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Jonathan D. Fineberg

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Morris Louis

The paintings of Morris Louis (1912-1962), temporarily on exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts, embody the contemporary feeling of

The Age of Rembrandt

The commercial prominence of the Netherlands in the seventeenth century made Amsterdam the major market place for the sale of

Meyer Schapiro

In this age of specialization, the renaissance man is becoming hard to find. Yet, the curiosity of the most inventive

Indian Art Exhibit Illustrates Irrelevance of Time & Space

The Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection of Indian and Nepali Art the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, closed yesterday. The

Water, Oil and Slime Cover Florence's Art

Superficially, the city will still be the greatest artifact of Renaissance culture. But its richness for scholars has been greatly

Warhol Paintings Revitalize the Aesthetic of the Everyday World

Andy Warhol's soup cans, Brillo boxes, films, wallpaper, and his floating helium Clouds await Boston gallery-goers at the Institute of

Matisse: Innovation From an Armchair

The "Henri Matisse Retrospective" exhibition is the largest travelling exhibiton ever housed in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Including

Albretcht Durer in Boston

Durer and His Time, is an exhibition of German drawing now on display at the Museum of Fine Arts through

Select Bibliography Of History

The Select Bibliography of History --Which may now be purchased in the history library on the top floor of Widener--can

Copley Exhibit Depicts Colorist's Long Career

Peter Pelham, a relatively unknown Boston mezzotint engraver and portrait painter, died in 1751, leaving his studio to his thirteen-year-old

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