The Dahesh Museum of Art and Syracuse University Art Galleries today announced the
formation of a partnership, which will include the museum organizing several exhibitions
annually from its own collection of 19th-century art in the academic tradition, complemented
by works in the University's rich collection, for presentation at the SUArt Galleries in
Syracuse, as well as at the Palitz Gallery at Lubin House, located at 11 E. 61st St., off Fifth
Avenue, New York City. The Palitz Gallery has recently attracted artworld attention with
the exhibition "Michelangelo: The Man and the Myth," on view through Jan. 4.
The partnership is initially projected for two years and will include exhibitions at the Palitz
Gallery and the SUArt Galleries in Syracuse. The two institutions are also in discussion about
additional collaborative ventures such as programming, publications and educational
outreach.
The launch of this collaboration is scheduled for New York City this spring. From March 24-
April 30, a focused selection of the museum's finest works will be featured in the exhibition
"In Pursuit of the Exotic: Artists Abroad in 19th Century Egypt and the Holy Land."
Curated by David Farmer, the exhibition explores how artists in that era depicted their
expanding world. The most exotic destinations for Europeans at that time were Egypt and
the Holy Land, which, for centuries, had been difficult to reach. Egypt offered a mysterious
culture and monumental environment, while the Holy Land combined a historical, religious
connection with European tradition and an extraordinary visual "otherness."
The second exhibition, the museum's critically acclaimed and immensely popular traveling
show, "Napoleon on the Nile: Soldiers, Artists and the Rediscovery of Egypt," will be on
view at the SUArt Galleries from Jan. 29-March 29. It tells the story of Napoleon's
extraordinary scientific project to systematically explore, describe and document Egyptian
civilization, as part of his brief, but ill-fated, bid to add Egypt to the growing French Empire.
"Napoleon on the Nile" features 80 large, exquisitely engraved plates drawn from the
massive, encyclopedic compendium "The Description of Egypt," perhaps Napoleon's
greatest legacy, and offers visitors a rare encounter with the foundational work of modern
Egyptology.
"We were honored to receive an invitation from Syracuse University to create exhibitions for
a large audience of art lovers, both in Manhattan and at the University's campus galleries in
Syracuse," says Flora E.S. Kaplan, the Dahesh Museum of Art's director. "The museum's
mission is to collect, exhibit and interpret works by Europe's academically trained artists of
the 19th and early 20th centuries. Our goal has always been to provide a fresh appraisal of the
role academies played in reinvigorating classical ideals of beauty, humanism and skill, and
to trace that legacy as it influences artists today. Our exhibitions are framed by
contemporary concerns and universal questions; they provide new ways of thinking about
the role of art and artists in society, a vision we share with the SUArt Galleries. The
University's diverse collections will complement our own, and we hope to draw upon them
in new, unexpected ways."
According to Domenic Iacono, director of the SUArt Galleries, which encompasses the Palitz
Gallery in New York, "Our objective was to expand our exhibition programming with
quality displays developed from the Dahesh's collection and to provide an opportunity for
each institution to work with one another. While the Dahesh Museum of Art's collection
numbers around 3,000 works, predominately focused on 19th_ and early 20th_ century
European masters in the academic tradition, the collections of Syracuse University are very
diverse, comprising more than 45,000 objects that include paintings, prints, sculpture,
decorative and ethnographic arts from the 15th through 20th centuries. The Annie Walters
Arents Collection of 19th-century Academic Paintings has many parallels with the Dahesh's
own collection."
The partnership between Syracuse University and the Dahesh Museum offers each
institution heightened visibility, new audiences, and the potential for dynamic collaborative
programming. The museum, which closed its doors on Madison Avenue and 56th Street
almost a year ago, has not yet located a suitable permanent home, though it continues to
travel its exhibitions and loan objects nationally and internationally. The partnership enables
the museum to mount new exhibitions in mid-Manhattan in Lubin House, a classic 19th-
century townhouse known for its focused, quality exhibitions, and to reconnect with its
members, colleagues and devoted museum-goers. At the same time, the Palitz Gallery will
be introduced to new audiences, while the students, faculty and diverse communities within
Syracuse will be introduced to a new way of looking at and thinking about art in the context
of history, an approach that the Dahesh Museum has pioneered in its 14-year history.
Though the partnership is projected for just two years currently, there may be a long-term
relationship in the future. "Especially in these challenging economic times," says Iacono,
"our two institutions will investigate other ways to collaborate."
Kaplan agrees: "Our experiment is reaching out to and engaging new audiences. We see the
partnership as fluid and look forward to working in new ways and on new projects."
For the latest information on the exhibition in New York City, visit http://lubinhouse.syr.edu
or http://daheshmuseum.org. For the exhibition in Syracuse, visit http://suart.syr.edu.