Aimee Ng

 

 

video still of Aimee Ng and oil painting of bullfighters
Cocktails with a Curator: Manet's "Bullfight"

In this week’s episode of Cocktails with a Curator, Curator Aimee Ng explores the turbulent history behind Édouard Manet’s Bullfight, once part of a larger work that the artist exhibited at the Salon of 1864. The original canvas was derided and caricatured by critics, prompting Manet to cut it into pieces. The two surviving fragments were brought together for the first and only time during a 1999 exhibition at the Frick. This week’s complementary cocktail is, fittingly enough, the Toreador.

video still of Aimee Ng and oil painting of woman handing a seated woman a note
Cocktails with a Curator: Vermeer's "Mistress and Maid"
In this week’s episode of Cocktails with a Curator, Curator Aimee Ng pulls back the curtain on hidden details in Mistress and Maid.
video still of Aimee Ng and panting of woman in red hat
Cocktails with a Curator: Lawrence's "Lady Peel"

In this week’s episode of Cocktails with a Curator, Curator Aimee Ng explores the history behind Sir Thomas Lawrence’s celebrated portrait of Julia, Lady Peel. When it was shown at the Royal Academy, in 1827, this painting was hailed as Sir Thomas’s greatest portrait—and one of the great works of modern art at the time. It’s easy to see why: the sitter projects authority, confidence, and ease despite her flamboyant, over-the-top outfit.

video still of What's Her Story, woman wearing orange colored dress, sitting in chair
What's Her Story: Elsie de Wolfe

The year 2020 marks the one-hundredth anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which granted millions of women in the U.S. the right to vote. The Frick is celebrating with a series of videos honoring the stories of women who made, appeared in, collected, and took care of art in this collection.

In the second-to-last episode, meet Elsie de Wolfe, America's first professional interior designer, who decorated the Frick's Fifth Avenue home. #WhatsHerStory

Video still of Aimee Ng and painting of woman holding a dog
Cocktails with a Curator: Romney's "Lady Hamilton as 'Nature'"
Follow the life of Lady Hamilton, who was seventeen years old when she posed for this painting by George Romney.
video still of Aimee Ng and oil painting man against green backround
Cocktails with a Curator: Bronzino's "Lodovico Capponi"

In this week’s episode of “Cocktails with a Curator,” Curator Aimee Ng explores the life of Lodovico Capponi, the subject of a 16th-century portrait at the Frick by Agnolo Bronzino. A page at the Medici court, Lodovico had the misfortune of falling in love with a Florentine noblewoman whom Duke Cosimo I intended to marry to one of his cousins.

video still of What's Her Story, oil painting of woman in red and white seated
What's Her Story: Miss Mary Edwards

The year 2020 marks the one-hundredth anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which granted millions of women in the U.S. the right to vote. The Frick is celebrating with a series of videos honoring the stories of women who made, appeared in, collected, and took care of art in this collection.

Curator Aimee Ng is continuing the series with a look at a portrait of Miss Mary Edwards, a woman who took her life and legacy into her own hands. #WhatsHerStory

video still of Aimee Ng and oil painting of woman standing with blue dress
Cocktails with a Curator: Ingres's 'Comtesse d'Haussonville'

In this week’s episode of “Cocktails with a Curator,” Curator Aimee Ng explores the history behind one of the audience favorites at the Frick, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres’s “Comtesse d’Haussonville.” Sometimes referred to as the “poster girl” of The Frick Collection, the subject of this celebrated portrait led a fascinating life, taking piano lessons from Chopin and writing biographies of Lord Byron and the Irish revolutionary Robert Emmet.

video still of Aimee Ng and oil painting of group walking in park
Travels with a Curator: St. James's Park, London
In this week’s episode of “Travels with a Curator,” explore the history of St. James’s Park with Curator Aimee Ng. This popular attraction in London serves as the backdrop for Thomas Gainsborough's “Mall in St. James’s Park,” which he painted about 1783 for George III. Originally a cockleshell-strewn court for playing pall-mall, a precursor of croquet, the Mall was a place of visual encounters, where fashionable 18th-century Londoners (and their pets) could see and be seen.