wh 发帖数: 141625 | 1 排名见下。你们去过几个?我也一直很喜欢Yale Center for British Art,宽敞明亮
,袖珍而精。喜欢Constable,Turner的画作,很有代表性。
台北故宫上榜,北京故宫没上,倒是北京的789工厂榜上有名。
第50名是波士顿的museum of bad art,听着很好玩,有人去过吗?
The Times
The world’s 50 greatest galleries
May 4 2013
1 Uffizi Gallery, Florence
The word masterpiece can be bandied about too easily in Italy but the Uffizi
is packed with them. It was here that the Medici
family displayed its magnificent collections. The gallery’s architect,
Giorgio Vasari, said it was here that the greatest artists of
the Italian Renaissance would gather “for beauty, for work and for
recreation”. Now their cultural splendours adorn the
courtyards and walls with a host of treasures from the serene beauties of an
earlier medieval era to the exuberant dramas of
the high Baroque.
Don’t miss The Birth of Venus by Botticelli
2 Prado Museum, Madrid
The Spanish royal family were avid but discriminating patrons of art. Now,
the collections they amassed over centuries form
the passionate heart of the Prado, the country’s principal art museum.
Behind the imposing Neoclassical façade lies the home
of national stars such as Goya, Velázquez and Zurbarán. Here is what
unquestionably counts as the finest single collection of
Spanish art. The gallery, with its recently extended display space, also
includes the most moving Flemish masterpieces and
several marvels of the Italian High Renaissance.
Don’t miss Las Meninas by Velázquez
3 The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg
Russia can feel like it’s a trek from the more conventional art centres of
Rome, Paris and London, but the Hermitage’s
collection of more than three million objects must surely count among the
most spectacular in the world. Its marvels span
civilisation from the earliest Stone Age to the Modern period. Its highpoint
is the 100 rooms and more devoted to the glories of
west European art, from unknown medieval masters through Rembrandt and
Rubens to Titian, Cézanne and Picasso.
Don’t miss The Hermitage Rembrandts
4 The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York
MoMA has so many must-see masterpieces that it is hard to know where to
start, but if you head straight for the fourth and
fifth floors of this recently revamped building, the story of Modernism,
from 1880 to 1980, will unfurl. As you travel through a
labyrinth of interlinked rooms, connections and references and allusions
emerge. Picasso talks to Matisse but also to
Mondrian. He glances across at Max Beckmann who chats with Diego Rivera
while looking over his shoulder to catch
Pissarro’s eye. It’s a bit like being invited to a cocktail party in which
the history of Modernism is being discussed by all its
main players.
Don’t miss The Dance by Matisse
5 Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland
My favourite...by Simon de Pury
In 1661, the city of Basel acquired the Amerbach Cabinet, which was the
beginning of the oldest public municipal museum in
the world. Being a native of the city I owe it my first exposure to and
passion for art.
Don’t miss The 20th-century holdings of works by Picasso, Braque and Gris
6 The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
There are worlds of art within these walls. From Jackson Pollock’s Autumn
Rhythm (Number 30) to Caravaggio’s The
Musicians; from the Temple of Dendur, brought in its entirety from the banks
of the Nile, to a suit of armour worn by Henry
VIII, its curling etching designed by Hans Holbein himself. New York’s
Metropolitan Museum of Art — founded a year after
the end of the American Civil War — is the jewel in the city’s artistic
crown.
Don’t miss The seven Unicorn Tapestries, some of the finest examples of
medieval art, in the Cloisters
7 Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
This palatial museum, which stands on the Ring, the grand boulevard that
encircles Vienna, is home to the great art collection
of the Habsburgs, the dynasty that ruled the Holy Roman Empire from 1452 to
1740. Their reign included the years of the
European Renaissance and successive emperors amassed works by all the
outstanding European artists. There are paintings by
Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, Velázquez and Vermeer, and objets d’art,
including the famous gold salt cellar by Benvenuto
Cellini.
