Exhibitions
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Today at the Museum

May 18, 2013

Design for Living: Gustav Stickley and The Craftsman Magazine

2 – 3 p.m.
Friends Community Room

Lecturer: Debra Hegstrom, PhD Gustav Stickley disseminated ideas about domesticity and the role of the American homemaker through his magazine, The Craftsman (published 1901-1916). The influence of The Craftsman continues today in magazi...

Exhibition

Albrecht Dürer (German, 1471–1528), The Flagellation, woodcut, The William M. Ladd Collection, gift of Herschel V. Jones

Insult and Injury: Elaborations on Christ's Passion

Saturday, May 10, 2008—Sunday, November 2, 2008
Gallery 344
Free Exhibition

In Germany and the Low Countries, Christ’s Passion was relived many times daily in the minds of the faithful. The Passion was the most highly venerated subject during the fifteenth and much of the sixteenth centuries, a phenomenon characterized by high-strung devotions and empathetic emotionalism. Popular Passion tracts encouraged such meditations by elaborating on Gospel events with wholly invented miseries, designed to intensify people’s empathy for Christ’s suffering.

As demonstrated in this exhibition, drawn from the MIA's permanent collection, printmakers also embellished the Passion, adding new forms of torture, inventive coloring, and other wrenching devices to heighten the drama of Christ’s sacrifice.