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16th Century Florentine Portrait Painting - Updated

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The Jacquemart-André Museum is presenting an exhibition dedicated to the art of 16th century Florentine portrait painting. The unerring eye of Edward André and Nélie Jacquemart has enabled them to collect, amid the masterpieces of Italian Renaissance art, portraits by the hand of such painters as Ridolfo del Ghirlandaio and Francesco Salviati. For the first time in Paris, they will be reunited with their contemporaries Rosso Fiorentino, Andrea del Sarto, Pontormo and Bronzino. 

Famous in their time, but today less well known by the French public, these artists fashioned the portraits of men and women who witnessed the profound transformation of the city of Florence during the 16th century. The selected works, presented in an itinerary that is both thematic and chronological, allow us to understand the progressive evolution of the genre towards a public and personal affirmation of the self-image as a desire to leave a mark for posterity.

This exhibition provides the opportunity to rediscover these refined portraits of the late Renaissance and its distinguished representatives. Following the austerity of the Republican era, still bearing the imprint of the teachings of the great masters such as Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael, portraits become brilliant and complex, symbols as much of the luxury of the Medici court as of the inner beauty of the soul, manifestos of the «modern style» that was so greatly admired.

In the 16th century, the art of portraiture became increasingly common among the Florentine elite, who had found in it a means of capturing their facial characteristics and social status for posterity. They drew on literary characters such as Petrarch, musical references or a staged production full of symbols to describe the model’s life in all its facets.

The Musée Jacquemart-André has devoted an unrivalled exhibition to the great Florentine portrait painters of the 16th century, based on around forty works. Alongside the presentation of masterpieces by Pontormo, a pupil of Andrea del Sarto and master of mannerism, there will be a chance to appreciate the refined and graceful features, typical of the portraits of Bronzino or Salviati, which are testimony to a meaningful sense of sophistication.

This exhibition will offer a panorama of Florentine portraiture in the 16th century with all its main themes and stylistic transformations. Through the eyes of the painters experimenting with new ways of representing their contemporaries, it will allow visitors to appreciate the style developments of the Cinquecento, an especially eventful century in cultural and religious terms.

The portraits of the republican period in the early 16th century in all their gravitas gave way to heroic representations of men at war, symbols of military and political conflicts that led the Medici to seize power in Florence in 1530. Next come the court portraits, distinguished by their richness and elegance, and the portraits of artists, witnesses to a new role bestowed on court painters and opening their minds to other forms of art such as poetry and music.

This exhibition has benefited from an extraordinary partnership with the Museums of Florence. Other renowned international museum institutions and exceptional collections such as the Royal Collection (London), the Louvre (Paris) and even the Städel Museum (Frankfurt) are also supporting this event with remarkable loans 




Ridolfo del Ghirlandaio (Ridolfo Bigordi). Florence, 1483 - 1561 Portrait of a Woman (‘La Monaca’)- 1510-1515,oil on panel, 65 x 48 cm Florence, Istituti museali della Soprintendenza Speciale per il Polo Museale Fiorentino, Galleria degli Uffizi © S.S.P.S.A.E. e per il Polo Museale della Città di Firenze itinerary

The Republic of Florence and the Dawn of the Golden Age of Portraiture

The premature death of Lorenzo il Magnifico, on 4 April 1492, was a turning point in the history of Florence and the Medici. The decades 1490–1510 marked a low point for these merchants, whose good fortune had brought them wealth and power for more than a century. Il Magnifico was succeeded by his son Piero who in 1494 was obliged to flee the city, and Savonarola took power. It was not until 1512 that the Medici were finally authorised to return to the city. Florence underwent a radical political and cultural transformation. Throughout this period, young artists depicted their models against a plain background or before a landscape, as can be seen in 





Ridolfo del Ghirlandaio’s Veiled Woman.

The names of numerous artists were ascribed this painting, before it was eventually attributed to Ridolfo del Ghirlandaio. 

