メトロポリタン美術館のインスタグラム(metmuseum) - 2月2日 01時29分
As part of our #MetAccess program, every month we invite Disabled and Deaf artists to respond to works in The Met's collection that spark their curiosity or inspiration.
This month, @jerronherman reflects on this 1650 portrait of Juan de Pareja:
"I’m attracted to this piece for several reasons—chiefly a brown face in classical portraiture, but it also interestingly references this alluring relationship between 'outsiders' and their gatekeepers: how a world embraces someone from a distant background but that person, Juan here, is/was/and will always be historically part of the canon. Juan was already prolific and demonstrated so later.
As a Disabled dancer, this is my portrait—I was invited into art and ensconced by others, yes, but I sustain due to my complex prowess and aesthetics. How much more so for other 'outsiders'?"
🎨 #Velzquez (Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez) (Spanish, 1599–1660). #JuanDePareja (1606–1670), 1650. @meteuropeanpaintings #BlackHistoryMonth
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