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<channel><title><![CDATA[artsmarttalk.com - ArtBlog]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog]]></link><description><![CDATA[ArtBlog]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 18:29:15 -0400</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[The Color of Life: For Detroit Institute of Arts]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/the-color-of-life-for-detroit-institute-of-arts]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/the-color-of-life-for-detroit-institute-of-arts#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 15 Aug 2013 01:43:19 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[art as collective memory]]></category><category><![CDATA[detroit institute of arts]]></category><category><![CDATA[the importance of art]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/the-color-of-life-for-detroit-institute-of-arts</guid><description><![CDATA[George Bellows A Day in June 1913                     In the young adult novel The Giver the world is a fair and equal place, a peacefully drab community of such numbing sameness that random chance, even if sometimes cruel and unjust, gradually comes into focus as a valuable part of human existence.&nbsp; The first insidious hint for the reader that the gleaming utopia is in fact a horrifying dystopia is the dawning awareness that the world in The Giver has no color. No color, thus no racism - n [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4652517_orig.jpg?392' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4652517.jpg?392" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">George Bellows A Day in June 1913</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    I<font size="3">n the young adult novel <em>The Giver</em> the world is a fair and equal place, a peacefully drab community of such numbing sameness that random chance, even if sometimes cruel and unjust, gradually comes into focus as a valuable part of human existence.&nbsp; The first insidious hint for the reader that the gleaming utopia is in fact a horrifying dystopia is the dawning awareness that the world in <em>The Giver</em> has no color. No color, thus no racism - no color, thus no flashy show-off fashion - no color, thus few ways to tout superiority through superficial indicators. But just think...&nbsp; no Color.&nbsp; No rainbows, no bright spring flowers, no blue sky, no rich range of greens, blues, yellows, oranges found in food, fabrics, cars, cats, trees, houses, etc., etc. Need I mention that there is no art in this sad practical world? Culture as a category has been expunged as messy and troublesome. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4731799_orig.jpg?238' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4731799.jpg?238" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Great Hall Detroit Institute of the Arts</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">This post is dedicated to the <font size="4"><strong>Detroit Institute of Arts</strong></font>, one of the greatest of American museums, with an international collection of art that ranks among the best in the world. No surprise there; the font of American industrial wealth centered in Detroit was perfectly sited to nurture the DIA in the late 19th and early 20th century when the great American museum collections were being compiled. A long list of European masterpieces is a given, but the DIA is a vibrant, living place with a vigorous embrace of world art and contemporary art as well. The setting is also first rank, a landmark building designed by Paul Cret, the French-born, Philadelphia-based master architect. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9314944.jpg?436" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Diego Rivera Detroit Industry Fresco Cycle (detail) 1932-33</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">And now, when Detroit has been left out to dry for a sad laundry list of reasons and inevitabilities, this great institution has become a pawn. None of the art has been sold off yet but the possibility seems to be very real. If that happens, what will be lost?&nbsp; Will it be the complete set of massive murals by Diego Rivera, commissioned in 1932 by Edsel Ford as homage to Detroit&rsquo;s world-changing invention and hard work?     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:1px;*margin-top:2px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3736227_orig.jpg?403' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3736227.jpg?403" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pieter Bruegel The Wedding Dance 1566</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Or one of the priceless (but a price will be established, never worry) Van Goghs, his <em>Self Portrait with Straw Hat</em> (the first of his self-portraits to enter an American museum collection) or his portrait of Postmaster Roulin, partner to the masterpiece at the Barnes Foundation? How about the fabulous Bruegel <em>Wedding Dance</em> from 1566, one of only a handful by this master in the U.S.? Would it matter, after all, if this great collection were to be nibbled away at the edges, like a prized cashmere blanket left to the mercy of moths?</font>    </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1302145_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1302145.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Van Gogh Self Portrait with Straw Hat 1887</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Yes. It matters very much. Art is the color in our banal and practical world; without it we lack grace, joy, and rich significance, we miss the palette of magnificence that offsets and complements the hum and strain of daily life. While a collection like Detroit&rsquo;s might have been built by grim, hardworking men who made their fortunes by the grinding screech of machines, the benefit of the art they amassed is that it calls us all - then, now, and far into the future, to eternal grandeur.&nbsp;     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:4px;*margin-top:8px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7218710_orig.jpg?365' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7218710.jpg?365" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Donald Sultan Oranges on a Branch March 14 1992</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Great art is what reminds of us of our possibilities, no matter how often and by how much we fall short in the effort. The glory of art, the stuff of human striving towards the divine in some form,&nbsp; is there to pick us back up, dust us off, and inspire us to try again. The DIA and its irreplaceable collection is a trust for the long haul; at this moment, as much if not more than any other, we must remember that it is not ours to bargain with. Great museums hold our collective memory; they must be maintained and respected for those who come after us. Once we start chipping away pieces we cannot guarantee the integrity of the whole; the story of humankind starts losing pages.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1382644_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1382644.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Joan Mitchell Before After ii 1998</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Human lives and accomplishments function on a strange sliding scale in our world; those with fancy cars and fat bank accounts get high marks and great esteem, never mind the possible human cost of all that luxury, while pitiful souls who scrape by in creative fields are often denigrated as losers and ne&rsquo;er do wells. When Detroit was alive with industrial wealth it was a byword of the American Dream, but now that the party has moved on, the glory days are forgotten and the city and the people who worked to achieve that wealth get kicked to the curb.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:5px;*margin-top:10px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7253640_orig.jpg?381' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7253640.jpg?381" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><span style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Allie McGhee Night Ritual 1991</span></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Apparently artists are now moving into Detroit, attracted by the dirt-cheap housing and the freedom from the high overhead of thriving cities like New York. How ironic that an artist like Van Gogh, who starved and suffered through his sad existence while sharing his explosive joy in life in paintings that no one wanted during his lifetime, might have been one of them. How weird that he is now considered a commodity with enough ka-ching to make a dent in the plight of a down-on-its-luck American city.     </font><br /><br /><strong><font color="#000099" size="4"><span>What do you think? </span></font></strong><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;">                    <a title="" href="http://www.dia.org/" style=""><font color="#000000">The Website of the Detroit Institute of Arts</font><br /><span></span>http://www.dia.org/</a><br /><br /><span>Wikipedia gives a good account of the history and holdings of the DIA</span><br />                    <a title="" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit_Institute_of_Arts" style="">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit_Institute_of_Arts</a><br /><br /><em><font size="3"><span>All art in this post is from the collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts</span></font></em><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      <br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Outsider Art: Outside What?]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/outsider-art-outside-what]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/outsider-art-outside-what#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 07 May 2013 15:49:11 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[folk art]]></category><category><![CDATA[outsider art]]></category><category><![CDATA[philadelphia museum]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/outsider-art-outside-what</guid><description><![CDATA[Blue House with People Bill Traylor                     I&rsquo;ve been mulling over the term &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; since I saw &lsquo;Great and Mighty Things: Outsider Art from the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Collection, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art&rsquo; a couple of weeks ago. Outsider Art is an accepted term in current artspeak, but there is something intrinsically troubling about it. It&rsquo;s not that the label is politically incorrect or insensitive &ndash; although it is &ndash; [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/394499_orig.jpg?200' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/394499.jpg?200" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Blue House with People Bill Traylor</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">I&rsquo;ve been mulling over the term &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; since I saw &lsquo;Great and Mighty Things: Outsider Art from the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Collection, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art&rsquo; a couple of weeks ago. Outsider Art is an accepted term in current artspeak, but there is something intrinsically troubling about it. It&rsquo;s not that the label is politically incorrect or insensitive &ndash; although it is &ndash; but that it purports to sit in judgment on the art, not merely on the people who make it. In fact, if &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; were altered slightly to &lsquo;Outsiders&rsquo; Art&rsquo; I&rsquo;d have less of a problem with it. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1284098_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1284098.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">3 VW vans Martin Ramirez</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">At face value &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; means art made by people outside the accepted world of art - no training, no galleries, no knowledge of the art world <font size="3">-</font> simple folk making art free of &lsquo;civilizing&rsquo; constraints. Outsider art is free of the knowing, educated intellect that adds a sophisticated gloss to &lsquo;Insider Art.&rsquo; It is also, one needs to add, free of the cynical, ironic, arch bullshit that is all too often given pride of place in contemporary &lsquo;Real Art.&rsquo;</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2905571_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2905571.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Man, Fish, Rooster David Butler</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Outsider Art is the least cynical of art - it isn&rsquo;t looking for a spread in a magazine or a grant or the approbation of fussy critics. Whether it&rsquo;s good or not Outsider Art leads with the heart rather than the mind, celebrates the hand/heart connection, traffics in physical, sensual objects, and doesn&rsquo;t care a whit what you think. It is the ultimate anti-Conceptual Art, the &lsquo;who the heck is Marcel Duchamp?&rsquo; art.* </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:2px;*margin-top:4px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9430805_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9430805.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Assemblage/Painted Frame Simon Sparrow</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3"><em style="">Raw Vision</em>, a publication devoted to Outsider Art, relates the history of the term. Beginning in the mid-19th c. and especially with the development of psychology, came the awareness of another kind of art <font size="3">-</font> art by psychiatric patients, often done on random bits and pieces of paper, described as being &lsquo;of unusual quality and power.&rsquo; French artists Jean DuBuffet and Andr&eacute; Breton picked up on the importance of these untamed visions in the 1940&rsquo;s and gave the work the name &lsquo;Art Bru&rsquo; <font size="3">-</font> Raw Art. The term Outsider Art was coined by a British critic in 1972, an unfortunate shift in meaning away from the power of the work to the diminished status of those who create it.</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8771807_orig.jpg?400' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8771807.jpg?400" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">from Story of the Vivien Girls Henry Darger</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Henry Darger, whose vast body of work was brought to light after his death in 1973, is one of the most emblematic of &lsquo;Outsider Artists.