Don’t miss The Huntsmen in the Snow, a superb wintry scene by the Flemish
painter Pieter Bruegel the Elder
8 The Louvre, Paris
It’s a bit like riffling through an art-history book but finding that the
illustrations are all the original pieces. The Louvre, its
landmark building an historic monument in its own right, is the home of
dozens of the most celebrated images in the world.
Here you can find anything from Venus de Milo to Mona Lisa. You could get
lost inside the labyrinth of galleries and years
later still be finding stuff you hadn’t seen.
Don’t miss Mona Lisa
9 The National Gallery, London
In its enthusiasm for blockbuster exhibitions, the British public can
sometimes overlook the spectacular quality of permanent
collections. The National Gallery, housing a collection of west European
paintings from the 13th to the 19th centuries, has
masterpieces to match any that arrive for loan shows. The Sainsbury Wing
includes a collection of early Renaissance wonders
which surpasses any other outside Italy — what’s more, you can enjoy them
in contemplative peace.
Don’t miss Venus at her Mirror by Diego Velázquez
10 The Frick Collection, New York
Henry Clay Frick was one of the great barons of America’s age of industry:
the Frick Collection is housed in what was,
remarkably, his home — one of the last surviving mansions of the Gilded Age
. Bellini, Rembrandt, Vermeer, Goya, Whistler:
these astonishing works of art are displayed in what is, essentially, a
domestic setting. Frick was the sort of man who hung five
paintings by Gainsborough in his dining room and whose tea service was
composed of 17th-century porcelain from the Qing
dynasty. A wonder around every corner.
Don’t miss Holbein’s portraits of Henry VIII’s ministers, Thomases More
and Cromwell. You decide whose side you’re on.
11 Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
My favourite...by Edmund de Waal
I remember the old place with everything bathed in ersatz Rembrandt gloom.
Everything was brown pots, pictures, furniture
and discovering anything was happenstance, a much overrated experience
outside novels. The new Rijksmuseum is a triumph.
There is the self-confident rediscovery and restoration of the original 19th
-century museum, gilded, mosaiced, frescoed and capacious. This allows you
to see the collections as if for the first time; collections that span
Delftware to Vermeer. It is exhilarating to have them back.
Don’t miss The Interior of St Odulphuskerk in Assendelft by Pieter Jansz
Saenredam (1649)
12 Borghese Gallery, Rome
The brute ambition of the Mafia-like Borghese family who presided over Roman
society, not just as princes and pontiffs but
also as artistic patrons, becomes more apparent when you visit the gallery
that houses the bulk of its collection. Here are the
possessions of a dynasty whose proclivity for powerful drama erupts in its
taste for the dramatic masterworks of classical
antiquity and also for such contemporaries as the rogue Caravaggio and the
rumbustious Peter Paul Rubens.
Don’t miss Apollo and Daphne by Bernini
13 Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam
The refurbished Van Gogh museum celebrates the exhilarating imagination and
impetuous force of a painter who, though in
his time written off as a mad failure, has become one of the most popular
and recognisable artists in the world.
Don’t miss The Sunflowers
14 Musée d’Orsay, Paris
Gare d’Orsay was the Paris station for the southwest of France, but its
platforms became too short for modern trains. The idea
of turning it into an art gallery was accepted by the French Government, and
so, it was opened in 1986. Its collection of French
19th-century art consists of a wonderful array of the great Impressionists
including Degas, Manet, Monet, Renoir, and many
others.
Don’t miss Renoir’s Bal du moulin de la Galette of 1876
15 Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut
Paul Mellon, who died in 1999, gave his collection of British art and this
fine gallery to Yale University. It was opened in 1977.
The architect Louis I. Kahn created a building, with an interior of marble,
white oak and Belgian linen that would show the
pictures in as much diffused natural light as possible. It contains the
largest collection of British art outside of Britain, with
paintings and prints by artists such as Holbein, Gainsborough and Turner, as
well as many rare books and manuscripts.
