In Celebration
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #109446 in DVD
- Released on: 2003-07-22
- Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 131 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
A trip to New York City is not complete without an exploration of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Met is a true place of beauty, not only for its collection, but also for the exquisite manner in which its art is displayed. In Celebration is a three-video program that presents New York's treasured Metropolitan Museum of Art on its 125th birthday. Narrated by museum director Philippe de Montebello, In Celebration presents the history of the museum and its founders while escorting viewers on a tour of some of the museum's most powerful masterpieces.
Volume 1, Merchants and Masterpieces, profiles the benefactors whose money, vision, and priceless collections built the museum into one of the greatest art institutions in the United States. This volume includes rare archival footage, location photography, and a look behind the art in search of the people who originally collected and lived with these works. Volume 2, Masterpieces of the Met, shows what makes the Met such an incredible museum: the artwork. This volume displays diverse works, from ancient Egyptian relics to Jackson Pollock's Autumn Rhythm, from Monet's Terrace at Sainte-Adresse to Pompeiian frescoes, from modern cubism to Rembrandt's mesmerizing self-portrait. De Montebello's knowledgeable commentary describes the importance of the pieces in the world of art, their place in history, and their importance to the Met. In volume 3, Glories of Medieval Art: The Cloisters, the tour continues on the Upper West Side of Manhattan at the branch dedicated to art of the Middle Ages. On display amid medieval gardens and Gothic architecture are the famed collection of Unicorn Tapestries, Robert Campin's Annunciation Altarpiece, and the unique stained glass windows of the Cloisters.
If you can't get to the Met, In Celebration: 125 Years at the Metropolitan Museum of Art is the perfect way to whet your aesthetic appetite for great art. --Rob Bracco
Customer Reviews
Live and Let Live
This is a beautiful play, gorgeously written by David Storey, marvelously directed by Lindsay Anderson, and beautifully well-acted by the incomparable Alan Bates and company. Brian Cox, in one of his first performances, plays one of the tortured sons of a working-class family that has never come to grips with the loss of the first son, nor ever admitted the mother's attempted suicide. Together now for the parents' 40th anniversary, the three surviving sons want both to confront the parents with the truth and to let the past go. Drunk and tired, they argue over the past, one trying to smooth things over while the other stirs things up. The play is masterfully conceived. It is tight, plotted according to Aristotle's strictest codes of singularity and brevity. The entire company drawn from the famous Royal Court is superb, but it is especially gratifying to see the late Sir Alan Bates and the young Cox, who has matured into such a formidable character actor. Landau's filmed theatre series is one of the treasures of the 20th century.




