:A reinstallation of the Birmingham Museum of Art's growing and
important Eighteenth Century English Art Collection will open on
May 22.
For the first the time, the museum's holdings of Eighteenth
Century paintings, ceramics, silver, and furniture will be
integrated into one installation providing the visitor with a
well-rounded picture of the prosperity and opulence that defined
English life during this period.
The Eighteenth Century English art collection will be relocated
to galleries on the third floor adjacent to the Dwight and
Lucille Beeson Wedgwood Collection, the finest and most
comprehensive collection of Eighteenth Century Wedgwood outside
of England.
The galleries will be transformed through the use of color and
fabric, moldings and other architectural elements as well as new
lighting and display techniques to create a backdrop to one of
the Southeast's largest collections of English art.
The reconfigured gallery space will feature a select 100 objects
that represent the era at its utmost while providing a better
context for the Wedgwood collection. The works will be drawn
exclusively from the museum's permanent collection, including
several new acquisitions. Together, these works, with new and
expanded didactic labels, will provide an encompassing view of
life in Eighteenth Century England.
Highlights include the portraits of Sir George and Lady Chad by
Thomas Gainsborough (1727-88); the figures of the four
continents, made by the Derby porcelain manufacture circa 1775;
an intricate silver basket dated 1740-41 by master Paul de
Lamerie (1688-1751), mounted 80 years later on a matching stand
made by Paul Storr (1771-1844); as well as recent additions from
the Catherine H. Collins Collection of Eighteenth Century English
ceramics.
To celebrate the opening of the new English galleries, Anne
Forschler-Tarrasch, The Marguerite Jones Harbert and John M.
Harbert III Curator of Decorative Arts, will lead a tour of the
galleries on Sunday, May 22, at 2:30 pm. She will describe how
the tea wares in the museum's silver and porcelain collections
were used in tea rituals throughout the Eighteenth Century.
The museum is at 2000 8th Avenue North. For information,
205-254-2318.