Don’t miss A Lion Attacking a Horse (1762) by George Stubbs
16 Tate Modern, London
My favourite...by Iwona Blazwick
The wow-factor of the Turbine Hall is just one reason why Tate Modern is
such a great building to visit. But it is also the
prelude to a journey through space and time offered by the collection
displays and exhibitions. This museum gives the
beginner’s guide to every aspect of modern and contemporary art. All the
major movements in the art of our time are
represented and intelligently contextualised. Tate Modern’s increasing
openness to showing work by women and by
non-Western artists also provides a counterpoint to traditional collections.
Don’t miss Living Sculpture, 1966, by Marisa Merz
17 Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, Qatar
Even in Doha, with its famously eclectic skyline, this modernist ziggurat of
a building is a landmark in its own right. Inside is
the world’s most complete collection of Islamic artefacts. Drawn from
everywhere, from Spain to Central Asia, and
encompassing ceramics through metalwork and jewellery to textiles, coins and
glass, it reflects the diverse complexity and
eye-catching vitality of Islam’s artistic traditions.
Don’t miss The 15th-century Central Asian Koran, created for the Emperor
Timur
18 Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin
It’s not just the huge Neoclassical façade of this museum with its two
towers and now-trademark night-lighting by the
modernist Dan Flavin that will impress visitors. The displays inside are
just as imposing. This museum is dedicated to art
created since the 1960s; to all that is testing to the parameters of
tradition and taste.
Don’t miss The Friedrich Christian Flick Collection
19 Vatican Museums, Rome
“Since God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it,” declared Pope Leo X.
Thanks to the immense art collections built up by a
succession of avaricious pontiffs, the Vatican City has a complex of art
galleries with painterly masterpieces, ancient Etruscan
treasures and, of course, some of the greatest works by the high Renaissance
artists whom the popes commissioned, including
frescoes by Raphael and Michelangelo.
Don’t miss The Sistine Chapel
20 The Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
My favourite...by Jeremy Deller
In 1922, Albert Coombs Barnes, a successful chemist, established the Barnes
Foundation for the purpose of “promoting the
advancement of education and the appreciation of the fine arts”. It’s a
great, eclectic collection, displayed unusually, mixing
time and space and placing Impressionist and Modernist masterworks alongside
ancient sculptures and native crafts. Way ahead of its time.
Don’t miss “At-Montrouge” — Rosa La Rouge by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
21 Dia: Beacon, New York
You need industrial-scale spaces to house the sort of installations that Dia
:Beacon presents. This is the home of the Dia Art
Foundation’s collection from 1960 to the present with each sprawling space
dedicated to one big name.
Don’t miss Andy Warhol’s Shadows, displayed in a 350ft installation
22 Musée National Picasso, Paris
What turned a young upstart from Spain into the modern world’s greatest
master? The principal focus is on the earlier part of
his career — the blue period and Cubism. Note that this museum is shut for
renovation during 2013 and more than 200 major
works are on loan to Paris galleries.
Don’t miss The Las Meninas series
23 Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark
A 20-minute train ride from Copenhagen lies a place where art, architecture
and landscape merge. Outside the most- visited
museum in Denmark modern sculptures are set off by the chill northern sea.
Inside is an equally fine collection of paintings
and sculptural works by artists from Giacommetti’s attenuated figures
through Jean Dubuffet’s raw confections or Roy
Lichtenstein’s Pop Art to surrealistic works by Louise Bourgeois.
Don’t miss Little Janey-Waney by Alexander Calder
24 Tate Britain, London
This grand institution, which houses the national collection of British art
from 1500 to the present, is home to an unrivalled J.
M. W. Turner collection, as well as canvases by the Pre-Raphaelites through
to David Hockney — and it plays host to
imaginatively curated loan shows too.
Don’t miss Turner’s Snow Storm — Steam Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth
25 Dulwich Picture Gallery, London
Built by Sir John Soane in the early 19th century, this was England’s first
public art gallery and contains works by Rembrandt
and Rubens. Though it may feel like the sort of genteel gallery that
specialises in charming watercolours and fine scones, it
does put on unexpectedly innovative exhibitions, such as the recent pairing
of Twombly and Poussin.
