Clark Lecture on Picasso Features Met Curator
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The ways in which Pablo Picasso studied, stole from, and outdid the masters of earlier eras is the subject of “Picasso Looks at Degas, Renoir, Ingres…and Mantegna,” a free lecture by Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Gary Tinterow. The lecture takes place at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute on Sunday, Aug. 29, at 3 p.m., and is open to the public.Tinterow, chairman of the Department of 19th Century, Modern and Contemporary Art, recently curated a critically acclaimed survey of the works by Picasso in the Metropolitan’s collection. He has organized numerous exhibitions during his career, beginning with "Master Drawings by Picasso" (Art Institute of Chicago and Philadelphia Museum of Art); "The Essential Cubism" (Tate Gallery); and "Juan Gris: A Retrospective" (Biblioteca National, Madrid). At the Met, his exhibitions include: "Degas" (1988); "From Poussin to Matisse: The Russian Taste for French Painting"; "Corot, The Private Collection of Edgar Degas"; and "Portraits by Ingres: Image of an Epoch." Tinterow is a founding trustee and the first president of the national Association of Art Museum Curators.
"Picasso Looks at Degas" explores Picasso’s direct response to Edgar Degas’ body of work over the decades. Picasso collected the Impressionist’s prints, continually reinterpreted his images, and at the end of his life, created scenes that included depictions of Degas himself. The exhibition is on view at the Clark through Sept. 12.
For more information, call 413-458-2303 or visit clarkart.edu.

