Follow the Star: A 2021 Advent Calendar

In 2021 Glencairn Museum is offering an online Advent calendar. The Glencairn collection contains many examples of depictions of the Nativity and infancy of Jesus Christ, including paintings, illuminated manuscripts, sculptures, and stained-glass windows. Collected by Raymond Pitcairn, some of these artworks date to the medieval period. Others were original works commissioned by Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn during the first half of the 20th century.

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A Thousand-Year Journey: An Ivory Box on Loan to The Met Cloisters

In this issue of Glencairn Museum News, art historian Julia Perratore, Assistant Curator at The Met Cloisters, profiles one of the more enigmatic works in the Glencairn collection of medieval art: an ivory box with scenes from the Book of Kings carved in Spain in the tenth or eleventh century. Dr. Perratore reflects upon its thousand-year journey through time and examines the ways in which it teaches us about the past.

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Glencairn Museum Kids: A Resource for Families

We’re excited to announce a new online resource for families with children: Glencairn Museum Kids! There are six different sections to visit, each with a different type of activity, project, or puzzle, including a section that shares family-friendly ideas of what a visit to Glencairn might include.

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Death and the Athenian Family: An Athenian Funerary Lekythos

Funerary art offers a window into the lives of the living as well as the dead. In this essay for Glencairn Museum News, Dr. Wendy Closterman, Associate Curator at Glencairn Museum and Professor of History and Greek at Bryn Athyn College, introduces us to an Athenian funerary monument in the shape of a lekythos (a vessel used to store oil and perfume) in the Glencairn collection.

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Woodstock Artist John Pike: Paintings Commissioned by Raymond Pitcairn

Raymond Pitcairn assembled a significant collection of artwork from a variety of cultures and time periods, executed in a variety of media. However, it is well known that he purchased very few paintings from auctions or galleries. Instead, Pitcairn preferred to commission paintings. This short essay will consider three paintings commissioned by Pitcairn from American artist John Pike (1911-1979), and also two smaller works that were gifted by Pike to the Pitcairns.

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Ancient Egyptian Creation Myths: From Watery Chaos to Cosmic Egg

In this essay for Glencairn Museum News, Dr. Jennifer Houser Wegner, Associate Curator in the Egyptian Section at the Penn Museum, introduces us to the fascinating subject of ancient Egyptian creation myths, including the cosmological context for a number of objects in Glencairn Museum’s Egyptian gallery.

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“Craftsmanship at Glencairn: Five Artists”

Glencairn is decorated with hundreds of original artworks in a variety of media, created by the artists and craftsmen who worked for Raymond Pitcairn’s Bryn Athyn Studios. A new exhibit in the Great Hall, Craftsmanship at Glencairn: Five Artists, explores the work and lives of just a few of the artists who worked at Glencairn. Beginning this September, the Museum will also be launching a guided tour about craftsmanship at Glencairn.

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The Cherry Street Temple: A 3D Digital Reconstruction

Rev. Christopher Augustus Barber explores several objects in Glencairn’s collection in the context of his research into the history and overlapping legacies of Glencairn and the old Cherry Street Temple in Philadelphia. As a result of this research, Rev. Joel Christian Glenn has created a detailed 3D digital reconstruction of the Temple.

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The Glencairn Pietà: A 15th-Century Painting from Valencia

A Pietà acquired by Raymond Pitcairn, previously in the Demotte Collection, is an extraordinary panel from Valencia, Spain, painted around 1435-40. This essay by Dr. Mercedes Gómez-Ferrer, Professor of Art History at the University of València (Spain), sheds new light on this remarkable painting.

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The “Clouds of Heaven” Motif in Art Created for Glencairn

The “clouds of heaven” motif—an arching, multilayered band of clouds, usually appearing at the top of a medieval work of art—is used repeatedly in the original art and decoration created for Glencairn in the 1920s and 1930s. It is found in various locations in the building in stained glass, sculpture, and metalwork. This article will provide examples of the “clouds of heaven,” both in the art made for Glencairn and in Raymond Pitcairn’s personal medieval collection.

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