Don’t miss Rembrandt’s Jacob de Gheyn III
26 Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
There’s nothing dull at the Whitney, with its range of work by 20th and
21st-century American artists. Martin Wong’s Big Heat
(1988) shows two New York firemen embracing in front of a crumbling tenement
. You’ll also find work by Frank Stella,
Berenice Abbott, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Weegee.
Don’t miss Mark Rothko’s Four Darks in Red (1958)
27 Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
Created by Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano, the Centre Pompidou is famous for
having its insides (plumbing, wiring) on the
outside; what is inside is pretty impressive too — the largest collection
of modern art in Europe with works by Picasso, Klee,
Kandinsky and Man Ray.
Don’t miss The collection of Cubist paintings, including Picasso’s Le
Guitariste
28 Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid
In the 16th century King Felipe II of Spain decided that all of the court’s
hospitals should be housed in one building and it is
that building that houses Spain’s main museum of modern art. By far its
most significant work is Picasso’s Guernica.
Don’t miss Guernica
29 MoMA P.S.1, New York
MoMA P. S. 1 sounds like an offshoot of the more famous MoMA, but it was
founded independently. It is independently
housed, too, and the building is half the attraction. MoMA P. S. 1 began as
the Institute for Art and Urban Resources Inc,
which was “devoted to organising exhibitions in underutilised and abandoned
spaces”. One of those spaces was the disused
Romanesque Revival school. Inside you will find one of the largest art
institutions in America.
Don’t miss The Saturday afternoon Warm-Up events, where musicians make
merry in the courtyard
30 Hakone Open-Air Museum, nr Tokyo, Japan
Just 90km southwest of Tokyo is one of the world’s most spacious galleries.
Hakone Open-Air Museum has more than 300
works by Picasso and one of the world’s largest collections of Henry Moores.
Don’t miss Henry Moore’s Reclining Figure: Arch Leg
31 Inhotim sculpture park, Brumadinho, Brazil
My favourite ... by Cristina Ruiz
This remote exhibition centre , set up by the mining billionaire Bernardo
Paz, is arguably the most ambitious contemporary art
museum yet. Paz owns 3,000 acres which he has been developing into an art
site and a biodiversity research centre. Major
installations by artists such as Simon Starling, Yayoi Kusama, Paul McCarthy
and countless others sit among rare orchids,
palm trees and exotic plants.
Don’t miss Doug Aitken’s Sonic Pavilion
32 Sotheby’s and Christie’s auction houses, London
My favourite ... by William Boyd
It may seem odd to include the two great auction houses in a list of art
galleries. But if — as I do — you regularly visit the
London headquarters of Sotheby’s, in Bond Street, and Christie’s, in King
Street, then you can see centuries’ worth of art in an
ever-changing, ever-rolling series of exhibitions, year-in, year-out. They
are usually beautifully hung and the catalogues are a
mass of expert information. I’ve probably seen more art and been better
educated at Christie’s and Sotheby’s than at
half-a-dozen grander art galleries combined.
33 Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge
The home of the British artists Jim and Helen Ede, Kettle’s Yard was
designed to be not “an art gallery ... rather a continuing
way of life”. And it feels like that: works by Joan Miró and Barbara
Hepworth sit beside ordinary armchairs and tables.
Re-roofing has closed part of the gallery until the end of the year.
Don’t miss The individually designed light switches
34 National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
You’d never guess from its stodgily Neoclassical main building but this is
a relative newcomer. It was founded in 1937 by the
banker Andrew Mellon and collections range from the Renaissance to the
present.
Don’t miss The 23m-long Alexander Calder mobile
35 Fondation Beyeler, Basel, Switzerland
Set in the hills outside the city, Fondation Beyeler is another creation by
Renzo Piano. Its understated structure allows the
Modernist works inside to get the attention they deserve. Ernst Beyeler
amassed his collection as an art dealer.
