Materials of Empire: Colonial Narratives 1700–1860 January 15–July 31, 2022
![Possibly Indian or Spanish, Earrings from a Parure, c. 1780–1820, emeralds, diamonds, and yellow gold with silver overlay](https://test.mfah.org/static/images/earrings-from-a-parure.17860720925716497688.jpg?width=290)
Portuguese, Earrings from a Parure, c. 1780–1820, emeralds, diamonds, and yellow gold with silver overlay, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Masterson III.
Unknown artist, Pendant, c. 1750, sepia on ivory, gold, hair, and glass, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, bequest of Caroline A. Ross.
Mexican, Silla (Side Chair), c. 1750–1800, zebrawood and upholstery, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, Museum purchase funded by the Rienzi Society.
Mexican, Candeleros, c. 1670–80, silver with iron shaft, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, Museum purchase funded by the Rienzi Society.
Digby Scott and Benjamin Smith, Wine Label from a set of six, 1806, silver-gilt, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, Museum purchase funded by the Rienzi Accessions Endowment and various donors in honor of Katherine Howe's retirement.
Daniel Hockly, Nutmeg Grater, 1811, sterling silver, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Masterson III.
Rienzi, the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts, presents special exhibitions twice a year. Exhibitions are included with general admission.
Materials of Empire: Colonial Narratives 1700–1860 explores objects from the Rienzi Collection that shed light on the links between Europe, Africa, the Americas, and India. This small exhibition examines the stories objects reveal as well as conceal, and places them within the context of entangled legacies and experiences of empire.
Exploration, war, scientific expeditions, and religious missions feature prominently in the history of Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries. These factors fueled an age of discovery in which thousands of ships transported explorers, merchants, and migrants from Europe to far-reaching destinations.
Vessels bound back to Europe carried cargo such as gold, silver, sugar, and tobacco. The ships also transported millions of enslaved men, women, and children from Africa to points across the empires to serve as labor in the cultivation of the new materials. Every crossing brought new encounters and confrontations between people and ways of life, resulting in a complex cultural landscape.
Materials of Empire: Colonial Narratives 1700–1860 / January 15–July 31, 2022
This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.