What persists from these conjectures is the unanimous recognition of the artist’s sensibility to the «maniera moderna» (modern style) of Leonardo and Raphael.To begin with, the twisting movement of the body contributes to the impact of the young woman’s presence: the three-quarters pose hints at the upper back and the tilt of the shoulders feigns a vitality that energises the pyramid in which the body seems to move.Next, the hands stage an invitation to look closer: the right hand seems to be resting on the picture frame, the fingers exhibiting a disturbing naturalism, the rings capturing and reflecting the light, as do the gilded edges of the pages of the Prayer Book.The topographical narration is depicted through the two openings in the loggia. On the left, one can see the hospital at the convent of San Paolo. On the right, before a fortified enclosure, stands the monastery of San Jacopo di Ripoli.The appearance of the young woman complies with the standards of beauty that were fashionable at the time. The shoulders are exposed by a deep neckline that reveals the beginning of the bosom, with a hint of the lacework around the edge of the bodice. The dress and its detachable sleeves are made from a fine black woollen cloth that Florentine weavers exported all over Europe. Under a translucent veil, undulating delicately and coming to rest on the bare shoulders, a white satin bonnet gathers the long hair, hiding it from the eyes of a society that attributed an erogenous power to it.

Despite the restraint in the choice of hues and the simplicity of the ornaments, the dress and the bonnet are made from high quality fabrics and their cut denotes a sensuality that would be astonishing in a portrait of a religious lady.In contrast, a certain moderation in the display of pomp bears witness to a style of attire that was specific to the ladies of Florence because of the social context, for the Republic had decreed sumptuary laws in order to limit the consumption of luxury goods by the urban elite. The aim was to promote the export of wealth so as to ensure the economic sustainability of the province; it was also a way to return to the moral foundations of the Republic.[Extract from the exhibition catalogue.Text by Gaylord Brouhot] 


Whether depicted in three quarters or in profile, like the Portrait of a Man by both 





Franciabigio and 




Rosso Fiorentino respectively, 

the models are serious and have a certain simplicity—severity even — in both their postures and their attire. The rigour and sobriety characteristic of these works reflected the return to moral values linked to antique republican virtues.





Francesco Salviati (Francesco de’ Rossi). Florence 1510 - Rome 1563 Portrait of Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, 1546-1548,oil on panel, 65 x 46 cm Florence, Istituti museali della Soprintendenza Speciale per il Polo Museale Fiorentino, Palazzo Pitti, Galleria Palatina © S.S.P.S.A.E. e per il Polo Museale della Città di Firenzeroom 2

1530 - 1537 The Medici Reconquest. Portraits of Men Bearing Arms 

Capturing the city by force in August 1530 after a terrible year-long siege, Alessandro de’ Medici then governed Florence—which had suffered great hardship and was obliged to capitulate—, but he was savagely assassinated seven years later. Although shaken by this event, the dynasty managed to survive. Aware of the importance of creating a new form of representation—both of himself and his status and authority—, Alessandro entrusted various artists with commissions to carry out a veritable image-based rehabilitation campaign. This resulted in a series of heroic portraits, in which the model was depicted dressed in armour, and these were veritable political propaganda instruments that underlined his recent accession to power, a noteworthy example of which is 





Giorgio Vasari’s Portrait of Alessandro de’ Medici.

Cosimo I also implemented a strategy of legitimisation, in which he cultivated not only his own image, but also that of his father, Giovanni of the Black Bands, the famous condottiero, whom he transformed into a second (after Cosimo the Elder) pater patriae, and for whom he commissioned a whole series of portraits, particularly from Francesco Salviati (1546–1548). The Medici never retreated and never refrained from using force to achieve their goals. 

1539 - 1574  The Medici Court. Magnificent Portraits

By his marriage to Eleonora di Toledo in 1539, Cosimo I sealed his alliance with Charles V. In May 1540, the ducal family moved into the Palazzo Vecchio, the first refurbishment works were carried out in the duchess’s apartment. As the inventor of the duchy’s new pictorial language, Bronzino was the leading artist in the Medici court. Hence, Bronzino was an integral part of the development of the representational codes used in portraits of the duke, which were stripped of all military connotations in the 1560s, like the recently discovered Portrait of Cosimo I de’ Medici at the Age of Forty.



Bronzino (Agnolo di Cosimo, dit). Florence, 1503 - 1572 Portrait de Cosme Ier de Médicis à l’âge de quarante ans1560,oil on panel, 82,5 × 62 cm, Newark, Delaware, The Alana Collection © The Alana Collection, Newark, Delaware, USA.

