Showing posts with label National Gallery of Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Gallery of Art. Show all posts

Sunday, June 24, 2007

They're back! Teenage Ninja Mutant Turtles




Today, I had a quick lunch with some friends who were returning home to Massachusetts from their vacation in Williamsburg and Virginia Beach.

Their older son (4 1/2 ) was waxing lyrical about the TNMT's. As I don't have any small children, I haven't kept up with the current movies. (He was extraordinarily impressed I was originally from Spidey's hometown (neighborhood), Forest Hills, Queens!)

Oh dear! I thought that the Turtles were all past history, but I've got to deal with it again!

Years ago, I remember trying to describe to a group of eighth-graders how Brumidi painted the Apotheosis of Washington inside of the dome of the Capitol: "He was flat on his back atop scaffolding, like Michaelangelo painting the Sistine Chapel."
"You mean, the Ninja Turtle?"
"Huh?"
"Michaelangelo!"

After clearing up the misunderstanding, I ended up taking the group to the National Gallery of Art.

The students were amazed to find out that the names of the pizza-eating Turtles were after famous painters and loved seeing the art.

While the NGA doesn't have a Michaelangelo, they do have a Leonardo DaVinci, a few Raphaels (St. George and the Dragon is a favorite), and sculptures by Donatello in their collection.

Introducing students to great art through the Teenage Ninja Mutant Turtles?

Cowabunga!

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Postcard from Washington, DC #1





GREETINGS FROM DC!

Almost everyone rhapsodizes about Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa; some of you even remember the song sung so beautifully by the late, great Nat King Cole. But most of you know it as a iconic work of art that is both admired and parodied.
However, Mona Lisa is no comparison to her older, lovlier, and more mysterious 'sister', Ginevra de'Benci who holds court at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.

Da Vinci painted only three portraits of women that we know of; the third portrait is in Kracow, Poland.

There is a wonderful
documentary, narrated by Meryl Streep, concerning the painting and the voyage to the NGA. It is available through the usual sources or by contacting the NGA directly.

Why not introduce your students to Da Vinci through Ginevra the next time you visit the nation's capital? (The National Gallery of Art is across the National Mall from the Smithsonian's National Museum of Air and Space.)
And while you're there, take a
highlights or themed tour of some of the other great works of art through the auspices of the the NGA's
Educational Department and be sure to enjoy a gelato downstairs while you sing Donovan's, Jennifer Juniper!

The Tour Marm