Harlem Is Everywhere: Episode 4, Music & Nightlife – The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/perspectives/harlem-is-everywhere-music-and-nightlife
What were the sounds of the Harlem Renaissance?
They’re also places full of emotion.
What were the sounds of the Harlem Renaissance?
They’re also places full of emotion.
This panel and a scene showing the Flagellation of Christ (The Met 2001.216.2) come from a large dismantled retable probably made for the high altar of the former Collegiate Church (Kollegiatstift) of Sankt Maria und Sankt Georg, now the Neustädter Marienkirche, in Bielefeld
Berswordt Altar German ca. 1400 On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 603 Emotion
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
was celebrated for the animacy of his sculptures, imbues his subject with intense emotion
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
MARK DOTY: I think it’s the quality of emotion; that it’s suffused with feeling.
Objects conservator Deborah Schorsch recounts the long history of conservation at The Met
Lawson and Betty Fiske examine loans for the exhibition� Counterparts: Form and Emotion
The Artist: The great history painter and portraitist Jacques Louis David studied with Joseph Marie Vien and then, in 1766, entered the school of the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture
the choice of attitudes for Socrates’s disciples: immobility for Plato, strong emotion
"I see vibrant thoughts as clouds and feel volatile emotions as waves."
In this series of works, I see vibrant thoughts as clouds and feel volatile emotions
of icons changed, incorporating more narrative elements and expressing poignant emotions
of icons changed, incorporating more narrative elements and expressing poignant emotions
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
on Biography of a Thought "I see vibrant thoughts as clouds and feel volatile emotions
Organized to commemorate the anniversary of World War I, this exhibition—drawn mainly from The Met collection of works on paper—focuses on the impact of World War I on the visual arts.
Avenue July 31, 2017–January 7, 2018 Related Publication Expressing a range of emotions