Viewing art like an expert — Harvard Gazette

Looking at art can be intimidating for the untrained. Is this piece impressionist or surrealist? What, exactly, makes it worthy of hanging in a museum?

“Ultimately, it’s subjective,” Lynette Roth, the Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum, told the Gazette in 2023. “I can’t convince you to like something because I say, ‘This is a major artist of the 20th century’ — you might not be interested in that. But my experience has been that it will grow on you as you have more context.”

We asked specialists from the Harvard Art Museums to lend us their expertise to help develop that context. Below, they home in on the tiny details that make pieces of art important.


A close-up of a Wall Painting Fragment from the Villa at Boscotrecase, 10 BCE-1 BCE. Two small birds stand by water. The paint is aged but the colors are still bright.
Kate Smith with “Wall Painting Fragment from the Villa at Boscotrecase.”

Penley Knipe points to Leaping Antelopes, c. 1745.Leaping Antelopes, c. 1745.
Penley Knipe with “Leaping Antelopes.”

“Child from the Old Town,” Ernst Thoms, 1925
Lynette Roth, Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum, speaks about a favorite detail found in an object at the Harvard Art Museums at Harvard University. She is pictured in front of Child from the Old Town by Ernst Thoms.a detail of Child from the Old Town by Ernst Thoms.
Lynette Roth with “Child from the Old Town.”

Janet O'Brien stands with a painting.
Janet O’Brien with “Portrait of Maharaja Kumar Sawant Singh of Kishangarh.”

A detail of the Garden Carpet, 18th century Persian textile.
A tiny animal is hidden in the 18th-century wool carpet.

Laure Marest holds an ancient Greek coin.A close-up of an ancient Greek coin.
Laure Marest shares a favorite coin.

A close-up of the edge of  a photograph showing the dye process of a large-format Polaroid image.
Dawoud Bey’s diptych is a large-format type of Polaroid.

Susan Costello holds an eight-lobed mirror from the 8th-century Tang dynasty.A close-up image of a mirror from the Tang Dynasty.
Susan Costello shares an eighth-century Chinese bronze mirror.

Narayan Khandekar with A close-up of the edge of
Narayan Khandekar appreciates the marks of Pollack’s process.

Peter Murphy stands with A close-up on Light Prop for an Electric Stage (Light-Space Modulator)
Peter Murphy stands with “Light Prop for an Electric Stage.”

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