So many Exhibitions, So Little Time
#1
Posted 15 November 2008 - 02:41 PM
Philip Pearlstein's retrospective at Monclair Art Museum, till Feb 1, 2009.
will add more later
#2
Posted 16 November 2008 - 03:50 AM
Yves St. Laurent at the De Young
Treasures from Afghanistan at the Asian Art Museum
Martin Puryear at SFMoma
and the one I am anxious for early next year:
Artistic Luxury: Fabergé, Tiffany, Lalique at the Legion of Honor.
#3
Posted 13 December 2008 - 01:14 PM
#4
Posted 13 December 2008 - 01:33 PM
Yves St. Laurent at the De Young
Treasures from Afghanistan at the Asian Art Museum
Martin Puryear at SFMoma
and the one I am anxious for early next year:
Artistic Luxury: Fabergé, Tiffany, Lalique at the Legion of Honor.
I saw the Puryear before I left for the East Coast and was really blown away. The monumental size of his works makes one feel like Alice in Wonderland as they let you walk very near the pieces and can practically touch them.
I'll be seeing the Afghanistan exhibit as part of a private docent tour that's been arranged through the NoCal Metal Arts Guild (we're gonna get to touch the jewelry!) That will be in January so I'll report back.
And as stated in a different thread, if any of you are near the National Gallery in D.C., the Jan Lievens exhibit is spectacular and worthy of a visit.
#5
Posted 13 December 2008 - 05:38 PM
I'm dying of Jealousy here! I saw photos of the pieces in the Smithsonian Magazine & wanted to jump on a plane to SF just to go see this exhibit! (darned economy!) Friends of mine from down there called after seeing it & said that it was indeed fab, but they've got nothing on your behind the scenes tour!
Much as I love Seattle otherwise, one of the things I miss most about SF is that we are not generally a stop for the big exhibits
That said I'm looking forward to our current exhibit at the SAM: "Edward Hopper's Women" and an upcoming one at the SAAM called Garden and Cosmos: The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur. We also have a tiny museum The Frye that gets in some good smaller exhibitions. Currently they have Napoleon on the Nile: Soldiers, Artists, and the Rediscovery of Egypt and in January they'll have an exhibit on the Munich Secession.
Oh and who could forget the Science Fiction Museum, which currently has an exhibit on Robots which the Husband will probably want to see
- Athenaeus
#6
Posted 13 December 2008 - 06:11 PM
[M]ost of the pastas hover around $25. This ought to be enough to buy bucatini that is cooked on both ends. -- Pete Wells on Caravaggio ( * review)
Tonight, there was a dessert of coconut, rhubarb, and black olive. Obvious in its execution how innovation and experiment, when introduced for their own sake, are annoying. --irnscrabblechf52, May 9, 2013
notorious stickler -- NY Times
deeply annoying and nitpicking -- Molly O'Neill, One Big Table
#7
Posted 13 December 2008 - 09:13 PM
I'll never forget it.
Currently at various places around the country, including New York.
Utterly stunning.
_______________
Hootie McBoobins -
#8
Posted 13 December 2008 - 11:27 PM
En route to NY tomorrow, I'll jot down those images which are sticking with me and report back.
#9
Posted 14 December 2008 - 07:33 PM
- Athenaeus
#10
Posted 26 January 2009 - 04:43 PM
July 19, 2008 through June 7, 2009 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
at the IAIA (Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe.
http://www.iaia.edu/...hibit_300_C.php
This exhibit was quite interesting and it was my first and long overdue visit to the IAIA (across from the cathedral). The museum's focus is contemporary Native American arts and culture. As a bonus, the museum gift shop has a small but choice selection of jewelry made by top notch Indian artists and also some other interesting contemporary Indian art media.
#11
Posted 26 January 2009 - 05:20 PM
Modernists in New Mexico
Works from a Private Collector
February 13, 2009 - May 10, 2009
This exhibition from the collection of an anonymous New Mexico collector provides an excellent selection of American Modernist visions of New Mexico during the first half of the twentieth-century.
"In 1916, the painter Robert Henri left New York for the first of three visits to Santa Fe in search of new artistic inspiration. He did so at a pivotal moment in the early history of American Modernism, during the Great War and amid the aftermath of the sensational Armory Show in New York, when many of his compatriots were responding inventively to the aesthetic challenge posed by the European avant-garde. Captivated by the beautiful, unfamiliar western places and peoples of New Mexico, Henri encouraged two close friends and colleagues – George Bellows and John Sloan – to follow his lead. Before long, many American Modernists trekked to New Mexico as well, including Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Stuart Davis, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Edward Hopper. Some visited only once or stayed for just a short time while others (notably O’Keeffe and Sloan) became long-time residents; for all these American Modernists, though, visiting and picturing New Mexico became an artistic rite of passage of sorts – a catalyst for aesthetic reinvention.