&rsquo; &nbsp;His profile fits - childhood deprivations, time in institutions, lack of a secure place in the world &ndash; and his work is singular, visionary, obsessive/compulsive, with a haunting, compelling power and beauty.&nbsp; The show of his work at the Museum of Folk Art in New York (in their beautiful contemporary building, now under demolition threat from that neighboring haven of &lsquo;Insider Art&rsquo; &ndash; MOMA) wowed the world and did much to put &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; on the official map.&nbsp; Darger poured his heart and his whole life into his limitless narrative full of drawings of beleaguered children in a hostile world, and now his obsessions inform other art forms, especially graphic novels and contemporary music.</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:3px;*margin-top:6px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3216424_orig.jpg?338' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3216424.jpg?338" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Interior James Castle</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Darger is not included in the PMA show but many of the artists in the show are important &lsquo;Outsider&rsquo; names. James Castle, one of the most interesting for me, lived his life in profound silence because of deafness; it is not known how well, or even if, he could read or write. &nbsp;Using sharpened sticks, soot, and saliva applied to discarded cardboard and food containers, he created elegant, often highly refined scenes of interiors and landscapes. His knowledge of perspective, assumedly instinctive rather than learned, is impressive and the drawings show a masterful, confident hand. He also made collage/assemblage constructions with cardboard and string that appear careless but are in fact subtle and exacting. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2594580_orig.jpg?351' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2594580.jpg?351" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Dancing Hog Whirligig David Butler</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">'Outsider' Artists often blur the boundaries between 2 dimensions and 3 dimensions, disregarding categories that are clearly defined in art classes but have no particular hierarchy when it comes to an artist&rsquo;s vision. &nbsp;David Butler, a Louisiana artist featured in the PMA show, was a maker of energetic &lsquo;whirligigs,&rsquo; fashioned from scraps of tin and wood and slathered with bright chalky colors &ndash; they enchant the eye and mind with their lively sense of movement even sitting quietly in the museum gallery. In Butler&rsquo;s work there is something of the shaman, a calling out to spirits for help and protection, a reminder that in &lsquo;Outsider Art&rsquo; spiritual and religious belief can be as much a part of the making as the paint and the scraps of cardboard. This unfettered declaration of faith is perhaps part of the attraction for an &lsquo;Insider Art&rsquo; world of cynical, ironic detachment from any deeply held belief. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5049475.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">David Butler</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                      <font size="3">David Butler was a rare &lsquo;Outsider Artist&rsquo; who received the acclaim of the Art World while he was still alive. Although he started making art full time only after a workplace accident at age 67, he was included in a major Smithsonian show of &lsquo;Black Folk Art in America&rsquo; (more labels &ndash; Black. Folk.) in the early 1980&rsquo;s. After that he saw his art come to demand fairly high prices. He didn&rsquo;t always sell; he believed that God had given him a gift, and &lsquo;if you have a gift then you shouldn&rsquo;t be taking no money.&rsquo;</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3191180_orig.jpg?296' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3191180.jpg?296" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">James Castle</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">The trouble with these labels, and with the PMA show (and others) is that it is all too clear that they serve the &lsquo;Insider Art&rsquo; world, which speaks a language of hard cash, a language that is blessedly foreign, or at least obscured, in the heartfelt work of &lsquo;Outsider Artists.&rsquo;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s all too obvious that, with this exhibit, the PMA is courting the collectors in order to get them to leave this important work to the Museum, a gambit that is more and more common with big expensive-to-run museums. I&rsquo;m not privy to the negotiations, but I hope it works. I&rsquo;m inclined to think that collectors are delighted to see their collections go up in value as a result of such a show, making it possible to reap a robust harvest on the open market.&nbsp; </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:4px;*margin-top:8px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8080074_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8080074.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Bill Traylor</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Meanwhile the art - which is neither &lsquo;Outside&rsquo; nor &ldquo;Inside, but truly Art -&nbsp; stands as testament to the human heart, the striving for sincere expression, faith and beauty. Try not to let that get lost in the labels. </font><br /><br /><br />                    <font size="3">*Marcel Duchamp, although cited with other avant-garde artists who created a stir with art outside cultural traditions, did so for reasons that are the diametric opposite of Outsider Art intent. Duchamp is considered the father of Conceptual Art, a highly intellectualized approach to art in which the aesthetic object is far less important than the idea behind it. </font><br /><span></span><br /><span></span><br /><span style=""></span>                    <a title="" href="http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/768.html" style="">http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/768.html</a><a title="" href="http://www.rawvision.com/what-outsider-art"><br /><span style=""></span>  </a><a title="" style="">http://www.rawvision.com/what-outsider-art</a><br /><br /><em><span>Artists included but not discussed - Bill Traylor, Simon Sparrow, Martin Ramirez</span></em><br /><br /><font size="3"><span><strong><font size="5">What do you think?</font></strong> Why is Joseph Cornell, who also isolated himself, was self-taught and created </span>singular, obsessive work, considered an Insider instead of an Outsider? Why is Modigliani, who made his sculptures from stolen paving stones and couldn't give away his art for most of his life, an 'Insider' instead of an 'Outsider?' Do labels help or hinder our understanding and experience of artists and their art?</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      <br /><span style=""></span>      <br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[All that Glitters - El Anatsui at the Brooklyn Museum]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/all-that-glitters-is-not-gold-el-anatsui-at-the-brooklyn-museum]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/all-that-glitters-is-not-gold-el-anatsui-at-the-brooklyn-museum#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2013 00:30:36 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[african art]]></category><category><![CDATA[ann hamilton]]></category><category><![CDATA[art installations]]></category><category><![CDATA[brooklyn museum]]></category><category><![CDATA[el anatsui]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/all-that-glitters-is-not-gold-el-anatsui-at-the-brooklyn-museum</guid><description><![CDATA[In the Event of a Thread 2012 (photo MGM)                     What is happening to Contemporary Art? Lately it seems to have staked a claim for joy, pleasure, beauty and lasting meaning. Ann Hamilton&rsquo;s In the Event of A Thread, which took over the Park Avenue Amory in New York for a too brief month last December, was a gleeful romp of swings and children and billowing curtains. Shouts and laughter, the ringing music of freedom and serendipity, filled the cavernous space as muttering, Becke [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8888406_orig.jpg?278' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8888406.jpg?278" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">In the Event of a Thread 2012 (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    What is happening to Contemporary Art? Lately it seems to have staked a claim for joy, pleasure, beauty and lasting meaning. Ann Hamilton&rsquo;s <em><font size="4"><strong>In the Event of A Thread</strong></font></em>, which took over the Park Avenue Amory in New <font size="3">York </font>for a too brief month last December, was a gleeful romp of swings and children and billowing curtains. Shouts and laughter, the ringing music of freedom and serendipity, filled the cavernous space <font size="3">as</font> muttering, Beckett-gray characters sat fixated on monotonous tasks at tables piled with caged pigeons. <em><strong><font size="4">In the Event of A Thread</font></strong></em> made a clear, significant point without having to belabor it. My spirits still lift every time I think of it. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:5px;*margin-top:10px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5831590_orig.jpg?488' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5831590.jpg?488" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Gravity and Grace 2010 (see credit**)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">And now, <font size="4"><strong>El Anatsui at the Brooklyn Museum</strong></font>. Wow. Beauty. Joy. Splendor. Delight. Wonder. Awe. If you don&rsquo;t immediately feel these things when you see his work, go back and start over. <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> is the great African artist whose rich textured draperies crafted of crushed bits of metal detritus have taken the world by storm; <em><font size="4"><strong>Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works</strong></font></em> is his first sole exhibition at a New York museum. It&rsquo;s there until April 4th <font size="3">-</font> don&rsquo;t miss it<font size="3">*</font>. M<font size="3">uch </font>of the work in the show <font size="3">is recent and stems</font> from an accidental discovery of a discarded bag of worthless bottle caps. The day he stumbled on that banal cache <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> discovered gold <font size="3">- </font>literally - though not the gold you may think I mean.</font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:2px;*margin-top:4px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4255457_orig.jpg?282' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4255457.jpg?282" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">El Anatsui (image by Nash Baker)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3"><strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong>, born in Ghana and raised with a Western-style education at a Christian school, has long been a professor of fine art at the University of Nigeria. As a full time resident of Africa, he is a rare ambassador of forms and ideas, inhabiting a strong, proud culture with deep traditions while also viewing it with the intellectual and historical perspective of a Westernized outsider. In videos that help narrate the exhibit, he speaks of how he was introduced to his own culture and how he works to communicate profound truths of African history. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8012166_orig.jpg?307' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8012166.jpg?307" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Yida (Comb) 1994/2010 (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">A theme of the show is &lsquo;<font size="3">N</font>on-<font size="3">F</font>ixed <font size="3">F</font>orms<font size="3">,'</font> a key concept for <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong>. <font size="3">T</font>he best demonstration of what he means by the term c<font size="3">omes</font> from the earliest work on display. Several small-scale sculptures, planks of wood with burnt and punctured patterns, are deceptively simple but communicate layers of ideas. The worked surfaces of the wood, an iconic material of art from West Africa, relate to scarring patterns that appear on human skin and in traditional African sculpture; the planks therefore represent Africa itself - continent, people, and culture. These forms can be endlessly interchanged on aesthetic whim but they also carry a punch; in the shifting of divided forms </font><font size="3"><font size="4"><strong>El Anatsui </strong></font>consciously harks back to the Berlin Conference of 1884 when European powers sat around a table portioning out the African continent. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/849840_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/849840.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Amemo 2010 (see credit**)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    It is, of course, the <font size="3">celebrated</font> draperies that are the stars of the show. When <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> hung one of these gargantuan wonders on the fa&ccedil;ade of a Venetian palace at the 2007 Biennale, jaws dropped and the world snapped to attention. Painstakingly crafted of those crushed castoffs <font size="3">- </font>from liquor bottles, thus the debris of Colonialism<font size="3"> (</font>liquor was introduced into Africa to further exert European control over a degraded continent) <font size="3">-</font> and twisted into blocks of color and pattern with bits of copper wire, each<font size="3"> one</font> looms up before you with an astonishing unearthly power and presence.&nbsp; </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6312452_orig.jpg?343' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6312452.jpg?343" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Earth's Skin 2009 (see credit**)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">In Brooklyn two of them face each other across the broad central gallery<font size="3">:</font> <em><font size="4">Gravity and Grace</font></em> (2010) on one side, <em><font size="4">Earth&rsquo;s Skin</font></em> (2009) on the other. Here is the gold I mentioned <font size="3">-</font> the metallic surfaces gleam and shimmer and tantalize with the subtle brilliance of purest gold and precious stones, throwing off regal and celestial associations. Pres<font size="3">ent</font> is the once powerful, gold-wealthy Ghana and great kings wrapped in swaths of colorful, highly valued Kente cloth. Another glance brings aerial maps with rivers, villages, roads and trails - a physical, historical and fantastical journey that may speak first of Africa, but just as truly propels the viewer around and through a mes<font size="3">merizing</font> universe.