All Events

Visit to the Barnes Foundation

Nov 17
2025
1:30pm - 3:00pm
Off Campus Event, Barnes Foundation, 2025 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
The Barnes
"The Barnes Foundation", photo in the public domain

The Department of Transnational Italian Studies is delighted to announce a field trip to The Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, for a themed visit of the art museum focused on the Italian artifacts, objects, and paintings collected by Dr. Albert Coombs Barnes throughout his life. The visit will start immediately after the lecture of art historian Kristi I. Grimes titled "Giorgio de Chirico, Albert Barnes, and Philadelphia's Italian Renaissance" (Friends Center, MLK Room, 12:10-1:15 pm). For more information about the lecture preceding the museum trip please visit the related event page available at this link.

 

Start time and location: 1:30 pm at the Barnes Foundation (2025 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19130).

 

The event is organized within Luca Zipoli's course “Philadelphia the Global City: The Italian Legacy across Time” (ITAL B240) and is open to all the students enrolled in the class.

 

Please contact lzipoli@brynmawr.edu for more information.

 

The event is co-sponsored by the Tri-Co Philly Program and by the Program in Museum Studies

 

Abstract:

This museum trip, led by art historian Kristi I. Grimes and by Assistant Professor Luca Zipoli, follows the lecture by Professor Grimes titled "Giorgio de Chirico, Albert Barnes, and Philadelphia's Italian Renaissance". The tour will explore how Dr. Albert C. Barnes — pharmaceutical magnate turned art collector — positioned himself as a twentieth-century patron whose cultural vision rivaled that of Italy's most discerning Renaissance families. By championing Giorgio de Chirico's work, Barnes created a reciprocal relationship that authenticated both his taste and de Chirico's status as an artist worthy of serious patronage. The remarkable journey of de Chirico’s 1926 portrait of Dr. Barnes — from his private residence to its current position at the entrance of the Barnes Foundation — reveals how patronage, portraiture, and institutional legacy intertwine. This museum tour will trace the connections between twentieth-century Philadelphia and early modern Italy, showing how one Italian artist and one American collector helped establish Philadelphia as a transnational cultural capital where Italian artistic traditions found new expression and enduring influence.

 

Speaker's bio:

Kristi Grimes

Kristi Grimes traces how culture travels—over oceans, through centuries, across boundaries between word and image. Associate Professor of Italian and Director of the Italian Studies Program at Saint Joseph's University, she earned her PhD from the University of Chicago, MA from the University of Notre Dame, and BA from the College of the Holy Cross. This award-winning educator designs interdisciplinary courses that bridge Italian Studies, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Art History and Museum Studies. In Rome, where she teaches regularly, she guides students through the city's layered histories. Her scholarship on Trecento art and literature explores Petrarch and the lyric tradition, the interplay of word and image, the iconography of female saints, and the history of humanism. Her work has appeared in The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language AssociationDiversity in Italian StudiesItalian CultureLatomus: Revue d'Études LatinesLectura Petrarce, and The Medieval Feminist Forum.

Audience: For Students
Type(s): Discussion, Exhibition
Submitted by:
Contact:
Luca Zipoli

Bryn Mawr College welcomes the full participation of all individuals in all aspects of campus life. Should you wish to request a disability-related accommodation for this event, please contact the event sponsor/coordinator. Requests should be made as early as possible.