Ideals of Beauty: Asian and American Art in the Freer and Sackler Galleries

Title: Ideals of Beauty: Asian and American Art in the Freer and Sackler Galleries
Author: Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
Publisher: Thames and Hudson; Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
Publication Date: 2010
Publication Type: book
Format: print (softcover)
Pages: 192
Illustrations: 141
ISBN: 9780500204030
Collection Area(s): Across Collections
Ideals of Beauty book cover. Cover image: Two figures stand by a body of blue water. On the left, a woman in a white and red dress kneels beside the water, one hand gripping a large swath of cloth that is in the water. She looks over her shoulder at a man standing on the right, carrying a large pack on his back.
Description:

The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington comprise the Smithsonian Institution’s national museums of Asian art. The Freer Gallery opened to the public in 1923, and the Sackler Gallery welcomed its first visitors in 1987. The two museums are physically connected by an underground passageway and ideologically linked through the study, exhibition, and preservation of Asian art. In addition, the Freer Gallery contains an important collection of nineteenth-century American art featuring James McNeill Whistler’s Peacock Room, perhaps one of the earliest art installations on record.

This guidebook serves as a curator-led experience through more than one hundred masterworks assembled in the collections of both museums: American, Ancient Near East, Chinese, Indian, Islamic World, Japanese, Korean, and Southeast Asian, including ceramics, biblical manuscripts, photography, and other works of art. Each object or group of objects is accompanied by a brief description of its art historical significance or surprising or little-known aspects of its history.