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3401715_orig.jpg?301' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3401715.jpg?301" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Detail (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Folds in these tapestries create further landscapes of light and shadow.<font size="3"> L</font>et them entice you closer until you are nose to nose with the fabric<font size="3">; </font><font size="3">t</font>he closer you get the more you understand of meaning and process.&nbsp; <font size="3">C</font>olors and brand names on the bottle caps are still clearly visible<font size="3"> -</font> staring ordinary in the face, you note each twist of copper wire and wonder at the alchemy by which <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> transforms the worthless into the magical.    </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5013027_orig.jpg?318' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5013027.jpg?318" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Red Block 2010 - Akron hanging (see credit**)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">It <font size="3">was</font> fascinating to be told by <font size="3">Kev<font size="3">in Dumouchelle, </font></font>the curator of the exhibit, that <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> ships these great works flat with no instructions. How they are hung, how many folds and how exactly they fall <font size="3">- </font>all this is left to th<font size="3">ose who hang<font size="3"> t<font size="3">h<font size="3">em</font></font></font></font>. In Akron, Ohio, where the show <font size="3">originated</font>, <em><font size="4">Gravity and Grace</font></em> was upside down to how it is seen in Brooklyn. Two beautiful drapery pieces in the final room, <em><font size="4">Red Block</font></em> and <em><font size="4">Black Block</font></em> (both 2010) are especially striking <font size="3"><font size="3">in</font> the Brookly<font size="3">n presentation</font></font>. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7392502_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7392502.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Gli 2010 (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Other works are just as fascinating if not as spectacularly beautiful as the drapes. Several floor constructions, including <em><font size="4">Drainpipe</font></em> and <em><font size="4">Peak</font></em> (both 2010), are also shimmering gold<font size="3">, but instead of bottle caps </font>they are made of tops from condensed milk cans, a ubiquitous African brand named Peak. A featured work, <em><font size="4">Gli</font></em>, hangs in 5 panels in the 72-foot high rotunda at the entry to the show. <em><font size="4">Gli</font></em> (Wall) is the first installation piece <strong><font size="4">El Anatsui</font></strong> has made with the bottle cap<font size="3"> medium -</font>&ndash;the work has a tissue-like quality that plays with the meaning and idea of walls. You are in front, you are behind<font size="3">;</font> <font size="3">as others </font>move in the space they disappear and reappear.&nbsp;     Like much of Western contemporary art - The Ann Hamilton  installation is a great example - the work comes to full life with the  participation of &lsquo;viewers&rsquo; - no longer bystanders but an essential part of  the artist&rsquo;s intention. </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9649233_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9649233.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Waste Paper Bags 2004-2010 (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3"><font size="3">There are other <font size="3">Western <font size="3">art connections </font></font>in <strong><font size="4">El Ana</font></strong><font size="3"><strong><font size="4">tsui's</font></strong> work - <font size="3">his validity as a voice of Africa is a <font size="3">springboard into the full conversation of art and art his<font size="3">tory, not</font> a<font size="3"> geographical stricture. </font></font><font size="3"><font size="3">R</font>eferences to Abstract E<font size="3">xpressionism<font size="3"> and</font> <font size="3">Pop <font size="3">Art are easy to spot - </font></font></font></font>the work <font size="3"><em><font size="4">Waste Paper </font></em><font size="3"><em><font size="4">Bags</font></em> (2004-2010) owes a good deal to Claes Oldenberg, but <font size="3">bec<font size="3">a<font size="3">use the <font size="3">giant bags </font>are</font></font> made of crushed printing plates telling of people's lives and dea<font size="3">ths they are eloquent rather than <font size="3">merely </font>playful; they charm<font size="3"> <font size="3">even as they</font></font> speak<font size="3"> of<font size="3"> <font size="3">suffering and poverty</font></font></font></font></font></font>. </font></font></font></font></font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4415188_orig.jpg?309' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4415188.jpg?309" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Earth's Skin and Peak (photo MGM)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">At 68, an age thought old <font size="3">in</font> Western cultures, <strong style="">El Anatsui</strong> is a wise elder on fire with creativity and inspiration<font size="3">.</font> <em style=""><strong style="">Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui</strong></em> is <font size="3">his</font> sober, beautiful feast of pleasure and joy. <br /></font><br /><br /><span></span><font size="3">    *If you are unable to make it to Brooklyn for the show, check to see if there is a work by <strong style="">El Anatsui</strong> at a museum in your area. The De Young Museum in San Francisco has a beauty - <em style="">Hover II</em> from 2004.</font><br /><br />    <a style="" href="http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/el-anatsui" title="">http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/el-anatsui</a><br /><br />    <a style="" href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/el_anatsui/" title="">http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/el_anatsui/</a><br /><br />    <a style="" href="http://www.armoryonpark.org/programs_events/detail/ann_hamilton" title="">http://www.armoryonpark.org/programs_events/detail/ann_hamilton</a><br /><br />                    <em style=""><strong style="">**Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui</strong></em>  is organized by the Akron Art Museum and made possible by a major grant  from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. The Brooklyn  presentation is organized by Kevin Dumouchelle, Associate Curator of  African and Pacific Art, Brooklyn Museum.<br /><br />      <br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Art Games and Forgeries]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/art-games-and-forgeries]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/art-games-and-forgeries#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 30 Jan 2013 20:09:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[art auctions]]></category><category><![CDATA[art forgery]]></category><category><![CDATA[novels about art]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/art-games-and-forgeries</guid><description><![CDATA[Sotheby's Art Auction (NYTimes)                     If you ever doubted that the &lsquo;Art World&rsquo; is an insider&rsquo;s game, read the recent article in the New York Times, As Art Values Rise, So Do Concerns About Market&rsquo;s Oversight. A detailed chronicle of failed or ignored regulations, accepted practices visible only to those already in on the &lsquo;rules,&rsquo; and tricky high-stakes finance, the article paints a vivid picture of what you probably already suspected. It&rsquo;s  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1229113.jpg?309" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Sotheby's Art Auction (NYTimes)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">If you ever doubted that the &lsquo;Art World&rsquo; is an insider&rsquo;s game, read the recent article in the New York Times, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/28/arts/design/as-art-market-rise-so-do-questions-of-oversight.html"><strong><font size="4">As Art Values Rise, So Do Concerns About Market&rsquo;s Oversight</font></strong></a>. A detailed chronicle of failed or ignored regulations, accepted practices visible only to those already in on the &lsquo;rules,&rsquo; and tricky high-stakes finance, the article paints a vivid picture of what you probably already suspected. It&rsquo;s dangerous territory for the na&iuml;ve, the innocent and, certainly, for those of only moderate wealth. <font size="3">For m</font>ost artists too -&ndash;although art is the commodity on which this all hangs, very few reach a point of having the power to dictate terms of sale. Despite what it may have cost them in real life terms, an artist&rsquo;s work becomes the glittering ball tossed around in a game of (<font size="3">most<font size="3">ly </font></font>someone el<font size="3">se's) </font>greed and gain.       </font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:5px;*margin-top:10px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2324223_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2324223.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Degas: After the Bath 1900</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">But if you think that the world of legitimate art is dark and nefarious, try the underground labyrinth of art forgery. I&rsquo;ve just finished two books on the subject, one a novel, one an intriguing call for the acceptance of art forgery as &lsquo;the great art of our time.&rsquo; The novel, <a title="" href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Forger-A-Novel/dp/1616201320"><font size="4"><strong>The Art Forger</strong></font></a>, by B. A. Shapiro, has gotten quite a lot of press, mostly enthusiastic. I agree <font size="3">that</font> it&rsquo;s a good read, with a compelling main character and a twisty plot that is fun to follow. Shapiro, who is not a visual artist, gets some of her art history wrong - Ernest Meissonier was a far more important painter than she allows for example, and she credits Edgar Degas with a bubbly, flirtatious personality that flies in the face of everything that&rsquo;s ever been said about him<font size="3">.</font> <font size="3">B</font>ut this is fiction and th<font size="3">o</font>se are irritations rather than flaws in her tale. The core of the story is the <font size="3">famous </font>theft of paintings from the Isabel Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, a mystery of mythic proportions. </font><br /><span></span><font size="3"><font size="3"><font color="#333399"><em>The (real) Degas shown here is <font size="3">similar to the </font>work <font size="3">that is the center<font size="3">piece in 'The Art Forger'.</font></font></em></font><br /></font></font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7266956_orig.jpg?378' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7266956.jpg?378" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Missing: empty frames at the Gardner</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">One March evening in 1990 thieves dressed as Boston police walked out with 13 extraordinarily valuable works, including Vermeer&rsquo;s <font size="4"><em>The Concert</em></font> (one of only 35 known paintings by the artist) and Rembrandt&rsquo;s only seascape, leaving empty frames that remain on the walls in anticipation of t<font size="3">he<font size="3">ir return</font></font>. No person or any information has ever come forward to explain the theft or reveal the whereabouts of any of the sto<font size="3">len art</font>. The story is a novel already, but Shapiro has the fun of taking it further into &lsquo;what if?&rsquo; territory, leading her heroine into ever-narrowing tunnels of personal integrity and artistic identity.       </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3394734_orig.jpg?317' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3394734.jpg?317" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Van Meegern: Supper at Emmaus 1937</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    When she gets to the details of how a forgery can be pulled off, <font size="3">Shapiro</font> borrows from art forgery royalty, the real life Hans van Meegeren, a Dutch charlatan who fooled experts and amateurs alike into believing his &lsquo;Vermeers.&rsquo;&nbsp; Using a cobbled, incredible technique involving Bakelite <font size="3">-</font> a 30s era plastic - he created previously unknown &lsquo;masterpieces;&rsquo; one of his most ardent collectors was Hermann Goring. Van Meegeren&rsquo;s ersatz Vermeers are the sappiest, most lugubrious religious scenes imaginable, impossible to take seriously, but one of the truths running through Shapiro&rsquo;s story and through the second book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Forged-Why-Fakes-are-Great/dp/0199928355/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1359572179&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=jonathon+keats"><font size="4"><strong>Why Fakes are the Great Art of our Age</strong></font></a>, is the mantra &lsquo;people see what they want to see.&rsquo;       </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8766744_orig.jpg?288' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8766744.jpg?288" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Too many Mona Lisas</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">As the author Jonathon Keats proves over and over again, this truth holds even if those people are the curators of major museums, art scholars and experts, and wealthy experienced collectors. For Keats, however, the prism of art forgery is colored differently; instead of seeing a scourge and a crime, he believes that forgery does art&rsquo;s proper job of provoking and disturbing<font size="3">. H<font size="3">e</font> trumpets forgery as </font>the perfect art for our current &lsquo;age of anxiety.&rsquo; The theory is intrigui<font size="3">ng, </font>both specious and valid<font size="3">, and</font> he makes his case with anecdotal evidence ranging from Raphael to recent forgers hell-bent on wreaking havoc.       </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:1px;*margin-top:2px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2765865_orig.jpg?305' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2765865.jpg?305" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Tom Keating painting a Van Gogh</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Wreaking havoc is, in fact, a common thread for a number of forgers, at least in recent cases, and that is where a hole tears into the fabric of Keats&rsquo; theory. Revenge - in retaliation for slights by art dealers, for a lack of recognition of &lsquo;genius,&rsquo; for invisibility when someone else gets all the glory - is not the stuff of great art. Many artists, famous or not, can relate to the feelings, but if th<font size="3">ose angry negatives</font> take over they will certainly dim the light of honest creation. Real art needs real heart, not simply classic technique and clever tricks. </font><br /><span></span><font color="#999999" size="3"><em>photo by </em><font size="3"><em>R</em><font size="3"><em>ob E</em><font size="3"><em>bdon</em> </font></font></font></font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7615252.jpg?200" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Fake Modigliani by Elmer de Hory</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Another indisputable truth, emphasized in both books, is that successful forgers are very good art makers; they ma<font size="3">y</font> lack the true artist&rsquo;s inner fire of inspiration but they are exceptional technicians. Although <font size="3">t</font>he number of works by forgers hanging in major museums can never be known<font size="3">, </font>it is openly acknowledged to be large - astonishingly so. </font><br /><br /><span></span><font size="3"><font size="3">I</font>f you&rsquo;re tempted to enter into the game of art at the highest levels, be cautious. And remember this: forgery may not be mentioned in the hushed halls of the big auction houses, but it is surely a wild card in a complex game.&nbsp;       </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7611280_orig.jpg?288' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7611280.jpg?288" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">card from Open Studio event in Wash DC</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">P.S<font size="3">. B</font>uy local, go to studios and small galleries, attend <font size="3">Open Studio events, </font>seek out your own original treasure. <font size="3">Real a</font>rt is everywhere. When you buy art from real artists you don&rsquo;t have doubts about the art or the heart&ndash;- and you have something worth millions - at least to you. </font> &nbsp; <br /><br /><span></span><br /><br /><span></span> <a title="" href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Forger-A-Novel/dp/1616201320" style="">http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Forger-A-Novel/dp/1616201320</a><a title="" href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Forger-A-Novel/dp/1616201320   http://www.amazon.com">  &nbsp; <br /><span></span> </a><a title="" href="http://www.amazon.com/Forged-Why-Fakes-are-Great/dp/0199928355/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1359572179&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=jonathon+keats" style="">http://www.amazon.com/Forged-Why-Fakes-are-Great/dp/0199928355/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1359572179&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=jonathon+keats</a>  &nbsp; <br /><span></span> <a title="" href="http://www.gardnermuseum.org/">http://www.gardnermuseum.org/</a><br /><a style="" title="" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/28/arts/design/as-art-market-rise-so-do-questions-of-oversight.html">http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/28/arts/design/as-art-market-rise-so-do-questions-of-oversight.html</a><br /><br />Tom Keating photo courtesy of <font color="#999999">most of the shebang</font><br /><a style="" href="http://www.stephenbrookes.com/arts/2007/8/7/fine-art-of-the-fake-makers.html">http://www.stephenbrookes.com/arts/2007/8/7/fine-art-of-the-fake-makers.html</a><br />      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Royal Portraits: The Grand and the Odd]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/royal-portraits-the-grand-and-the-odd]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/royal-portraits-the-grand-and-the-odd#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 18 Jan 2013 04:14:23 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[french portraits]]></category><category><![CDATA[jean clouet]]></category><category><![CDATA[mary cassatt]]></category><category><![CDATA[metropolitan museum]]></category><category><![CDATA[modern british painting]]></category><category><![CDATA[royal portraits]]></category><category><![CDATA[velasquez]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/royal-portraits-the-grand-and-the-odd</guid><description><![CDATA[Elizabeth I by an unknown artist 1600 When the first official portrait of Kate Middleton, the Duchess of  Cambridge, was revealed last week to much gnashing of critical teeth, my  thoughts went to all those long-suffering court artists who  spent their lives&nbsp; struggling to craft acceptable images of individuals blue in blood but all too often lacking in physical  beauty.A portrait is never an easy thing for an artist - ego and vanity make it treacherous ground to tread. What must it have be [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/333128_orig.jpg?183' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/333128.jpg?183" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Elizabeth I by an unknown artist 1600</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">When the first official portrait of Kate Middleton, the Duchess of  Cambridge, was revealed last week to much gnashing of critical teeth, my  thoughts went to all those long-suffering court artists who  spent their lives&nbsp; struggling to craft acceptable images of <font size="3">individuals</font> blue in blood but all too often lacking in physical  beauty.</font><br /><font size="3"><span>A portrait is never an easy thing for an artist - ego and vanity make <font size="3">it</font> treacherous ground to tread. What must it have been like when the likely consequence of an unflattering likeness was the loss of your head?</span></font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/999582_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/999582.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Mary Cassatt: Lady at the Tea Table 1883</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Mary Cassatt, speaking from personal experience, once defined a portrait as &lsquo;a painting in which something is wrong with the nose.&rsquo; In her case the painting was<strong><em> Lady at the Tea Table</em></strong>, finished in 1883 but hidden away until 1914 after criticism about the size of the nose from the sitter&rsquo;s daughter. This beautiful work is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. </font><br /><br /><span></span><font size="3">Mrs. Robert Moore Riddle, Cassatt's subject, was of the  upper crust but she was American, not noble or of Royal lineage. For an artist to please the picky entitled beings who  command armies with a snap of their fingers<font size="3"> would have taken dip<font size="3">lomacy and ta<font size="3">ct as well as artistic skill.</font></font></font> </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><font size="3">Many Royal portraits are State Portraits, easily  recognized by all the visual Pomp &amp; Circumstance. In a State  Portrait the human individual is subsumed into a version of the nation  they rule. In these official images of Francois I of France and Catherine the Great of Russia decorum and power are the intent - though both had lively personalities, quick minds and reputations for promiscuity, we don't get much inkling of it from these paintings. </font><br /></div>  <div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class='wsite-multicol-table-wrap' style='margin:0 -15px'> <table class='wsite-multicol-table'> <tbody class='wsite-multicol-tbody'> <tr class='wsite-multicol-tr'> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1188390_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1188390_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:100%;max-width:627px" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%">Francois I of France by Jean Clouet 1525</div> </div></div>  </td> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8695411_orig.jpg?306' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8695411.jpg?306" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%">Catherine the Great of Russia by Alexei Antropov 1766</div> </div></div>  </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div></div></div>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5270228_orig.jpg?368' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5270228.jpg?368" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Louis XIV by Hyacinthe Rigaud 1701</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                     <font size="3">The State Portrait that sets the standard has to be the 1701 portrait of Louis XIV by Hyacinthe Rigaud.     Louis&rsquo;s likeness is apparently a good one, but it doesn&rsquo;t really matter - it&rsquo;s the trappings that count. Louis - aka France - was powerful and wealthy and so dominant in Europe at the time that he/it doesn&rsquo;t need to wear a crown to bolster his authority. The golden sword at his side implies <font size="3">-</font> no need to shout - military might. While the swords carried by his contemporaries were a sign of their aristocratic standing, for Louis &ndash; the first among gentleman <font size="3">-</font> his sword hints at a very real threat. He/it can - and did - use it to start wars that involved all of Europe. The impossibly expensive ermine and velvet cape broadcasts wealth while it also drapes the man Louis in the fleur-de-lys, the symbol of France. This get-up was customary for French kings for several centuries, but no one ever wore it with more style or more sincere intent than Louis XIV. (After the original ermine cape was destroyed during the French Revolution a copy was made for the coronation of Louis XVIII. It can be seen in the Treasure House at Reims.) The most individual part of the portrait is Louis&rsquo;s well-turned legs, a reminder that he was a dancer and patron of the dance; it was in his court that the vocabulary of ballet was established. He also set the style for men for a long time to come <font size="3">-</font> thanks to Louis, men had to display shapely legs, so no doubt &lsquo;touching up the nose&rsquo; often meant &lsquo;touching up the legs&rsquo; until long pants came into fashion.</font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:8px;*margin-top:16px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7854998.jpg?285" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Las Meninas by Diego Velasquez 1656-57</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Diego Velasquez painted numerous portraits of his patron, King Philip IV of Spain, some of which are more &lsquo;official&rsquo; than others. Las Meninas, Velasquez&rsquo;s greatest masterpiece, is a state portrait of sorts, but a very different sort, one that changed the idea of portraiture, royal and otherwise, forever. The Spanish court of Philip was an extremely serious, rigidly formal place, so Velasquez&rsquo;s genius for naturalism was a gift to us as well as to Philip. Philip, from the distinguished, jealously guarded line of Hapsburgs, was not a handsome man. He has the characteristic hangdog look <font size="3">-</font> long prominent chin, narrow face and drooping eyes, but at least he escaped the most grievous consequences of all that intermarrying. (The jaw of a close relative was so distorted that he was unable to eat normally.) Thanks to Velasquez, who earned his king&rsquo;s deep trust and friendship, the legacy of Philip IV is graced by some of the most exquisite, sensitive paintings ever created - and we are privy to an extraordinarily acute sense of Philip&rsquo;s humanity. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class='wsite-multicol-table-wrap' style='margin:0 -15px'> <table class='wsite-multicol-table'> <tbody class='wsite-multicol-tbody'> <tr class='wsite-multicol-tr'> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8945460_orig.jpg?287' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8945460.jpg?287" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%">Philip IV by Velasquez 1644</div> </div></div>  </td> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8244159_orig.jpg?295' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8244159.jpg?295" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%">Philip IV by Velasquez 1653</div> </div></div>  </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div></div></div>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4202230_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4202230.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Elizabeth I by Cecil Beaton 1953</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">The Coronation Portrait of Elizabeth II, a photograph by Cecil Beaton, is quite a contrast to that of Elizabeth I but it&rsquo;s nevertheless full of the proper symbolic regalia - orb, scepter, ermine, crown, etc.&nbsp; Now, with their hold on the throne so well established, the British Royals apparently have little further need for State Portraits. The new portrait of her Highness the Dutchess of Cambridge is&nbsp; hardly the most radical or controversial of recent Royal non-State portraits. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1960842_orig.jpg?198' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1960842.jpg?198" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Elizabeth I by Lucien Freud 2001</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Lucien Freud, England&rsquo;s most celebrated living painter until his recent death, painted the Queen as a gift in 2001. The result is tiny in size but a provocative statement, focusing in on her features with the merciless perspective of a fish-eye lens and squeezing in the Crown in all its diamond detail at the top edge. Robert Simon, editor of the British Art Journal, commented, "It makes her look like one of the royal corgis who has suffered a stroke." The chief art critic of The Times, Richard Cork, describes the image, on the other hand, as "painful, brave, honest, stoical and, above all, clear sighted." </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7886399_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7886399.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Prince Philip by Stuart Pearson Wright 2004</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Prince Philip gamely went along with what must be a policy decision to bolster contemporary British art and let himself be painted by Stuart Pearson Wright in 2004. Wright, like Paul Emsly who painted Kate Middleton, is a past winner of the BP Portrait Award, an annual competition for British artists. Pearson Wright is an artist with a sense of the theatrical and a definite sense of humor &ndash; the result is a fine painting, but surely one of the most bizarre entries in the National Portrait Gallery. Philip rejected the first version; he allowed the second, but exclaimed upon seeing it, "Gadzooks!" Why have you given me a great schonk?" The nose again!