Getty Villa

Home to the Getty’s antiquities collection, housed in a re-created Roman villa overlooking the Pacific

Also posted in Behind the Scenes, Education, J. Paul Getty Museum

Discovering Latin at the Getty Villa

Students in the Academia Aestiva Latina show off their bouquets garnis in the Getty Villa’s Herb Garden

If you visited the Getty Villa during the week of July 25 and thought you overheard people speaking Latin, you weren’t imagining things. That week, we at the Getty Villa were proud to invite a group of 14 high school students… More»

Tagged , , , , , , Leave a comment
Also posted in Behind the Scenes, J. Paul Getty Museum

Nothing Happens, Everything Happens: Perspectives on “Trojan Women (after Euripides)”

trojan_women_2

“People don’t understand why Trojan Women is such a great play, because they say nothing happens,” says director Anne Bogart, explaining why SITI Company chose to adapt the ancient drama for this year’s outdoor theater production at the Getty Villa. “In… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , , 2 Responses
Also posted in Behind the Scenes, J. Paul Getty Museum

SITI Company on “Trojan Women (after Euripides)” at the Getty Villa

siti_company

SITI company premieres a newly commissioned adaptation of Euripides’ Trojan Women at the Getty Villa on September 8. “We’ve been working for 20 years to do this play,” says Leon Ingulsrud, who helped found the New York-based ensemble in 1991. In… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , , Leave a comment
Also posted in Behind the Scenes, J. Paul Getty Museum

Reimagining Euripides: A 21st-Century “Trojan Women” at the Getty Villa

Playwright and dramaturg Jocelyn Clarke and SITI Company director Anne Bogart
Playwright and dramaturg Jocelyn Clarke and SITI Company director Anne Bogart

First performed over 2,400 years ago, Euripides’ Trojan Women is one of the most enduring and moving of classical dramas—and one of the greatest antiwar plays. Beginning September 8, renowned New York-based theater troupe SITI Company premieres a newly commissioned… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , 3 Responses
Also posted in J. Paul Getty Museum

At the Roman Table: Fish Sauce, Sausage-Stuffed Pig, and Good Conversation

Sally Grainger with porcellum hortolanum at the serving table for At the Roman Table at the Getty Villa

On a recent midsummer’s evening, the Getty hosted a program called At the Roman Table: A Culinary Adventure at the Getty Villa. The event drew 160 guests on each of two balmy evenings to Malibu, where we enjoyed a banquet… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , 1 Response
Also posted in Antiquities, Behind the Scenes, Conservation, J. Paul Getty Museum

Forensic Techniques Illuminate a New Acquisition

Oil jar (lekythos) with a funerary scene, attributed to the Achilles Painter, Greek, made in Athens, about 435–430 B.C. Terracotta, 17 3/4 in high x 5 5/16 in. diam. The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2011.14

The recently acquired white-ground lekythos on display in Women and Children in Antiquity (Gallery 207) at the Getty Villa is a handsome addition to the Museum’s antiquities collection. With its narrow neck and cylindrical body, this popular type of vase… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , 2 Responses
Also posted in Exhibitions and Installations, J. Paul Getty Museum, Photographs, Film, and Video

Traveling through Bible Lands: The Dream and the Reality (Audio)

Jacob's Well, near Shechem, Frank Mason Good (English, 1839–1928), 1860s. Albumen print, 6 1/8 x 8 1/8 in.

Begins with an introduction by Karol Wight, senior curator of antiquities. Audience Q&A follows. Running time: 59:04 | Download (MP3 file, 55.4 MB) For centuries, Americans and Europeans saw the lands of the Bible—known variously as Palestine, western Syria, and… More»

Tagged , , , , , 2 Responses
Also posted in Ancient World

Uncorking the Secrets to Ancient Cocktails

Patrick McGovern in his lab, sniffing out an ancient brew

Update—We’ve posted video excerpts from Patrick McGovern’s talk. See below for his discussion of Midas Touch, here for Chateau Jiahu, and here for Theobroma. What ancient brews were served at the funeral feast of King Midas, or his father Gordius,… More»

Tagged , , , , , , 5 Responses
Also posted in Behind the Scenes, Photographs, Film, and Video

Unpixelated: Luther Gerlach Makes Photographs Like It’s 1851

unpixelated

There are digital photographers. And then there’s Luther Gerlach. In the time it took you to read that last paragraph, you could have snapped six digital photos. It would take Luther half a day to make that many images—on a… More»

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , 1 Response
Also posted in Behind the Scenes, Education, J. Paul Getty Museum

Homer’s “Iliad,” Told in 135 Voices

Karol Wight, Guy Wheatley, Claire Lyons, and Jay Kurtz at the podium for the daylong reading of Homer's Iliad at the Getty Villa

It was an unusual day at the Villa. People wandered about with numbers clipped to their lapels. Intense conversations took place about Homer’s poetry, fueled by coffee and snacks. Visitors moved in and out of the auditorium, as if in… More»

Tagged , , , , , , 2 Responses
  • Facebook

  • Twitter

  • Tumblr

    • photo from Tumblr

      differenceetrepetition:

      Medieval methods of entertainment included sad dances and alienation parties.

      Tights are not pants, circa 1400something.


      05/19/13

  • Flickr