The Year One | The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2000/year-one
Year One
global networks, as were luxury goods such as Roman glass, Chinese silk, and East Indian
Year One
global networks, as were luxury goods such as Roman glass, Chinese silk, and East Indian
Inscription: Inscribed on the top of the barrel: COLT’S PATENT; stamped at the front of the trigger guard, on the base of the frame in front of the trigger guard, and at the base of the loading lever, the serial number: 38549; stamped on the rear root of the trigger guard loop on the left side: 36 CAL
Foxley, Indian Wells, Calif. (about 1985–2014; his gift to MMA).
Mahmud II enforced a new dress code consisting of a fez, frock coat, and fitted trousers to replace traditional forms of clothing that differentiated the rank and religion of each person.
masonry of Mamluk architecture together with the chatris (memorial structures) of Indian
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
Trade in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries Throughout the centuries the Indian
Debbie Kuo, a jewelry designer and the administrator in the Department of Greek and Roman Art, shares artworks that inspire her designs.
distended, or stretched earlobes, very much like a Boddhisattva in Chinese and Indian
Gold NecklaceThe striking way in which this piece, with its circular stone-set gold elements surrounded by small pearls, is stylistically reminiscent of the miniature of the zenana (harem) scene in the Met (30
Indian jewelers cling to tradition with enormous tenacity.
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
were produced at Qing imperial workshops; a rare portrait of Joanna de Silva, an Indian
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
Lacquer: The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection 1991 The Flame and the Lotus: Indian
Though the earliest references to the term “Hudson River School” in the 1870s were disparagingly aimed, the label has never been supplanted and fairly characterizes the artistic body, its New York headquarters, its landscape subject matter, and often literally its subject.
In another gallery of the fair, the artist mounted a tableau vivant of real Indians
The field of arms and armor is beset with romantic legends, gory myths, and widely held misconceptions. Most of them are utter nonsense, devoid of any historical base.
Lochner dated 1549 Shirt of Mail and Plate of Emperor Shah Jahan (reigned 1624–58) Indian