</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2051229_orig.jpg?326' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2051229.jpg?326" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Catherine, The Duchess of Cambridge by Paul Emsley 2012</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">The Duchess and the Royal Family are evidently pleased with the Emsley portrait. I&rsquo;m not a fan - it&rsquo;s pretty bland, <font size="3">with no </font>adventurous agenda to make it entertainingly offensive, <font size="3">and</font> it isn&rsquo;t particularly beautiful either. I find it curious that the artist seemed compelled to sort to the negative with a vengeance, in fact putting negatives in where they don&rsquo;t exist. He has commented that Kate Middleton was &lsquo;too beautiful&rsquo; and therefore hard to paint, but why did he have to makes her look not only old but, as one comment<font size="3">er said,</font> zombie-like? On the other hand, knowing some of the al<font size="3">ternatives, perhaps&nbsp;</font>&nbsp; perhaps the family is simply relieved. And the nose seems fine. What do <font size="3">YOU t<font size="3">hink?</font></font></font><br /><br /><span></span><strong>Slide show - the &lsquo;Best and Worst of Royal Portraits&rsquo; with snarky comments, from the Guardian</strong><br /><span style=""></span>  <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2013/jan/11/kate-middleton-best-worst-royal-portraits#/?picture=402244397&amp;index=0" title="" style="">http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2013/jan/11/kate-middleton-best-worst-royal-portraits#/?picture=402244397&amp;index=0</a><br /><span style=""></span><strong>Websites of the Artists</strong><br /><span style=""></span>      <a href="http://paulemsley.com/works/" title="" style="">http://paulemsley.com/works/</a>=<br /><span style=""></span>  <a href="http://www.stuartpearsonwright.org/" title="" style="">http://www.stuartpearsonwright.org/</a><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1681811.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;"></div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    If you like this topic, you&rsquo;ll enjoy my <font size="4"><a href="http://www.postcardarthistory.com"><strong>Postcard Art History </strong></a></font>series: <font color="#990000" size="4"><strong>Paparazzi: The Rich and Famous</strong></font>. This 10 week series, delivered to you (by email to any device) <font color="#000000"><font size="3">in the form of</font></font> pdf postcards with beautiful images and entertaining, informative stor<font size="3">ies</font>, gives you a look at the <strong>Royal, the Wealthy, and the Powerful</strong> across centuries and cultures. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>  <a href="http://www.postcardarthistory.com/papparazzi-portraits-of-the-rich--famous" style="">www.postcardarthistory.com/papparazzi-portraits-of-the-rich--famous</a><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Matisse: In Search of True Painting at the Met  - and El Anatsui in Chelsea ]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/matisse-in-search-of-painting-at-the-met-and-el-anatsui-in-chelsea]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/matisse-in-search-of-painting-at-the-met-and-el-anatsui-in-chelsea#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 01 Jan 2013 20:38:47 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[chelsea galleries]]></category><category><![CDATA[el anatsui]]></category><category><![CDATA[matisse]]></category><category><![CDATA[metropolitan museum of art]]></category><category><![CDATA[modern art]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/matisse-in-search-of-painting-at-the-met-and-el-anatsui-in-chelsea</guid><description><![CDATA[Women in Blue Dress 1937                     Matisse? Again? Maybe it&rsquo;s just Philadelphia, but with the Barnes Collection and the recent &lsquo;Visions of Arcadia&rsquo; at PMA it seems like we&rsquo;ve been seeing an awful lot of Matisse lately. Not that I&rsquo;m complaining. Matisse is the &lsquo;art as comfortable as a good armchair&rsquo;* guy, and true to his word, he made a great deal of beautiful eye candy (in the very best sense.) His colors alone are an endless pleasure. Who coul [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5891984_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5891984.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Women in Blue Dress 1937</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Matisse? Again? Maybe it&rsquo;s just Philadelphia, but with the Barnes Collection and the recent &lsquo;Visions of Arcadia&rsquo; at PMA it seems like we&rsquo;ve been seeing an awful lot of Matisse lately. Not that I&rsquo;m complaining. Matisse is the &lsquo;art as comfortable as a good armchair&rsquo;* guy, and true to his word, he made a great deal of beautiful eye candy (in the very best sense.) His colors alone are an endless pleasure<font size="3">.</font> <font size="3">W</font>ho could ever get tired of his sweet spot blues, candy pinks and vivid greens? </font><br /><span></span><br /><span></span><font size="3">December 31 was Matisse&rsquo;s birthday, by the way, so Happy Birthday Henri, with great thanks. </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6841984_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6841984.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Palm Leaves 1912</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3"><font size="4"><strong>Matisse: in Search of True Painting</strong></font>, currently at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (through March 17<font size="3">,</font> 2<font size="3">0</font>13) is well worth a Megabus journey. The exhibit, organized by the Met<font size="3"> in c<font size="3">on<font size="3">junction with</font></font></font> a Copenhagen museum and the Pompidou Center in Paris, features 49 works in pairs or series<font size="3">. T<font size="3">he exhibit</font></font> is thus a spectacular chance not only to see Matisse but to probe beyond the pleasing surface of <font size="3"><font size="3">this most</font> popular artist</font> to get at his process and his ideas about creating art. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7097443_orig.jpg?294' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7097443.jpg?294" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Still Life with Purro I 1904</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">A number of the works have a still-searching-for-direction quality about them, particularly a grouping of still lifes that begin the show. In fact, when Matisse painted them in 1899 - 1904, he was in his early 30&rsquo;s with a wife and three children to support. He&rsquo;d been painting seriously for some time but had little to show for it <font size="3">-</font> no critical notice and no financial success.&nbsp; These still lifes are worth a long look; they hold many of Matisse&rsquo;s sources and influences as well as signposts <font size="3">indic<font size="3">ating</font></font> his road forward. Cezanne, Signac, Bonnard and Van Gogh are all more or less present in color usage, texture, and composition, but so are strong hints of Matisse&rsquo;s own unmistakable brand of alchemy. Part of the fun of the exhibit is noticing how the influences flicker in and out and then fade to background as Matisse became more confident with and more acclaimed for his own vision. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9626580_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9626580.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Acanthus 1912</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Much of the direction of his art was surely set by his trips to Morocco. I always picture Matisse, a child of bleak, grey industrial northern France, getting off the boat in that bright southern port for the first time in 1912 and opening like a flower to the golden light and the warm sun. Two paintings from that first visit, <em>Palm Leaves</em> and <em>Acanthus</em>, give a stunning idea of how Matisse absorbed the experience of Morocco and turned it into brave modern art. Both works are full of energy, slashed and scrubbed with strong color in thin washes; they both push and pull between representation and abstraction and steam with the excitement of discovery. <em>Acanthus</em>, a marvel of mauves, bright acid greens, oranges and rich periwinkle blue, troubled Matisse at first. He carted it home to Paris and then back again to Morocco, planning to rework it but finally deciding it was all right as it was. By nature and habit Matisse was said to be much milder than his groundbreaking art, so perhaps he just needed time to catch up with himself.</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6245292_orig.jpg?255' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6245292.jpg?255" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Young Sailor II 1906</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3"><em>Young Sailor II</em> from 1906, a painting in the Met&rsquo;s own collection, is shown side by side with an earlier version from the same year. I found this one pa<font size="3">iring </font>of the most striking moments in the exhibit. The Met version, well known and beloved, is a cartoon-like version of its partner, <font size="3">which is a</font> more solidly drawn, better proportioned representation of a young boy in sailor&rsquo;s clothing. When Matisse showed <em><font size="3">Youn<font size="3">g Sailor II</font></font></em> to Leo Stein, he tried to pass <font size="3">it</font> off as the work of the mailman in Collioure, the small town in southwest France where he painted it. Stein described <font size="3">the <font size="3">painting as a work of </font></font>&lsquo;extreme deformation.&rsquo; Again we see Matisse bent on pushing art in a new direction, taking chances and experimenting with form and color, but I was in<font size="3">terested to see that </font>in direct comparison with <em>Young Sailor I</em>, the Met version looked tepid and almost sentimental.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:7px;*margin-top:14px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2329142_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2329142.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Young Sailor I 1906</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                  <em>Young Sailor I</em> is already edgy and modern - in its energy and courage and the play of color in the face, it reminded me of <em>Femme au Chapeau</em>, Matisse&rsquo;s Fauve portrait of his wife from 1905, the painting that sent shock waves through American audiences when it was shown at the Armory show in 1913. <em>Young Sailor I </em>is in a private collection so is rarely seen <font size="3">-</font> the pairing in this exhibit not only revealed Matisse&rsquo;s process, but also raised interesting questions about the designation &lsquo;masterpiece.&rsquo; Is a work crowned with honor and glory on its own merits, or may it be revered simply because it hangs in a storied, world-class museum? How does the taste of gallery dealers<font size="3"> and</font> museum curators and market availability factor into our understanding and acceptance of the &lsquo;masterpiece&rsquo; label?&nbsp; <font size="3">Whether or not </font><em style="">Young Sailor II</em> is considered a great masterpiece in Matisse&rsquo;s overall body of work, the buzz of recognition connected to a known, rather than little seen, painting makes <font size="3">the</font> question relevant.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2738066_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2738066.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">View of Notre Dame 1914 (MOMA)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">In 1914, when World War I was about to devastate Europe, Matisse was in Paris, with a studio on the Quai St. Michel. Out the window he could see the towers of Notre Dame, and from this year came one of what is, for me, one of his supreme masterpieces. My heart did a little dance when I came around a corner and met it face to face. (The only masterpiece meter you need, really.) This is the stark, stripped down <em style="">View of Notre Dame</em> from the spring of 1914, owned by NY MOMA.     The MOMA <em>View of Notre Dame</em> is  a blue and black drawing on canvas, with a surface scrubbed and  scratched and smudged and worked over until everything that remains  seems both arbitrary and rock-solid essential. Disembodied  towers float in a blue ether that is at once underwater and high in the  sky. Only one little green splotch of a tree holds the great cathedral  to earth. </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4841729_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4841729.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">View of Notre Dame 1914 (Switzerland)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">At the Met this work is mated with a second view from the same year, a literal sketchbook sort of drawing/painting that is light years away from the concept of the MOMA work. Over and over <font size="3">again I found </font>this exhibit tell<font size="3">ing</font> stories beyond the one it prom<font size="3">ise<font size="3">d</font> in the title. T</font>he story of Matisse and his process, valuable as that is, is just the be<font size="3">ginning</font>. Here is the ranging imagination of artists in general, those with the vision and curiosity to see and express the same idea or scene in infinite ways and forms. <font size="3">Matisse di<font size="3">d numerous versions of Notre Dame<font size="3">, each with it<font size="3">s own<font size="3"> identity <font size="3">and particular magic.</font></font></font></font></font></font><br /></font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5234004_orig.png?342' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5234004.png?342" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">The Dream (1940) with photo of early stage</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">In the final galleries, several of Matisse&rsquo;s paintings are documented with photographs showing working stages. (<em style="">The Large Blue Dress,</em> a 1937 work in the Met&rsquo;s collection, is also accented with the skirt of the dress worn by model Lydia Delectorskaya.)