Paradise of Exiles: Early Photography in Italy at The Met Fifth Avenue

Deemed a “Paradise of Exiles” by the British poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, Italy attracted not only 19th-century Romantics, but also many of photography’s earliest practitioners, who traveled to the peninsula in order to capture its monuments and distinctive topography. At the same time, Italians adopted daguerreotypes and paper negatives as a means to represent their own cultural patrimony during a period of political upheaval.

 

This exhibition focuses on Italy’s importance as a center of exchange and experimentation during the first three decades of photography’s history—from 1839, the year of its invention, to 1871, the year Italy became a unified nation. Paradise of Exiles highlights the little-known contribution of Italian photographers to the development of the new medium through some 35 photographs and albums drawn from The Met collection, along with 11 loans, including rare daguerreotypes and photographs related to the Risorgimento, the period of modern Italian unification.

 

Exhibitions are free with Museum admission.

Start Date

March 13, 2017

End Date

August 13, 2017

Hours

10:00 AM - 05:30 PM

Address

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10028

Event Type

Public

More Information

The Met Fifth Avenue

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