Don’t miss Mondrian’s gloomily wonderful Eucalyptus
36 Wallace Collection, London
The Wallace Collection had a colourful start: one of its founders was Sir
Richard Wallace, who was the illegitimate son of the
4th Marquess of Hertford. Wallace’s father never acknowledged him but did
bequeath him his art collection; Wallace later
bought his father’s London townhouse where it is now displayed.
Don’t miss The rare complete suit of Gothic armour for man and horse
37 National Palace Museum, Taipei City, Taiwan
Ideal if you like pots: the collection includes some 25,525 ceramics. They,
along with many of the museum’s 600,000 or so
other objects, were taken from the Emperor Puyi when he was expelled from
the Forbidden City in 1924. A museum was built
in 1965 to house one of the world’s largest collections of Chinese art.
Don’t miss Travellers Among Mountains and Streams, a delicate silk-screen
print
38 Japan Folk Crafts Museum, Tokyo
Built in 1936 in the style of a traditional Japanese house, this charming
museum in Meguro celebrates mingei (the
hand-crafted art of ordinary people). Typical among the 17,000 works are the
dozens of porcelain water droppers in styles that
show off the makers’ skill.
Don’t miss The woven and dyed textiles of Okinawa in silk, hemp and cotton
39 Museum Ludwig, Cologne
Close to the colourful buildings of the Alter Markt, this centre of modern
art holds a substantial collection of Pop Art by
Warhol and Lichtenstein. Museum Ludwig was founded in 1976 by the chocolate
magnate Peter Ludwig and his wife. You’ll
also find works by Matisse, Max Ernst and Klee.
Don’t miss The big Picasso collection
40 The Leopold, Vienna
The star attraction of the new MuseumsQuartier is Rudolf and Elisabeth
Leopold’s limestone cube, containing more than
5,000 works of modern Austrian art, collected over five decades.
Don’t miss The largest collection of works by Schiele
41 Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow
My favourite ... by Bob and Roberta Smith
I visited this incredible collection of Modernist Russian art in 1984, as a
student on a cultural exchange. There were Matisses
from his most open expansive and innovative period — fields of colour —
and works by Kazimir Malevich: amazing black dots,
and his first white on white piece. (You might want to avoid the café — it
served slices of pork fat with thin streaks of meat accompanied by a cup of
watery hot chocolate. I’m sure things have improved . . .)
Don’t miss Woman with a Rake, my favourite Malevich. She represents a crazy
collision of ideas, both the nobility of labour
in a Millet sort of way, much favoured by socialists everywhere, and also
about the future language of art
42 Hepworth Gallery Wakefield, West Yorkshire
Known locally as “the bunker”, the £35 million gallery, composed of a
series of trapezoidal blocks, received 100,000 visitors in
its first five weeks in 2011. Taking its name from the artist and sculptor
Barbara Hepworth, it has 5,000 works by modern
British artists including Hepworth — the gallery holds 44 full-size working
models — and Henry Moore, Paul Nash, John Piper
and Lucie Rie.
Don’t miss Hepworth’s Mother and Child (1934) and Moore’s Reclining
Figure (1936)
43 Baltic 39 at the Baltic Centre, Gateshead
Building a modern art gallery on a post-industrial quayside was a gamble
that paid off: millions have been invested in culture
in Newcastle and Gateshead over 15 years. One of the latest additions to
Newcastle is Baltic 39, which includes a contemporary
art gallery, 32 artists’ studios and a comedy club. Run in part by the
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, the gallery has
brought the names of regional artists to public attention.
Don’t miss Paper Over the Cracks, an exhibition of counterbalanced
sculptures by Matt Calderwood that’s on until June 23
44 Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
Set in parkland, this handsome 1848 building contains modern and
contemporary art, with sculptures on the front lawn. The
lawn itself was redesigned as a “landform” sculpture by Charles Jencks in
2002. Other works are by Henry Moore, Rachel
Whiteread, Tony Cragg and Barbara Hepworth. Inside, artists from Picasso and
Braque to Lucian Freud and Tracey Emin are
well represented. There are also paintings by the Scottish Colourists,
especially Samuel John Peploe.