<em> The Dream</em> (1940) is centered amid 14 black and white photographs that show how it progressed from a loose, sketchy, literal scene of woman and foliage to an abstract composition, a white oval against a rose background that retains hints, <font size="3">flattened<font size="3"> and decorative,</font></font> of the original subject. My own love of Matisse&rsquo;s rich, luxurious drawings would have stopped the process at about stage 5 or 6 and left it in black and white, but the total picture, like this entire exhibit, is fascinating.       </font><br /><span>Matisse's famous quote:</span><br />                      <em>*What I dream of is an art of balance, of purity and serenity, devoid of troubling or depressing subject matter, an art which could be for every mental worker, for the businessman as well as the man of letters, for example, a soothing, calming influence on the mind, something like a good armchair which provides relaxation from physical fatigue.</em><br /><span></span><br /><u><a title="" href="http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2012/Matisse">http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2012/Matisse</a></u><br /><span style=""></span>Slide show from the Met Exhibit<br /><span style=""></span>  <u><a title="" href="http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/11/30/arts/design/20121130-MATISSE.html#1">http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/11/30/arts/design/20121130-MATISSE.html#1</a></u><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8802500_orig.jpg?393' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8802500.jpg?393" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">El Anatsui at Jack Shainman</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Also in New York, but only until January 13, is a show of the work of <font size="4"><strong>El Anatsui</strong></font>, the great contemporary African artist, at Jack Shainman Gallery in Chelsea. El Anatsui&rsquo;s astonishing tapestries are painstakingly composed of flattened bottle caps and other bits of discarded metal held together with tiny twists of copper wire. Sprawled across walls, the works make deep, rich connections to ideas of African tribal grandeur, especially the legacy of the storied gold-rich African kings wrapped in luxurious cloaks of symbolic Kente cloth, and to the sad history of colonial exploitation by Europeans who cheapened and brutalized people, countries and traditions. The seductive beauty of El Anatsui&rsquo;s textured, shimmering, swaths of metal cloth is the portal to worlds of meaning.      </font><br /><u><a title="" href="http://www.jackshainman.com/home.html">http://www.jackshainman.com/home.html      </a></u></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class='wsite-multicol-table-wrap' style='margin:0 -15px'> <table class='wsite-multicol-table'> <tbody class='wsite-multicol-tbody'> <tr class='wsite-multicol-tr'> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8814126_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:100%;max-width:600px" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>  </td> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-thin " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4131892_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:100%;max-width:1066px" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>  </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[State of the Art: Report from Miami/Art Basel]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/state-of-the-art-report-from-miamiart-basel]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/state-of-the-art-report-from-miamiart-basel#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 2012 23:04:51 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/state-of-the-art-report-from-miamiart-basel</guid><description><![CDATA[L'Homme a la Pipe by Picasso at Art Basel                     Miami last week might almost have been 19th century Paris. If you&rsquo;ve ever wondered what the atmosphere was like at the storied Academic Salons where fates of artists were judged to a rigid standard, Art Basel, the beating heart of Art Week Miami around which many other smaller events rotate, might give you some idea. Important doesn&rsquo;t begin to describe the level of Art World Who and What on display. Once through the toll g [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2408516_orig.jpg?290' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2408516.jpg?290" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">L'Homme a la Pipe by Picasso at Art Basel</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    Miami last week might almost have been 19th century Paris. If you&rsquo;ve ever wondered what the atmosphere was like at the storied Academic Salons where fates of artists were judged to a rigid standard, Art Basel, the beating heart of Art Week Miami around which many other smaller events rotate, might give you some idea. Important doesn&rsquo;t begin to describe the level of Art World Who and What on display<font size="3">.</font> <font size="3">O</font>nce through the toll gates, Art Bas<font size="3">e</font>l was a world of soft carpets, somber colors, serious money, plastic surgery, and the gravitas of art stamped and certified by every imaginable authority. The major difference from the late 19th century was, perhaps, the dress code, though I did see one top hat accessorizing an outfit of beach shoes and pink shorts. Sales seemed to be good. One heavyweight New York dealer told me that the Miami show and its sister (or mother) in Switzerland were the best in the world. This in front of a $13 million Picasso.&nbsp; </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:5px;*margin-top:10px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3996785_orig.jpg?308' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3996785.jpg?308" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Lichtenstein, Barry Flanagan - Art Basel</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">The really wonderful thing about Art Miami - a wild week in a wild city saturated with sun, sand, Art Deco, and endless, infinite art, spread and strewn widely across and around every district and corner - was that it wasn&rsquo;t all stuffy and high-pedigree. I made it to 4 of the many events <font size="3">-</font> NADA, Art Basel, Miami Projects, and Art Miami <font size="3">-</font> and enjoyed every one of them for similar and different reasons. Everywhere the atmosphere, even at Art Basel, was relaxed and welcoming. The ultra chic strolled around on 8&rdquo; heels, mingling easily with school kids and the dumpier rest of the world in flip-flops and hiking boots. There was that $20 a glass Champagne cart, but there were also snack bars and even a pseudo-grassy indoor park where people could stretch out to eat their lunch and browse their phones. </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2122236_orig.jpg?306' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2122236.jpg?306" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Nancy Spero - Anthony Reynolds Gallery (London) Art Basel</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">And what about the Art? I&rsquo;m happy to report that I was heartened by what I saw. Honest, seriously professional, good ideas, good craftsmanship <font size="3">-</font> the state of contemporary art looks much more promising that it seemed 5 years or so ago. &nbsp;I was especially excited to see so much drawing <font size="3">-</font> mark-making of all sorts and forms, evidence of active workings of mind, hand, heart, and materials.</font>    </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/595079.jpg?220" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Up close to El Anatsui at Jack Shaiman</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">It was also exciting to see new work by living masters - for example, the Jack Shaiman Gallery (Chelsea) featured two 2012 works by El Anatsui, one of the greatest of contemporary<font size="3"> art wonderworkers</font>. His luxurious draped fabrics composed of flattened bits of castoff metal and tiny copper wires are gorgeous - it was a thrill when they suddenly loomed up in the midst of Art Basel. The Jack Shaiman gallery will host a sh<font size="3">ow of El Anatsui's work opening Dec 14, th<font size="3">rough January 19, 2013.</font></font>    </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/255526_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/255526.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">American Contemporary Gallery - NADA</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">NADA (New Art Dealers Alliance) and Miami Projects were the most interesting shows for me, with relatively untested, emerging artists and galleries <font size="3">-</font> not only was the art interesting but it was great to see so much dynamism in the small gallery scene in New York, on the West Coast, and internationally.&nbsp; NADA, which had invited me to their event for this blog, is a New York based organization, so New York galleries dominated, but there were representatives from Europe and other US locations.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:1px;*margin-top:2px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9095637_orig.jpg?313' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9095637.jpg?313" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Keith Farquhar at Leslie Fritz - NADA *photo</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                  The really new ones, the ones there on a shoestring - I&rsquo;m guessing &ndash; were crammed into a tight corridor against one wall <font size="3">- </font>of windows with expansive ocean views, so it wasn&rsquo;t as claustrophobic as it sounds.&nbsp; These booths, the tiniest spaces I saw anywhere last week, were filled with 2D and 3D objects ranging from traditional frames to found plastic concoctions, adding up all together to a kind of sweet, earnest installation. A step beyond, bigger galleries in bigger spaces were making more cohesive statements with fewer works. One of my favorites was the Leslie Fritz Gallery; against an installed brick pattern with small-scale framed photos, Keith Farquhar&rsquo;s classical-looking busts and anatomical casts stood on pedestals, looking at first glance, a bit out of place among the radical and new. But the sculpture <font size="3">-</font> if that&rsquo;s what it is <font size="3">-</font> is 2 dimensional and painted in deep, drippy color <font size="3">-</font> a smart, aesthetically pleasing sort of in-joke.&nbsp;&nbsp; *ph<font size="3">oto courtesy of ArtObserved Blog<br /></font></font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/675148_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/675148.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Marina Abramovic 'Do It' - ICI at NADA</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">A couple of booths were amalgams of gallery and something else, particularly The Journal Gallery, which publishes a magazine in Brooklyn, and the ICI (Independent Curators International) a kind of think tank/impresario for the Art World. &nbsp;Bridget Finn explained that ICI is about to celebrate 20 years of their &lsquo;Do It&rsquo; project and pointed out the contribution from Marina Abramovic <font size="3">-</font> a wood, glass-fronted box containing an apron, a book of recipes and instructions signed by the artist. A bargain, considering the status of Abramovic, at $5000 <font size="3">-</font> you can order direct from their online shop. (link below)</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5496145.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Stroll at Miami Projects</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Miami Projects and Art Miami were set up next to each other in big white tents in the vibrant Design District on the mainland, along with Red Dot, Context and others that I didn&rsquo;t get to. Art Miami was to Miami Projects as Art Basel was to NADA - bigger names, a bit more of a reverent aura, a feeling of greater pressure, but in both interesting art and a relaxed atmosphere. 2012 was the first year for Miami Projects, and many of the exhibitors were from the West Coast - the organizer is from California so previous relationships made it natural to come along when he decided to set up in Miami. Having lived in the Bay Area for a long time, I was happy to find some familiar, top-notch names.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:6px;*margin-top:12px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9651697.jpg?287" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Catherine Clark (San Francisco) Miami Projects</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Catherine Clark, whose gallery is adjacent to SFMOMA, was featuring work combining traditional watercolor and drawing techniques with digital technology. Chris Doyle, the artist, is my new exhibit A for combining carefully honed, disciplined tradition with an equally disciplined embrace of the newly possible. I plan to write about his work in depth in the near future. Catherine reported that the fair was going very well - in fact, she said, she does a great deal of her business at fairs; she was a bit wistful about the fact that a large proportion of her best customers have never been in her gallery</font>.    </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6562137_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/6562137.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Gallery at Art Basel</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">By the time I left I&rsquo;d heard similar murmurs about the future of galleries, involving serious reservations about overhead for a permanent space and staff, a fixed location, etc., in the face of successful Art Fairs such as those in Miami. Roberta Smith, in today&rsquo;s New York Times, has some related thoughts on the subject     </font>                  <a style="" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/arts/design/the-great-gallery-slowdown-of-2012.html">http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/arts/design/the-great-gallery-slowdown-of-2012.html</a>    </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5859846.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Mark Khaisman at Pentimenti (Phil.) Miami Projects</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">                    In my next post I&rsquo;ll go into more detail about some of the artists and galleries that were most interesting to me, including an established older artist from Argentina, a small gallery from Santa Monica showing quietly engaging work, and a brash LA Gallery with a crazy mix that was really fun to see. I only found two Philadelphia galleries in Miami, Pentimenti and Bridgette Mayer - I&rsquo;d love to know why there weren&rsquo;t more. I&rsquo;ll also include them in the next post.