A Novel Look At Ornament and Patterns Across Art Forms
Ornament, which runs through Feb. 18, marks the Yale University Art Gallery’s latest collaboration with the Yale School of Music, occasioned by the restoration of its historic building housing the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments.
During the closure necessitated by the renovation project, three important and elaborately ornamented early keyboard instruments will be on loan to the Gallery. A 1640 harpsichord by the Antwerp-based craftsman Andreas Ruckers, with its intricately decorated soundboard and lid, exemplifies the Flemish school of harpsichord making at its height. Also featured in the installation is a smaller instrument called a spinetta, made by Francesco Poggio of Florence in 1620, with a lid painted by an accomplished atelier in the Tuscan city. On view alongside these two harpsichords is an early 19th-century Austrian pyramid piano, a stylish Neoclassical ancestor to the upright pianos that would become popular in 19th- and 20th-century homes.
These three objects will be accompanied by a selection of around 40 European drawings and prints from the 16th through the 18th century that demonstrate how ornament offers an arena for artistic license. The display of musical instruments and works on paper emphasizes how patterns and forms have been imitated, adapted, and translated across media by artists and craftspeople alike.
This installation is a continuation of the gallery’s collaborations with other Yale collections, following most recently on the exhibition Crafting Worldviews: Art and Science in Europe, 1500–1800, which assembled objects and artworks from the Yale Peabody Museum, the Yale University Library, and the Yale Center for British Art (YCBA), as well as the current exhibition In a New Light, showcasing painted masterpieces from the YCBA.
Yale University Art Gallery, at 1111 Chapel Street (at York Street), New Haven, is free and open to all.