This development reflected the consolidation of the Medicean regime and its ascension to the status of grand duchy of Tuscany in 1569.A keen collector, Cosimo I was primarily interested in monumental projects; and Baccio Bandinelli was his favourite artist. With other sculptors and architects, he transformed the Florentine city into a veritable centre of power. After symbolically taking up residence in the Palazzo Vecchio, where Vasari created a grandiose decor that celebrated the glory of the Medici in the room known as the ‘Salone dei Cinquecento’ (the Room of the Five Hundred), Cosimo had a large administrative building—the Uffizi Palace—erected nearby.





Francesco Salviati, 1510 - 1563, Portrait of a Young Man with a Fawn Circa 1545-1548, oil on panel, 88,5 × 68,5 cm Vaduz-Vienne, Liechtenstein Princely Collections© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna 

1539 - 1574
Magnificent Portraits of the Courtiers

Like the Medici portraits, those of their courtiers were composed with great finesse. Nothing was left to chance, neither in terms of the work’s composition, the arrangement and positioning of the sitters, or their postures and expressions—or rather their absence of expression—, nor their garments and accessories. The courtiers’ portraits rivalled one another in their representation of every detail of luxury and refinement, while taking care not to surpass the sumptuous representations of their rulers. The intention behind these highly naturalistic ceremonial portraits was to transcribe the physiognomy and character of the models and convey their social status, and sometimes even specify their rank within an extremely hierarchical court society. These portraits attest to the emergence of the grand duchy’s court society, and the affirmation of the nobility of those who belonged to it. The images convey this transmutation of bourgeois codes into specific aristocratic codes, which were indispensable for promoting the princely grandeur of the Medici court.  

The Medici Heirs. Magnificent Portraits

Francesco I preferred refined works and the decorative arts, a result perhaps of his cultivated upbringing and education, which comprised the study of the sciences, arts, and literature. Between 1570 and 1572, he entrusted Giorgio Vasari and Vincenzo Borghini with the project to refurbish his Studiolo inside the Palazzo Vecchio. From 1580 onwards, Francesco also established an area known as La Tribuna within the Uffizi that was dedicated to his collection—comprising antique sculptures, small bronzes, hard-stone objects, goldsmithed objects... — in a decor that combined natural treasures with artistic marvels. In the Florence of the second half of the Cinquecento, the art of Medicean portraiture attained its zenith. Bronzino was still the unparalleled master, as attested by the wonderful series of 29 small family portraits painted on tin that he created with the collaboration of his workshop, to adorn Cosimo I’s office. More precious than ever, the portraits comprised luxurious materials such as gold, silver, lapis lazuli, and other precious stones, attesting to an increasing emphasis on the sumptuary dimension, complemented by great attention to detail and the rendering of textures. Such refinement was also often associated with miniaturisation, and sometimes resulted in technical accomplishments. Nothing was deemed too luxurious to celebrate the prince’s life.  



Bronzino (Agnolo di Cosimo, dit) Florence, 1503 - 1572 Portrait of Francesco de Medici, 1555-1565, oil on tin, 16 x 12,5 cm Florence, Galleria degli Uffizi© S.S.P.S.A.E e per il Polo Museale della città di Firenze 




Francesco Salviati (Francesco de’ Rossi). Florence, 1510 - Rome, 1563 Portrait of a Lute Player 1527-1530, oil on panel, 96 x 77 cm, Paris, Musée Jacquemart-André – Institut de France © Paris, Musée Jacquemart-André - Institut de France/Studio Sébert Photographes 

Mannerist Portraiture as a Mirror of the Arts

As a keen patron of the arts Cosimo I de’ Medici made a point of officialising and supporting the recently established Academy of Florence—whose purpose was to promote the Tuscan language. Likewise, he collaborated with Vasari on the foundation of the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno (‘Academy and Company for the Arts of Drawing’). However, beyond the strict and elitist framework of these academies, the artists also assembled in confraternities (‘Companies of pleasure’), whose main aim was to have a good time and indulge in artistic jousts. A healthy emulation resulted from this coming together of the arts, as most of the artists of the era were polyvalent.Either via instruments or scores, musical references were recurrent, and there were many portraits of musicians, reflecting the fundamental role of music in Florentine culture. The lute—a symbol of court music, introduced to Florence by Galileo’s father—was the favourite instrument of professional musicians and the cultivated elite, as evoked by the portraits of Pontormo and Salviati. 