</font><br /><span></span><br /><a href="http://www.jackshainman.com/upcoming-exhibitions.html">http://www.jackshainman.com/upcoming-exhibitions.html</a><br />                    <a title="" href="http://www.lesliefritzgallery.com/index.php?q=Artist&amp;ID=22" style="">http://www.lesliefritzgallery.com/index.php?q=Artist&amp;ID=22</a><br /><span style=""></span>  <a title="" href="http://www.thejournalinc.com/gallery/events/current" style="">http://www.thejournalinc.com/gallery/events/current</a><br /><span style=""></span>  <a title="" href="http://curatorsintl.org/about" style="">http://curatorsintl.org/about</a><br /><span style=""></span>  <a title="" href="http://curatorsintl.org/shop/marina_abramovi" style="">http://curatorsintl.org/shop/marina_abramovi</a><br /><span style=""></span><a style="" title="" href="http://cclarkgallery.com/">http://cclarkgallery.com/</a><br /><span></span><br /><span style=""></span>    My camera gave out at one point, so thanks to Art Observed blog for photos of Keith Farquhar&rsquo;s work at the Leslie Fritz booth at NADA<br /><span style=""></span>  <a title="" href="http://artobserved.com/2012/12/ao-onsite-photoset-nada-art-fair-in-miami-beach-december-7th-2012/" style="">http://artobserved.com/2012/12/ao-onsite-photoset-nada-art-fair-in-miami-beach-december-7th-2012/</a><br /><br /><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      <br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Wisdom and Wonder: Winnie the Pooh and Children's Literature]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/wisdom-and-wonder-winnie-the-pooh]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/wisdom-and-wonder-winnie-the-pooh#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 16 Nov 2012 16:38:33 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[e h shepard]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/wisdom-and-wonder-winnie-the-pooh</guid><description><![CDATA[Pooh and Piglet by EH Shepard                   After all the venom, gnashing of teeth, the storms, real and political, and the convoluted language of the campaign season, let&rsquo;s take a refresher course in real wisdom. I nominate Winnie the Pooh as Master Wisdom Giver. I&rsquo;m in the midst of teaching my Children&rsquo;s Literature classes at Drexel University, so I&rsquo;m deep into the wise and charming world of Children&rsquo;s Books - and I&rsquo;m not alone.        Beatrix Potter: Pe [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8179357.jpg?0" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pooh and Piglet by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">After all the venom, gnashing of teeth, the storms, real and political, and the convoluted language of the campaign season, let&rsquo;s take a refresher course in real wisdom. I nominate Winnie the Pooh as Master Wisdom Giver. I&rsquo;m in the midst of teaching my Children&rsquo;s Literature classes at Drexel University, so I&rsquo;m deep into the wise and charming world of Children&rsquo;s Books - and I&rsquo;m not alone.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/7214404.jpg?1" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Beatrix Potter: Peter Rabbit</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">The Morgan Library is currently offering a peek at the correspondence of Beatrix Potter, particularly her hand-written illustrated letters with their winning combination of personal detail and flights of whimsical imagination parading as little sketches between the lines.<font size="3">&nbsp; </font></font><br /><span></span><font size="3">I haven&rsquo;t been there yet, but plan to go. The exhibit is at the Morgan Library through January <font size="3">27</font>, 201<font size="3">3</font>.</font><br /><br /><em><font size="3">A link to the show <font size="3">with </font>examples of her letters is at the end of the post. </font></em><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2495582.jpg?209" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Croation version: Winnie the Pooh</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">Like the very best of children&rsquo;s literature, Winnie the Pooh is something of a miracle, a perfect stew of tenderness, humor, wisdom, charm, sincerity, heart, and language that transcends time and generation. Winnie the Pooh speaks across all barriers of culture and geography <font size="3">-</font> it has been translated into innumerable languages, including Latin and Esperanto. One commentary, The Tao of Pooh, published in 1983, equates Winnie the Pooh with ancient Chinese philosophers; it was on the New York Times best seller list for 42 weeks.&nbsp; </font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:9px;*margin-top:18px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3871127.jpg?304" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pooh, Tigger and Christopher Robin by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">To be very clear, Winnie the Pooh is NOT a Disney creation - the Disney version is a travesty, a cheap tawdry imitation lacking any trace of the delicate, gentle, poignant lilt of the original. The Disney visuals, too, are harsh and crude - painful to look at if you know the sweet, careful original drawings by E. H. Shepard. Shepard&rsquo;s gift was for illustrations that capture the perfect tone for children: seriously good natured and forcefully innocent, in contrast to too many overly cute, sentimental versions of childhood. (He also did the original illustrations for The Wind in the Willows.)&nbsp; </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1393604.jpg?1" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">AA Milne, Christopher Robin, and Pooh Bear</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">For Winnie the Pooh we thank A. A. Milne, a Cambridge educated writer (one of his professors was H.G. Wells) who wrote humorous essays, murder mysteries and early screenplays, fought in WWI, and then retired to a farm in Sussex. His son, named Christopher Robin, was born in 1920 <font size="3">-</font> the first Winnie the Pooh stories (starring guess who) were published in 1925</font>.     </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1662440_orig.jpg?307' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1662440.jpg?307" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Map of Hundred Acre Wood by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">The other unforgettable characters <font size="3">-</font> Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Roo, etc. - were all &lsquo;real&rsquo; friends of Milne&rsquo;s son - his stuffed animals.* The setting, beloved as &lsquo;The Hundred Acre Wood,&rsquo; is modeled on Ashdown Forest near Milne&rsquo;s home, a wild moorland south of London with prehistoric traces that was once a hunting ground for Tudor Kings.    </font><br /><em><span>*see below for how to Meet Them</span></em><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2028065.jpg?0" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pooh and Piglet: EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                      <font size="3">Winnie the Pooh&rsquo;s world is a place of wonder and challenge&ndash;- every adventure leads to new discovery. The language is deft and playful, and behind every twinkle and charm lies a deeper truth. When Pooh says, &ldquo;It is more fun to talk with someone who doesn't use long, difficult words but rather short, easy words like "What about lunch?&rdquo;&nbsp; We think, <font size="3">"O</font>f course - wouldn&rsquo;t life be better if we just cut the bombast and got right to the important stuff?"</font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class='wsite-multicol-table-wrap' style='margin:0 -15px'> <table class='wsite-multicol-table'> <tbody class='wsite-multicol-tbody'> <tr class='wsite-multicol-tr'> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4580603.jpg?219" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pooh and the Hunny Jar by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3"><font size="4"><font size="3">&ldquo;Did you ever stop to think, and forget to start again?&rdquo;</font> </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>    </font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/143380.jpg?173" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Pooh and Piglet by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">&ldquo;What day is it?"<br /> It's today," squeaked Piglet.<br /> My favorite day," said Pooh.&rdquo; </font><br /><br /><br />&ldquo;Promise me you'll never forget me because if I thought you would, I'd never leave.&rdquo;</div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  </td> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4192736.jpg?0" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:0;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Tigger and Roo by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <br /><br /><span></span><font size="3">&ldquo;I'm not lost for I know where I am. But however, where I am may be lost.&rdquo;<br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>    &ldquo;You can't stay in your corner of the Forest waiting for others to come to you. You have to go to them sometimes.&rdquo;</font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/632139.jpg?219" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Christopher Robin and Pooh by EH Shepard</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="4"><font size="3">&ldquo;The things that make me different are the things that make me.&rdquo; </font></font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div></div></div>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/508324.jpg?0" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;"></div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">If you would like to meet Winnie the Pooh and some of his friends in person, take a trip to the New York Public Library. &ndash; <font size="3">Y</font>ou&rsquo;ll find Pooh, Eeyore, Tigger, Kanga, and Piglet in a case in the Children&rsquo;s Center at 42nd Street. EP Dutton, the original publisher, brought them to the U.S. in 1947 and donated them to the library in 1987.</font> <br />                  <font size="3"><a title="" href="http://exhibitions.nypl.org/treasures/items/show/28" style="">http://exhibitions.nypl.org/treasures/items/show/28</a>    </font><br /><br />                    <font size="3">Chapter 8: An Expedition to the North Pole, read by Stephen Fry, Judi Dench and others:</font><br />                    <font size="3"><a title="" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EJAJCToXGg&amp;feature=relmfu" style="">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EJAJCToXGg&amp;feature=relmfu</a></font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><font size="3"><span>Morgan Library</span> exhibit - Beatrix Potter: The Picture Letters</font> (Through January 27, 2013)<br />                    <font size="3"><a title="" href="http://www.themorgan.org/collections/works/potter/thumbs.asp" style="">http://www.themorgan.org/collections/works/potter/thumbs.asp</a></font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><font size="3"><span>What wisdom do you recall from Children's Books? Please share with the rest of us!</span></font><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Soutine in Paris: Order and Chaos at l'Orangerie]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/soutine-in-paris-order-and-chaos-at-lorangerie]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/soutine-in-paris-order-and-chaos-at-lorangerie#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 22 Oct 2012 02:50:43 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[french art]]></category><category><![CDATA[portraits]]></category><category><![CDATA[soutine]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/soutine-in-paris-order-and-chaos-at-lorangerie</guid><description><![CDATA[Chaim Soutine (1893-1943)                       I hadn&rsquo;t planned on seeing much in the way of modern art in Paris while I was there with my Cathedrals tour, but Thursday morning after the group left, I hurried down to the Orangerie Museum at the Tuileries to catch Chaim Soutine: Order out of Chaos (L'Ordre du Chaos). I was especially curious about what was left after Dr. Barnes snapped up everything not nailed down in Soutine&rsquo;s studio in 1923. Like all art in the Barnes Collection ga [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/8445736.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Chaim Soutine (1893-1943)</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                      <font size="3">I hadn&rsquo;t planned on seeing much in the way of modern art in Paris while I was there with my Cathedrals tour, but Thursday morning after the group left, I hurried down to the Orangerie Museum at the Tuileries to catch <em>Chaim Soutine: Order out of Chaos (L'Ordre du Chaos)</em>. I was especially curious about what was left after Dr. Barnes snapped up everything not nailed down in Soutine&rsquo;s studio in 1923. Like all art in the Barnes Collection galleries the Soutines don&rsquo;t travel, so it was a chance to look at other works by this intriguing artist, who is fast moving up in the art history ranks from lesser known to widely celebrated.</font>     </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:6px;*margin-top:12px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1711492_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1711492.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">The Little Pastry Chef 1919</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Before Dr. Barnes&rsquo;s visit Soutine had been just another artist &eacute;migr&eacute; scrambling for a place among the many struggling artists of Montparnasse. Although he was living hand to mouth, he wasn&rsquo;t doing badly, judging by the distance he&rsquo;d already come from a village childhood in Lithuania. By 1923 he had a solid body of paintings, a dealer, a couple of glamorous patrons, and a circle of kindred spirits, especially his friend Modigliani, who lived and worked in the same ramshackle artist building. Barnes first met Soutine in post-WWI Paris through art dealer Paul Guillaume, whose collection forms the core of the holdings in the Orangerie Museum. The first work to catch Barnes&rsquo;s adventurous eye was The Little Pastry Chef, one of a series of trades people and artisans painted by Soutine.    </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3201211_orig.jpg?292' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/3201211.jpg?292" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Garcon d'Etage 1927</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                    <font size="3">He bought it on the spot and then showed up at Soutine&rsquo;s studio cash in hand to clean him out. <font size="3">It wasn't a whole <font size="3">lot of mo<font size="3">ney for Barnes but it was the earth, moon, and stars to Soutine, and it </font></font></font>set him on a path <font size="3">to a solidly successful career. </font><em>The Little Pastry Chef</em> is safely in place in Philadelphia, but other<font size="3"> portraits</font> in the series were on display in Paris. It is said that Soutine distorted (a word that Soutine&rsquo;s work invariably invokes) the outward appearance of his sitters in order to show the truth of their personalities. I don&rsquo;t know if I buy that completely, but he certainly conveys a sense of the personal quirkiness lurking behind the social veneer of any individual. <em>Garcon d&rsquo;Etage</em> (Room Service Waiter) is a perfect example of Soutine&rsquo;s lush, charming, slightly maniacal portraits.