This important volume offers the first comprehensive look at the Arthur Ross Collection--more than 1,200 17th- to 20th-century Italian, French, and Spanish prints--and is published to mark the inaugural exhibition of the collection in its new home at the Yale University Art Gallery. Highlights include superb etchings by Canaletto and Tiepolo; the four volumes of Piranesi's
Antiquities of Rome, as well as his famous
Vedute (Views) and
Carceri (Prisons); Goya's
Tauromaquia in its first edition of 1816; an extremely rare etching by Edgar Degas; and numerous other 19th-century French prints, by Eugène Delacroix, Honoré Daumier, Édouard Manet, Paul Gauguin, Paul Cézanne, and others. The accompanying essays discuss the life of Arthur Ross, a significant philanthropist who funded several arts institutions; the formation of the collection and the art-historical significance of the works; and several thematic approaches to studying the collection, reinforcing its legacy as an important teaching resource.
Distributed for the Yale University Art Gallery
Exhibition Schedule:
Yale University Art Gallery
(12/18/15-04/24/16)
Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, University of Florida
(01/29/17-05/08/17)
Syracuse University Art Galleries, Syracuse University
(08/17/17-11/19/17)