The men and women who feature in the portraits of Bronzino and Andrea del Sarto are often depicted with books. The art of Florentine portraiture was, in fact, rooted in the vernacular poetic tradition, and necessarily incorporated references to the great poets who had established the Florentine identity and culture: Dante (1265–1321), Petrarch (1304–1374), and Boccaccio (1313–1375). The success of the portrait of one’s beloved, inherited from the first two writers, was considerable at the time, and endlessly employed by painters and poets, in a fertile dialogue between painting and poetry, as with Bronzino and Vasari. 

The artist working in the erudite context of the court had to be cultivated, and often devoted themselves to writing. Painted or praised in verse, the beloved lady was generally distinguished by her ideal and eternal beauty, as can be seen in Andrea del Sarto’s portrait of the facetious young woman holding a book.

This lute player is the Frenchman, Jacquet du Pont, a protégé of Cardinal Giovanni Salviati from whom the painter of the portrait adopted the name. Born in Florence and trained in the workshop of Andrea del Sarto, a prolific painter and a highly popular one right from his Florentine debut, Francesco Salviati (1510 - 1563) nevertheless spent most of his career in Rome. Deeply concentrated, the musician is playing a difficult chord, that of G major in its second inversion, on his tenor or bass lute of imposing dimensions. Restricted to an erudite public, this noble instrument is closely linked to the first experiments in abstract polyphonic music.The success enjoyed by these figures of musicians demonstrates the esteem in which they were held by the courts, particularly those of the French in Italy.




 Santi di Tito. Florence, 1536 - 1603 Portrait de Marie de Médicis1600, oil on convas, 193,5 x 109 cmFlorence, Istituti museali della Soprintendenza Speciale per il Polo Museale Fiorentino, Galleria Palatina© S.S.P.S.A.E. e per il Polo Museale della Città di Firenzeroom

  =The Majestic Grand Portraits of the End of the Century

The Medici court adopted the models of the major European monarchies, and even more so after two of its family members became queens of France: firstly, Catherine—the daughter of Lorenzo, duke of Urbino—, who married Henri II in 1533; then Maria, Francesco I’s daughter, who married Henri IV in 1600, as attested in her official portrait by Santi di Tito. This portrait highlighted her status as both queen of France and a Tuscan princess—an ambassador of the flourishing state, Medici finances, and a wife and future mother.In its desire to capture the contemporary mood, portraiture obeyed the conventions and ever-increasing demands for dignity, magnificence, and luxury in the Florentine court. This was particularly true after the arrival in 1539 of Eleonora di Toledo, who introduced Spanish fashions to the court. State portraits strictly employed ritual and repetitive codes, emphasising in particular the insignia of rank. Costumes, coiffures, and accessories constituted various weapons in the discreet but cruel battles of international diplomacy. The portraitists working in the court in the second half of the century were expected to pay particular attention to rendering sumptuary details, as attested by the significant volume of work produced in Santo di Tito’s workshop.Stripped of the noble and official codes of visual representation that applied to the portraits of the rulers, the portraits of courtiers are less rigid and feature various references to their personalities, and even their tastes and sentiments. In fact, two tendencies became apparent in the portraits of the closing decades. On the one hand, the emergence of an allegorical language, and on the other, a return to a certain simplicity in the portrayal of the sitters and their sentiments, in favour of a certain naturalism. This was particularly true of the portraits of children, which were a speciality of Santi di Tito and his son Tiberio. And lastly, portraits continued to become more popular and were commissioned by the bourgeoisie and less affluent families. 

 For a long time regarded as pejorative, the term mannerism is derived from maniera, widely used by Giorgio Vasari in his “Lives”.He used the expression maniera modernato designate the style of artists of his time, from which he developed the concept of the bella maniera, or the perfect manner, to denote in particular the art of Michelangelo, unsurpassable in his opinion.Grace, harmony, imagination, fantasy and virtuosity; such were the exceptional qualities that characterisedthe bella maniera. The movement that 19th century critics called Mannerist was born in Rome and Tuscany during the troubled period between 1515 and 1520. Strong personalities such as Rosso Fiorentino and Pontormo in Florence, or Beccafumi in Siena, crystallised the anxieties and formal research already perceptible in certain of their elders such as Andrea del Sarto and Michelangelo.

