Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Pointe-à-Callière Museum: Tea Roads


The Tea Roads

April 30 - September 29, 2013


Montreal's Pointe-à-Callière Museum is presenting a new temporary exhibition entitled The Tea Roads. It was inspired by the fact that tea is the most popular beverage after water, with thousands of years of history. Apparently 15,000 cups of tea are consumed around the world in one second!



Here is a famous Chinese poem, an ode to drinking tea, by poet Lu Tong’s (China, 790-835 A.D.):

 Seven Bowls of Tea 
The first bowl moistens my lips and throat;
The second bowl breaks my loneliness;
The third bowl searches my barren entrails but to find 
Therein some five thousand scrolls;
The fourth bowl raises a slight perspiration 
And all life’s inequities pass out through my pores;
The fifth bowl purifies my flesh and bones;
The sixth bowl calls me to the immortals.
The seventh bowl ah, but I could drink no more!
……...............................................................



This exhibition is presented with the collaboration of the Musée Gaimet des arts asiatiques and 20 other lenders. The exhibition takes visitors on a journey along vertiginous roads of the ancient tea roads, a journey that spans centuries, culminating in our modern times. 







Over 200 objects are on display, some of them considered true works of art. They include a number of exceptional pieces, impressive for their beauty, age and rarity as well as for the stories they tell. There are magnificent celadon porcelain pieces, with their subtle jade colour, and the famous yixing teapots that “remember” previous infusions; their high iron content gives the clay a special colour, and the teapots are worth more than gold!




There are also on display terracotta horses, acknowledging the hard work endured by those sturdy animals on torturous, mostly mountainous roads. See photos above, and especially note a valuable Tang period (619-908 A.D.) green glazed terracotta horse at the top of the photo to the right. China required 2,500 new horses each year. Those were acquired through the tea trade, where a horse would be purchased in exchange for 60 kg of tea leaves.

You will also see exhibited tea bricks and cakes wrapped in bamboo leaves in the shape of logs or baskets for the journey on horseback. In the photo to the right, you can see an unwrapped round cake of pressed tea leaves. 



There is also a variety of pouring vessels and superb serving accessories made of fine porcelain. The photo to the left shows “Imperial” teapots and bowls crafted during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). They were even produced in the Emperor’s workshops in the 20th century.

One can also smell a variety of different teas at the central display shown in the very first photo above.

The following photo demonstrates how valuable was the tea during the pre-Victorian era. The box with tea leaves was kept locked with a key, not entrusting the contents to the servants (box to the left).



Vist the PAC Museum's website for more information and opening hours.

http://pacmusee.qc.ca/en

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Two New Paintings at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts



Montreal Museum of Fine Art
Gift and Acquisition


Montreal Museum of Fine Arts is getting two new paintings.  One is a generous gift by Jorisch family. The painting was looted seventy years ago during the Anschluss and later restored to the descendants of its owners. This donation is Jorisch family's tribute to Montreal, the city that offered refuge to so many exiles. Stolen from Amalie Redlich in Nazi Austria, this work - Children on Their Way Home from School - is by the most famous Austrian painter of the Biedermeier period, Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (see image above).


The painting on the left - Woman Tuning a Lute - is by a Dutch painter Gerrit van Honthorst. It represents the museum's most recent acquisition. It was purchased by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts at the recent art fair in Maastricht. The painting was unknown until it re-emerged on the art market earlier this year from a private collection in France. It is signed and dated (G. Honthorst fe. 1624).

These two painting will be displayed at the museum's permanent collection section that is always open to the public free of charge.

Consult the museum's website for more information and events

http://www.mbam.qc.ca/en

Click on any image to enlarge it.
Hover your mouse over images to see credits.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts: Old Master Drawings



From the Hands of the Masters: Old Master Drawings

April 11 to July 17, 2013 


The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA)  features the Springtime of Drawing. It represents an exclusive opportunity to view a large selection of works from a private collection belonging to a Montreal collector who wishes to remain anonymous. It includes works by Boucher, Bernini, Jordaens, Le Brun, Natoire, Tiepolo and other renown artists.

The drawings are located at the Museum’s Graphic Arts Centre. This exhibition, from Canada’s Foremost Private Collection, displays some seventy drawings selected in consultation with the collector for their beauty and variety. This is a unique opportunity to see this outstanding Canadian collection, as most of these works will be displayed together for the first time in Montreal.

This exhibit is offered free of charge.

Visit the museum's website for the opening hours.



April 11 to July 7, 2013
Graphic Arts Centre
Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion - Level S2
Free admission at all times