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Nassau County Museum of Art hosts The Opulent Splendor of Napoleon and Eugenie
Written by rubin Saturday, 06 June 2009 23:26
ROSLYN HARBOR, NY - The sumptuous grandeur of France’s Second Empire is celebrated as Nassau County Museum of Art devotes its galleries to paintings, sculpture, decorative objects, memorabilia and historical artifacts that reflect the Imperial Court of Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie from 1852 to 1870. NAPOLEON AND EUGENIE, a major exhibition opening on June 7th and remaining on view through September 7th, 2009 draws from the notable Collection of Christopher Forbes who regards Napoleon III as “one of the great underrated world leaders.” The exhibition’s showing at NCMA, curated by Franklin Hill Perrell, is sponsored by The Florence Gould Foundation
NAPOLEON AND EUGENIE conveys the story of France during the era of the
Second Empire —its personages, its accomplishments, its international
relationships and, throughout, the opulence that characterized the royal court
of Napoleon III and his Consort Empress. The exhibition also encompasses
historical material on the Bonaparte family and the First Empire with many of
the works on view consisting of objects that were owned or commissioned by the
Imperial family.
Louis Napoleon (1808-1873), the nephew of Napoleon I, returned from exile in 1848 to become the first president of France under the constitution of the Second Republic (1848-1852). In 1852, the Second Empire was overwhelmingly approved with the result that Louis Napoleon became Napoleon III. His rise to the throne ushered in an era of liberal domestic policies and was marked by a commercial treaty with England that opened France to free trade, incursions into China in partnership with England, intervention into Mexico, the construction of the Suez Canal, programs of improvement in the city of Paris and, finally, the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 that saw the end of the regime. It was an era, surprisingly progressive for its time, in which youth, glamour and accomplishment rather than aristocratic birth, were the hallmarks of esteem. Writers and artists were invited to magnificent royal balls. The Empress Eugenie presided over charity sales and was a patron of the arts and literature. The Emperor supported universal suffrage, the working classes and the church.
Nassau County Museum of Art is located in Roslyn Harbor, Long Island, 20 miles east of New York City. It is chartered and accredited under the laws of New York State as a not-for-profit private educational institution and museum and is operated by a privately elected board of trustees which is responsible for its governance. Since the museum’s privatization in 1989 it has become the largest suburban fine arts museum in the country in terms of attendance, volunteer participation and budget. For information about the museum, about the current exhibitions or about public programs, please call (516) 484-9337 or log onto http://nassaumuseum.org.
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