Lower-Level Galleries

Close up of bronze sculpture of a horse.
Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes from the Hill Collection
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The Frick Collection was the only venue for the first public exhibition of this private collection devoted to the bronze figurative statuette.

Color print of female clown seated on red bench with legs apart
The Impressionist Line from Degas to Toulouse-Lautrec: Drawings and Prints from the Clark
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This exhibition presented a selection of nineteenth-century French drawings and prints from the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Sheets by Millet, Courbet, Degas, Manet, Pissarro, Gauguin, Toulouse-Lautrec, and other masters are on view.

intricately designed bronze oil lamp, with cast figures depicted
Andrea Riccio: Renaissance Master of Bronze
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The Frick Collection presented the first monographic exhibition dedicated to Andrea Riccio (1470–1532), one of the most creative sculptors of the Renaissance.

Print of a man's head.
Rembrandt and His School: Masterworks from the Frick and Lugt Collections
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When Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919) was asked whose talents he would most like to possess, he declared: "Rembrandt's." And as the largest individual railway stockholder in the world, Frick is reported to have said that "railways are the Rembrandts of investment." Like Frick, the Dutch art historian Frederik Johannes Lugt

Drawing of a man wearing a hat with small human figures upon it.
The Spanish Manner: Drawings from Ribera to Goya
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The greatest Spanish draftsmen from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century — Ribera, Murillo, and Goya, among them — created works of dazzling idiosyncrasy.

chalk drawing of woman in long robe reclining in chair with footrest, palm against the cheek
Watteau to Degas: French Drawings from the Frits Lugt Collection
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Frederik Johannes Lugt (1884–1970) was a Dutch art historian, connoisseur, and collector.