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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Wednesday, April 26, 1967
The paintings of Morris Louis (1912-1962), temporarily on exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts, embody the contemporary feeling of
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Tuesday, February 14, 1967
The commercial prominence of the Netherlands in the seventeenth century made Amsterdam the major market place for the sale of
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Monday, February 6, 1967
In this age of specialization, the renaissance man is becoming hard to find. Yet, the curiosity of the most inventive
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Monday, January 9, 1967
The Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck Collection of Indian and Nepali Art the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, closed yesterday. The
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Friday, December 9, 1966
Superficially, the city will still be the greatest artifact of Renaissance culture. But its richness for scholars has been greatly
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Tuesday, October 18, 1966
Andy Warhol's soup cans, Brillo boxes, films, wallpaper, and his floating helium Clouds await Boston gallery-goers at the Institute of
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Wednesday, May 11, 1966
The "Henri Matisse Retrospective" exhibition is the largest travelling exhibiton ever housed in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Including
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Thursday, April 14, 1966
Durer and His Time, is an exhibition of German drawing now on display at the Museum of Fine Arts through
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Tuesday, March 22, 1966
The Select Bibliography of History --Which may now be purchased in the history library on the top floor of Widener--can
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NEWS
By Jonathan D. Fineberg
Saturday, February 12, 1966
Peter Pelham, a relatively unknown Boston mezzotint engraver and portrait painter, died in 1751, leaving his studio to his thirteen-year-old
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