Dates:
Location:
Becker Gallery
This exhibition explores and critiques European visions of Mediterranean women as powerful, monstrous, seductive, or exotic in art from Ancient Greece through Picasso.
Selected Works

"Fish Shambles," 1600-1700, unknown artist, Italian. Oil on canvas. Bequest of the Honorable James ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ III. 1813.13.

"Turkish Woman with Veil," ca. 1900, vintage albumen print by J.P. Sebah, Turkish, 1872–1947, also active in Cairo. Gift of Isaac Lagnado, Class of 1971. 2010.68.190

Roman, "Fragment of Revetment Plaque Head of the Gorgon Medusa," first century BC–first century BCE, terra cotta. Gift of Edward Perry Warren, Esq., Honorary Degree, 1926. 1913.45

"Map of Fezzae and Morocco," 1570, 1635, Hand-colored map by Araham Ortelius, Flemish, 1527–1598. Gift of Sandy and Chris Potholm. 2012.15
About
This exhibition explores and critiques European visions of Mediterranean women as powerful, monstrous, seductive, or exotic in art from Ancient Greece through Picasso. Organized in collaboration with faculty from the Mediterranean Studies Humanities Initiative at ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ.
RELATED PROGRAMMINGTuesday, November 18, 2014 | 12:00 noon
Gallery Conversation: Revealing Mediterranean Women
Susan Wegner, associate professor of art history, and Davida Gavioli, senior lecturer in Italian, will lead an interdisciplinary conversation about select works in the exhibition Revealing Mediterranean Women.