This exhibition from the collection of an anonymous New Mexico collector provides an excellent selection of American Modernist visions of New Mexico during the first half of the twentieth-century. Since he moved to Santa Fe eleven years ago and saw one of John Marin’s New Mexico pictures at a local gallery, the owner of this collection has passionately pursued his love of American Modernism by collecting works that creatively engage the area’s distinctive environments, landmarks, and residents while also participating in an emerging international artistic movement. The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is delighted to be able to exhibit this superb selection, which demonstrates the richly productive encounter between some of America’s most innovative twentieth-century painters and one of their favorite sources of inspiration."
The Marsden Hartley exhibit last year at the O'Keefe was really wonderful.
and
O'Keeffiana
Art and Art Materials
May 22, 2009 - September 13, 2009
Explore the artwork, the artifacts, and the materials that inspired this legendary artist.
"In creating her extraordinary body of pictures, Georgia O’Keeffe developed an intimate knowledge of the artistic materials, objects, and places that informed her work on a daily basis. “O’Keeffiana: Art and Art Materials” will explore O’Keeffe’s material world through a rich selection of her works in various media – watercolor, charcoal, graphite, and oil – along with a sampling of the objects and artistic materials that she used and lived with.
The exhibition will shed new light on O’Keeffe’s imaginative and technical processes by showing how she studied the abstract properties of objects she admired, developing favorite visual motifs while investigating the unique qualities of her respective media. An artist keenly attuned to her tools, techniques, and surroundings, O’Keeffe demonstrated unusual knowledge of her materials and the wider world around her. As the artist said in 1945, “One paints what is around.” Elaborating on that point in 1976, O’Keeffe observed “I have picked flowers where I found them, have picked up sea shells and rocks and pieces of wood where there were sea shells and rocks and pieces of wood that I liked. When I found the beautiful white bones on the desert I picked them up and took them home too. I have used these things to say what is to me the wideness and wonder of the world as I live in it.” The exhibition will invite viewers to experience that sense of wideness and wonder by displaying some of the very rocks, bones, and other found objects that O’Keeffe considered beautiful in relation to her pictures of the places from which they came.
Organized by the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s Associate Curator, Alan Braddock, and drawing upon familiar works by the artist as well as many that have rarely been exhibited, “O’Keeffiana: Art and Art Materials” promises to delight and illuminate both enthusiasts of the artist and newcomers to her achievement – an achievement that grew directly out of her material environment. In a world that seems increasingly virtual, or marked by indirect experience, O’Keeffe’s art provides a vivid reminder of the value of intimate knowledge about “what is around,” about “the wideness and wonder of the world” we live in."
#12
Posted 26 January 2009 - 09:49 PM
With 140 drawings, this Gilcrease ledger book presents an accurate and detailed record of Cheyenne life during both the Pre-Reservation and Reservation Eras. As was common in Plains ledger books, the drawings represent the work of several artists. Twenty-four names are identified in the Evans book, and of those, twenty are found on the 1887 roster of Cheyenne and Arapaho Scouts. In some instances the name indicated the artist of the drawing, and at other times the subject of the drawing. One of the most prolific and talented artists of the book was 33-year-old Red Eagle, a Northern Cheyenne who elected to remain with his Southern brethren in Oklahoma. Most of his work depicted coup scenes on various Cheyenne enemies, notably Pawnees and Crows, who are identified by their clothing and hairstyles.
Transcending Vision: American Impressionism 1870-1940 is drawn from the Bank of America holdings and i will check it out.
The one upcoming exhibit I am looking forward to is Willard Stone - Storyteller in Wood. His wood carvings are amazing, at least to my eye.
#13
Posted 26 January 2009 - 10:01 PM
Please come visit my rock concert blog: Tantalized.
#14
Posted 13 March 2009 - 01:10 PM
Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese: Rivals in Renaissance Venice
These masters of 16th-century Venetian painting were no Holy Trinity. They were a discordant ménage-a-trois bound together by envy, talent, circumstances and some strange version of love.
This is the story the exhibition tells through 56 grand to celestial paintings — no filler here, not an ounce of fat — sorted into broad categories (religious images, portraits, belle donne) and arranged in compare-and-contrast couplings and triplings to indicate who was looking at whom, and why, and when.
NY Times
Warren Buffett
#15
Posted 13 March 2009 - 08:21 PM
Franz Hals currently at Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung
-Chomskybot