Don’t miss Vulcan, blacksmith to the gods, swinging his hammer, by Eduardo
Paolozzi
45 Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art, Beijing
The 798 Art District is set amid decommissioned military factories and now,
with its boutiques, galleries, and cafés and shops,
bears comparison to SoHo in New York. In 2007, a year before the Beijing
Olympics, Belgian arts patrons Guy and Myriam
Ullens opened the UCCA, offering a platform to artists from China. One of
the largest contemporary art spaces in the country,
this not-for-profit centre has hosted more than 60 exhibitions.
Don’t miss Duchamp and/or/in China, an exhibition of works by Marcel
Duchamp and Chinese artists influenced by his
work. To June 16
46 National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne In Europe or America, the NGV
creeps into the news for the wrong reasons
— the outing of a potentially fake Van Gogh or because “cultural
terrorists” have stolen a Picasso. But this is the oldest public
art museum in Australia, founded in 1861. In the 65,000-strong collection is
a wealth of international and Australian works,
spanning Aboriginal art, Impressionist paintings and 20th-century, modern
and contemporary pieces.
Don’t miss Picasso’s Weeping Woman
47 Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain Those who ask “What good are the arts?”
got their answer in 1997 with the
expansion of the Guggenheim museum’s network to the Iberian peninsula.
Frank Gehry’s $100 million titanium, glass and
limestone structure became a centre for art, architecture and collecting,
transforming the port city into a cultural hotspot.
Inside, you’ll find works from the mid-20th century to today, particularly
postwar painting and sculpture.
Don’t miss Richard Serra’s The Matter of Time, a permanent installation
conceived for the gallery
48 Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
“At the end of my time, when I die, I don’t want to leave any leftovers.
And I don’t want to be a leftover,” Warhol said. Yet two
years after his death, plans were made for a museum in his home town,
spanning juvenilia, through commercial illustrations to
collaborative works. The seven-floor “pop-art binge”, as The Times called
it, holds 17 galleries with 900 paintings; 1,000 prints
and more than 4,000 films and videos.
Don’t miss Warhol’s Brillo Boxes
49 Accademia Carrara, Bergamo, Italy
Bergamo lies at the foot of the Italian Alps. The Accademia, which you can
reach by funicular railway, contains a picture
gallery and an art school, and was founded in the late 18th century by Count
Giacomo Carrara. It has paintings by artists such
as Botticelli, Bellini, Mantegna and Raphael. Opposite there is also a
gallery of modern art, with works by Giorgio Morandi and
de Chirico.
Don’t miss St Sebastian, a tender portrait by Raphael, with the saint
holding an arrow, not as usual being struck by arrows
50 The Museum of Bad Art (MOBA), Boston, Massachusetts
There’s MoMA, there’s the NGV and then there’s MOBA: the Museum of Bad
Art, a collection of work by artists where, clearly,
something has gone awry. Where else could you see a giant orange cat
attempting to consume a man or such thoughtful
exhibition subtitles as Are those ice creams or mountains?
