entrance for groups and schools. Fully accessible toilets and lift access to all floors. All displays accessible apart from balcony in Gallery 3 and Sasakawa Fan Gallery. For large print or Braille information tel: 01223 332928 or email: fitzmuseum-access@lists. cam.ac.uk
Reference Library By advance appointment tel: 01223 764398 or email: fitzmuseum-library@lists. cam.ac.uk
Study Room Individual and group access to the collection of paintings, drawings and prints by advance appointment. Open Tuesday–Friday 10.00–13.00 & 14.00–16.30. Tel: 01223 764363 or email: fitzmuseum-studyroom@ lists.cam.ac.uk
Suppor t the Fitzwilliam
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Image © Martin Bond
Become a Friend of the Fitzwilliam and enjoy ... • Exclusive lectures, private views and tours ‘behind the scenes’ at the Museum
Support Us! Donations keep galleries open free of charge, conserve our collections and deliver our education service. Donate £5 by texting: FITZ345 to 70070 Gallery Hire
• Special visits to see other treasures within the Colleges of the University of Cambridge
Galleries are available for hire outside formal opening hours. They provide a stunning and unique environment for corporate events, concerts, lectures and receptions.
• Visits to exhibitions, art galleries and historic houses in Britain
Legacies help safeguard the collections
• Annual summer garden and Christmas events in the Museum
Corporate sponsorship of exhibitions,
• Seasonal offers in the Museum’s Courtyard shop Uniquely among UK Museums, the Friends support is directed exclusively to new acquisitions. Join online and find out more at www. fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/support/friends Or call the Friends Office on 01223 332933
for future generations to appreciate. events and education programmes offers opportunities for businesses to strengthen their corporate image and promote their brand.
The Marlay Group enjoy a special relationship with one of the greatest art collections of the nation and contribute to the future of the Fitzwilliam. To find out more, contact: Llinos Thomas, Development Coordinator Tel: 01223 332921 Email: LMT40@cam.ac.uk
www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/support/
www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk
FREE ADMISSION
Opening Hours Tuesday - Saturday Sundays & Bank Holidays CLOSED: Mondays
10.00 - 17.00 12.00 – 17.00
Building works The Museum is undergoing an ongoing programme of maintenance and refurbishment, which may lead to gallery closures. If you are coming to see a particular gallery/work of art, please check before you visit.
How to find us The Fitzwilliam Museum is in Trumpington Street, a few minutes walk from Cambridge City Centre.
Nearest car parks: Grand Arcade off Pembroke Street, or Queen Anne, Gonville Place.
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No visitor parking: however, limited Pay & Display and disabled badge-holder parking is available on Trumpington Street.
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The Uni 4 bus to and from Madingley Road Park & Ride and Addenbrooke’s Hospital stops outside the Museum (Mon-Fri). For Park & Ride information visit: www.parkandride.net/cambridge/cambridge_frameset. shtml
All images © The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, unless otherwise stated.
The Fitzwilliam Museum gratefully acknowledges the assistance of The Art Fund as a major supporter of acquisitions
Trumpington Street Cambridge CB2 1RB Tel: 01223 332900 Email: fitzmuseumenquiries@lists.cam.ac.uk