Meadows Museum, SMU, announces 2022-2023 upcoming exhibitions featuring Dali/Vermeer, Velazquez, holy women, and famed Spanish abstract works.
Masterpiece in Residence: Velázquez’s King Philip IV of Spain from The Frick CollectionSept. 18, 2022 through Jan. 15, 2023
The portrait King Philip IV of Spain (1644), by the Spanish court painter Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez, will travel from The Frick Collection in New York City to the Meadows Museum as part of the ongoing loan program titled Masterpiece in Residence and organized by the Meadows, featuring some of the most important works of Spanish art in U.S. collections. Beginning September 18, 2022, the portrait will be displayed with Meadows Museum’s own three paintings by this influential artist. The Meadows’s bust-length Portrait of King Philip IV (c. 1623–24), likely Velázquez’s first portrait of his king and patron, will be joined by The Frick’s 1644 portrait, which is considered among the most important Spanish paintings in an American collection. The differences in execution between the two portraits painted just over two decades apart highlight the evolution of Velázquez’s technique and his mastery of looser, more fluid brushwork, which demonstrates the impact of his study of Venetian masters, both in the Spanish royal collections and in Italy, as he developed a style all his own. The Meadows’s Portrait of Queen Mariana (c. 1656) and Female Figure (Sibyl with Tabula Rasa) (c. 1648), offer further evidence of his artistic growth over his career and will be installed in the same gallery as the two portraits of the king.
This exhibition has been organized by the Meadows Museum and is funded by a generous gift from The Meadows Foundation.
Picturing Holy Women in the Spanish Empire, 1620–1800
Sept. 18, 2022 through Jan. 15, 2023
Dalí/Vermeer: A Dialogue
Oct. 16, 2022 through Jan. 15, 2023
Spanish Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí’s appreciation for the 17th-century Dutch master Johannes Vermeer will be explored in the exhibition Dalí/Vermeer: A Dialogue, opening October 16, 2022. In 2016, the Meadows exhibition catalogue Dalí: Poetics of the Small, 1929–1936 shed new light on Dalí’s long obsession with Vermeer’s work. This new exhibition brings together two paintings for the first time: Vermeer’s Woman Reading a Letter (c. 1663), from the Rijksmuseum in the Netherlands, and Dalí’s The Image Disappears (1938), his Surrealist transformation of Vermeer’s composition, from the Fundacio Gala-Salvador Dali, in Figueres, Spain, who displays the painting in the Teatro-Museo Dalí. Thanks to a side-by-side display of the two paintings, this focused exhibition offers the extraordinarily rare opportunity to see work by these two artists together and trace the ways Dalí infused his own unique artistic vision with themes and techniques borrowed from the Dutch painter. A selection of Dalí’s prints from the Meadows Museum’s permanent collection will also be featured in the galleries.
This exhibition has been organized by the Meadows Museum and is funded by a generous gift from The Meadows Foundation.
Thank you,
Glenda, Charlie and David Cates