Don’t miss Charlie and Sheba, a colourful portrait of a chipmunk, who has
used a plaster to tape Sheba the sheepdog’s mouth shut before posing with
her on a picnic t
Entries written by Rachel Campbell-Johnston, Derwent May, Catherine Nixey,
Erica Wagner and Fiona Wilson | h*******g 发帖数: 80 | 2 原文链接呢:
http://phdtree.org/
Uffizi
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : 排名见下。你们去过几个?我也一直很喜欢Yale Center for British Art,宽敞明亮 : ,袖珍而精。喜欢Constable,Turner的画作,很有代表性。 : 台北故宫上榜,北京故宫没上,倒是北京的789工厂榜上有名。 : 第50名是波士顿的museum of bad art,听着很好玩,有人去过吗? : The Times : The world’s 50 greatest galleries : May 4 2013 : 1 Uffizi Gallery, Florence : The word masterpiece can be bandied about too easily in Italy but the Uffizi : is packed with them. It was here that the Medici
| H******9 发帖数: 8087 | | H******9 发帖数: 8087 | 4 N多地方没去
Uffizi
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : 排名见下。你们去过几个?我也一直很喜欢Yale Center for British Art,宽敞明亮 : ,袖珍而精。喜欢Constable,Turner的画作,很有代表性。 : 台北故宫上榜,北京故宫没上,倒是北京的789工厂榜上有名。 : 第50名是波士顿的museum of bad art,听着很好玩,有人去过吗? : The Times : The world’s 50 greatest galleries : May 4 2013 : 1 Uffizi Gallery, Florence : The word masterpiece can be bandied about too easily in Italy but the Uffizi : is packed with them. It was here that the Medici
| wh 发帖数: 141625 | 5 是许多画廊的聚集地,原先是个工厂,各个厂房改建成商店画廊,很现代派。
【在 H******9 的大作中提到】 : 北京的789工厂干嘛的
| b*******e 发帖数: 6482 | 6 Uffizi也就占了个河边的便宜,比大都会差远了。
=====〉PS1竟然榜上有名,这个榜可以歇了。
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : 是许多画廊的聚集地,原先是个工厂,各个厂房改建成商店画廊,很现代派。
| wh 发帖数: 141625 | 7 ps1没听说过,很差?
【在 b*******e 的大作中提到】 : Uffizi也就占了个河边的便宜,比大都会差远了。 : =====〉PS1竟然榜上有名,这个榜可以歇了。
| b*******e 发帖数: 6482 | 8 纽约MOMA的分馆,100%行为艺术。
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : ps1没听说过,很差?
| s******n 发帖数: 397 | 9 这个list好奇怪的,那gallery 跟museum有什么区别么 | wh 发帖数: 141625 | 10 不知道艾未未的瓜子有没有在那里展出过。
【在 b*******e 的大作中提到】 : 纽约MOMA的分馆,100%行为艺术。
| wh 发帖数: 141625 | 11 "The distinction between a museum and a gallery is blurry. But, for the
purposes of these lists, a gallery is considered to be a place where
artworks alone are displayed; while museums house a wider variety of objects
that relate to our past and the way we live now."
【在 s******n 的大作中提到】 : 这个list好奇怪的,那gallery 跟museum有什么区别么
| s******n 发帖数: 397 | 12 所以啊,他自己都没严格遵守这个定义,再说了,这个解释本来就有歧义,什么是
artworks? 照他的解释,met里古巴比伦的那些瓶瓶罐罐都不算了?中国的鼻烟壶呢?
也都不算了?
objects
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : "The distinction between a museum and a gallery is blurry. But, for the : purposes of these lists, a gallery is considered to be a place where : artworks alone are displayed; while museums house a wider variety of objects : that relate to our past and the way we live now."
| C*******g 发帖数: 1095 | 13 798好不好
另外,北京还有个宋庄画家村
致,
【在 wh 的大作中提到】 : 排名见下。你们去过几个?我也一直很喜欢Yale Center for British Art,宽敞明亮 : ,袖珍而精。喜欢Constable,Turner的画作,很有代表性。 : 台北故宫上榜,北京故宫没上,倒是北京的789工厂榜上有名。 : 第50名是波士顿的museum of bad art,听着很好玩,有人去过吗? : The Times : The world’s 50 greatest galleries : May 4 2013 : 1 Uffizi Gallery, Florence : The word masterpiece can be bandied about too easily in Italy but the Uffizi : is packed with them. It was here that the Medici
| wh 发帖数: 141625 | 14 噢噢,我错了,我有罪……那个画家村大概我同学住过,她在法国转一圈,混酒吧,搞
先锋,回来就办了个先锋画展,交往的都是非主流人士,哈哈。我以前看过她的一两篇
博客,感觉生活放荡而装b……
【在 C*******g 的大作中提到】 : 798好不好 : 另外,北京还有个宋庄画家村 : : 致,
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