</font> <font size="3">The man (not a boy - no one uses the word 'garcon' for waiters any longer) with his sharp-elbowed pose makes it clear that he is serious about his job, if a bit timid, perhaps about losing it. Soutine blocks out the color - red, black, white, dark greenish blue - and sparks the composition to life with the frenetic pace of his brushstrokes and the serio-comic expression on the man's face.</font><br /><span style=""></span><br /><span style=""></span>      </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/665389_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/665389.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Portrait of Mme Castaing 1929</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">The Metropolitan Museum loaned several works, in  particular the spectacular 1929 portrait of Mme Castaing, whose pouty  red lips and envelope of glossy black fur are slathered on the canvas  with Soutine&rsquo;s characteristic jerky energy and infusions of spots and  dashes of color.&nbsp; The show includes a video interview with Mme Castaing, a glamorous designer who, with her husband, was an important patron and friend, sharing her reflections on Soutine&rsquo;s personality and way of working some years after the artist&rsquo;s death in 1943. One instantly sees the portrait in the older, slightly coquettish woman.    </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9073732_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9073732.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Jean Fouquet Charles VII 1447</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Given his highly personal style, Soutine&rsquo;s choice of models is intriguing. He copied classics at the Louvr<font size="3">e like many artists; for hi<font size="3">m</font></font> Jean Fouquet&rsquo;s stiff formal 1447 <em>Portrait of Charles VII </em>was &lsquo;perfect&rsquo;<font size="3"> <font size="3">and </font>he</font> based several compositions on it. His admiration for Rembrandt, in particular his 1655 painting <em>Carcass of Beef</em>, led to <font size="3">his well known</font> series<font size="3"><font size="3"> of big bloody beef</font></font> carcasses<font size="3"> and works showing</font> dead rabbits, some skinned<font size="3">, some not</font>. <font size="3">T</font>he exhibition contains superb examples of each.     </font></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class='wsite-multicol-table-wrap' style='margin:0 -15px'> <table class='wsite-multicol-table'> <tbody class='wsite-multicol-tbody'> <tr class='wsite-multicol-tr'> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9902636.jpg?190" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;"></div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">Rembrandt <em>Carcass of Beef</em> 1655<br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/656729.jpg?160" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Soutine Carcass of Beef 1925</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">Soutine's version (one of many) - note how he zooms in to fill the frame, removing the distance between the viewer and the gory fact of the carcass.<br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  </td> <td class='wsite-multicol-col' style='width:50%;padding:0 15px'>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9805940_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9805940.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">The Rabbit 1923-24</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  The subject is perfectly suited to Soutine - he keeps the gruesomeness but adds so much flair and joy in the painting of these dead husks that your visual experience bounces back and forth between repulsion and pure pleasure.&nbsp; The fur of one of the rabbits was a &nbsp;small masterpiece, a dizzying, gleeful calligraphic dance of yellow against a darker gold.    </div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div></div></div>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5815860_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/5815860.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Portrait of the Sculptor, Oscar Miestchaninoff 1923</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">It was interesting to see that many of the strongest paintings were on loan from American museums. The curator of the show, Marie-Paul Vial (Director of L&rsquo;Orangerie) admits that Soutine is &lsquo;difficult to comprehend and little understood in France&rsquo; - the exhibition certainly seems to underline the idea that Americans &lsquo;got&rsquo; Soutine first.&nbsp; </font><br /><em><br /><span>This portrait of a fellow artist was based on the 15th century painting of King Charles VII</span> (see above.) Note how the composition echoes the broad spread of the shoulders to fill the space.</em><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:1px;*margin-top:2px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9454189_orig.jpg?380' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/9454189.jpg?380" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">The Houses 1923-24</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">Soutine&rsquo;s world was always in motion if we believe the evidence of his work. Houses sway and move with the rhythm of conga dancers, trees swirl and twist, flowers wave, people spin out in streams and splotches of color.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s more than a bit of Van Gogh&rsquo;s nervous expressionist energy in Soutine; he picks up the beat, turns up the music, and brings the dance into a deeper, darker, still very joyous place of human soul and spir<font size="3">it</font>.     </font><br /><br /><font size="4"><span>Chaim Soutine: L'Ordre du Chaos (the Order of Chaos)</span><br /><span>Oct 3, 2012-Jan 21, 2013</span></font><br /><u><a title="" href="http://www.musee-orangerie.fr/pages/page_id19505_u1l2.htm">http://www.musee-orangerie.fr/pages/page_id19505_u1l2.htm</a></u> (in French)<br /><br /><span>I will be teaching a 4 week class about the artists of the Barnes Collection, including Soutine, from October 23 - Nov 13. The class will be held in Chestnut Hill (Philadelphia) If you'd like more information contact me through my contact form.</span><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Paris on my Mind: Art of a Gilded Age]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/paris-on-my-mind-art-of-a-gilded-age]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/paris-on-my-mind-art-of-a-gilded-age#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 14 Sep 2012 19:46:13 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[19th c art4a3f8ec7db]]></category><category><![CDATA[european art]]></category><category><![CDATA[paris]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.artsmarttalk.com/artblog/paris-on-my-mind-art-of-a-gilded-age</guid><description><![CDATA[Le Pont Neuf It's always 1889 in Paris. In the movie Midnight in Paris, Woody Allen got the nostalgia part right, but the glorious 1920's he celebrated are a bit too modern; Paris is a city lavishly brushed with the golden blur of the late 19th century. In 1889 the beautiful Beaux-Arts facades were fresh and new, the recently created Grands Boulevards showed off vistas never before possible, the world was flocking to Paris to see modern wonders at the Grand Exposition. Fl&acirc;neurs in elegant  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/201016_orig.jpg?293' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/201016.jpg?293" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Le Pont Neuf</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">It's always 1889 in Paris. In the movie Midnight in Paris, Woody Allen got the nostalgia part right, but the glorious 1920's he celebrated are a bit too modern; Paris is a city lavishly brushed with the golden blur of the late 19th century. In 1889 the beautiful Beaux-Arts facades were fresh and new, the recently created Grands Boulevards showed off vistas never before possible, the world was flocking to Paris to see modern wonders at the Grand Exposition. Fl&acirc;neurs</font><font size="3"> in elegant dress, the men in slim striped trousers with top hats, the women in elaborate ruffles and flourishes, marveled at generous spaces and fresh light where short years before there had been nasty cramped slums. (Never mind the dirty little secret that hordes of the poor were pushed out to the fringes, setting up some of the problems Paris faces today.)</font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:4px;*margin-top:8px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4077496_orig.jpg?312' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4077496.jpg?312" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Boulevard des Capucines</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">I'm on my way to Paris in just a couple of weeks to lead a small group trip focused on the art, history, and faith of the great Gothic Cathedrals in and around Paris, with side trips to Chartres, Reims, and Amiens. (I also lead small group arts-focused tours - see links at the end for more information) Paris, therefore, is very much on my mind. I thought to share the work of a 19th century painter, one you've probably never heard of, but one who captures that late 19th century glow so beautifully. His name is Jean </font>B&eacute;raud<font size="3">, and from what I can tell - and see - he was sort of the Norman Rockwell of his time. </font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4230854_orig.jpg?350' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/4230854.jpg?350" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Boulevard Poissoniere in the Rain</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">Jean </font>B&eacute;raud<font size="3"> was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia. He moved to Paris with his French mother after his father's death intending to study law. That plan crashed when Paris was occupied during the Franco-Prussian war in 1870, and instead he became an artist. His work is so much of the era that it's something of a challenge for modern eyes. We've all bought the story of radical artists in rebellion against tired old Academy rules; our art heroes are Monet, Matisse and Picasso. It wasn't just the Art World in revolution, however. The clang of mechanical streetcars along those wide open boulevards, the new-fangled Eiffel Tower going up just over there - the whole world was changing fast. Radical new art was as much a symptom as a cause. It's easy to overlook the value - historic and artistic - of painters such as Beraud, who tell us stories of daily life before everything changed, but it's well worth the effort. </font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:right;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:right;;clear:right;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/624936.jpg?309" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 0px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">La Patisserie Glopp 1889</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">B&eacute;raud<font size="3"> often included little bits of humor and sly observations with satirical overtones but, as with the nuances of the stories in Gothic stained glass, we no longer have the context to understand them. Is there oblique meaning in this painting of well-dressed ladies nibbling pastries in an elegant patisserie? Are they the equivalent of vapid cocktail-swilling housewives of the 1950's? I have no idea.</font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/2540851.jpg?308" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">Les Ambassadeurs</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;"><font size="3">I'm willing to bet that </font>B&eacute;raud<font size="3"> did intend a direct shot at the overdressed young woman in The Ambassadeurs, sitting with her bored-looking companion as she downs her drink and flaunts her cigarette. Just not done, I suspect - a sign of the vulgar, Nouveau Riche. Again, think Norman Rockwell in some of his oh-so-pleasant but slyly satirical Saturday Evening Post covers. </font><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>  <span class='imgPusher' style='float:left;height:0px'></span><span style='z-index:10;position:relative;float:left;;clear:left;margin-top:0px;*margin-top:0px'><a href='https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1573840_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox' onclick='if (!lightboxLoaded) return false'><img src="https://www.artsmarttalk.com/uploads/5/4/2/9/5429354/1573840.jpg" style="margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 10px; border-width:1px;padding:3px;" alt="Picture" class="galleryImageBorder" /></a><div style="display: block; font-size: 90%; margin-top: -10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: center;">La Modiste, Champs Elysees</div></span> <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;display:block;">                  <font size="3">B&eacute;raud</font>    <font size="3"> and other late Academic painters (he is usually described as a transition figure between the Academy and Impressionism) give us a wonderful 'cinema verite' version of Paris. It's fun to keep these paintings in mind when you're walking those same streets today - Paris hasn't changed all that much. All that's missing is a few top hats and ruffles. </font><br /><br /><strong><font color="#990000" size="4"><span>ArtSmartTravel to Paris </span></font></strong><br /><u><font size="4"><a title="" href="http://www.artsmarttalk.com/paris-arts-tour.html">http://www.artsmarttalk.com/paris-arts-tour.html</a></font></u><br /><u><font size="4"><a title="" href="http://www.artsmarttalk.com/cathedrals-tour.html">http://www.artsmarttalk.com/cathedrals-tour.html</a></font></u><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><span></span><span>Jean </span>B&eacute;raud<span> at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY</span><br /><u><a title="" href="http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/110000086?rpp=20&amp;pg=1&amp;ft=jean+beraud&amp;pos=1">http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/110000086?rpp=20&amp;pg=1&amp;ft=jean+beraud&amp;pos=1</a></u><br /></div> <hr style="width:100%;clear:both;visibility:hidden;"></hr>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>