Organized by University of Chicago students, this intimate exhibition of prints from the Smart Museum's collection revisits the themes of 'The Darker Side of Light: Arts of Privacy, 1850-1900' and offers a new look at the shadowed interiors and private introspections of late nineteenth-century art. In these works, which date between 1850 and 1920, artists demonstrated a willingness to experiment with interior-focused and sometimes taboo subject matter. The small scale of the objects is appropriate to the domestic space--where they could be contemplated at leisure--and they touch on private experience and darker subject matter such as nostalgia, suffering, love, adultery, and drug addiction. The works are loosely grouped into several sections: views of the city, artist portraits, images of women, and seduction and its consequences.
Added by Upcoming Robot on September 16, 2010