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The exhibit features five paintings by Velazquez, including his portrait of the poet Luis de Gongora y Argote from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which was done a year before Velazquez became Philip IV's court painter. A Velazquez portrait of a court jester painted in the early 1630s comes from the Cleveland Museum of Art. A portrait of Philip IV from Velazquez's workshop that has never before been seen in public comes from a private Spanish collection. The exhibition also features 16 prints, some with engraved portraits modeled after Velazquez's work. The Prado and the Meadows began a three-year partnership in 2009 that has included an exchange of scholars, research, works of art and exhibitions. This summer the two institutions announced they will extend the collaboration for another two years. The Meadows Museum, which opened in 1965, is the vision of a Texan who started collecting Spanish art after being inspired by visits to the Prado. Hoping to create a "Prado on the Prairie," oil financier Algur H. Meadows donated his private Spanish art collection and funds to start the museum to SMU. The Meadows' portrait of Philip IV was one of his acquisitions. "It was a very easy and natural fit that the Prado should work closely with the Meadows," Finaldi said. ___ Online: Meadows Museum:
http://smu.edu/meadowsmuseum/
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