Profoundly innovative, as much in the field of composition and the handling of forms and space, as in its use of colours, Mannerist art abounds with quotations and references to the works of its predecessors, starting with Michelangelo. More or less naturalistic, it takes extremely varied forms depending on the interpreter, the location and the era. Among its most common manifestations are a lengthening of forms, angularity, dynamism and languor. Formal devices became established, including the famous serpentine or amphora silhouettes, bulbous at the waist.

A movement of this kind was not confined to Rome and Tuscany.Different manifestations appeared all over the peninsula, especially at Parma, with Parmigianino, but also at Bologna, where Primaticcio lived, andin Venice, with Titian and especially Tintoretto. Moreover, it spread throughout Europe from the 1530’s onwards.

It was propagated either by foreign artists visiting Italy who carried it back to their home country, for example Alonso Berruguete returning to Spain from Florence, or Jan van Scorel returning to the Netherlands from Rome, or by Italian artists who emigrated, such as Rosso Fiorentino and Primaticcio who came to France at the behest of François 1st. They were at the origin of the School of Fontainebleau, at the chateau of the same name, one of the finest expressions of European Mannerist art. 

In the 16thcentury, Florence saw the beginnings of the artistic movement that Giorgio Vasari defined as the «modern style» and which nineteenth century critics baptised with the name «mannerism».

Lucian Freud at Auction

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Christies New York, 9- 10 November 2015



Lucian Freud (1922-2011), The Brigadier, oil on canvas, Painted in 2003-2004. Sold $34,885,000



Lucian Freud (1922-2011), Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa, 1989-91. Oil on canvas. 39. x 35.in. (99.5 x 90.7cm.)

Lucian Freud’s Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa (1988-91), an intimate and poignant portrait of one of the artist’s most personal subjects, his daughter Bella, will be a centrepiece of the curated sale The Artist’s Muse. on Monday 9 November at Christie’s New York, which marks the first time this portrait is appearing at auction.


Sotheby's Modern & Post-War British Art Evening Sale London, 17 November 2015: Lucian Freud, Girl and Self Portrait






Lucian Freud, Girl and Self Portrait (1947/48), pen & ink, heightened with coloured crayon, on paper21.5 by 29.5cm; 81/2by 111/2inches (est. £600,000-800,000)

Sotheby’s London has announced the sale of an outstanding rediscovered drawing by Lucian Freud in its Modern &Post-War British Art Evening Sale on 17 November 2015. Girl and Self Portrait is the only self-portrait drawing by Freud known to feature his muse Kitty Garman, who was to become his first wife and whom he had painted devotedly from early 1947. 

Unveiled to the public for the first time in almost 70 years, Girl and Self Portrait was gifted between 1947 and 1948 shortly after it was drawn by the artist to the late Sonia Brownell( 1918-1980), second wife of George Orwell. The drawing now comes to the market for the first time with an estimate of £600,000-800,000.

Lucian Freud gifted the drawing to Sonia, who was almost certainly the inspiration for the heroine of George Orwell’s seminal novel 1984, the ‘girlf rom the fiction department’, with whom the book’s protagonist Winston Smith falls in love, changing the course of the storyline. Sonia and Lucian were close friends during the late 1940s, having met when they both worked at the highly regarded literary journal Horizon.It was Freud to whom Sonia turned when she needed help transporting Orwell to a Swiss sanatorium, in a last ditch attempt to save his life –although he died of tuberculosis a few days before the scheduled departure.

Girl and Self Portrait is testament Sonia’s famed loyalty as a friend. Indeed, despite her financial need later in life, Sonia kept the drawing to the end. During the seven decades that the drawing remained in her homet he work was only lent once for exhibition, shortly after she received the gift, for Freud’s now historic 1948 show at the London Gallery.

This arresting pen and ink drawing, heightened with coloured crayon, was initially intended to illustrate a reproduction of Flyda of the Seas: a Fairy Tale for Grown Ups, a book by Princess Marie Bonaparte, Sigmund Freud’s disciple and patron. It was Marie Bonaparte’s idea to commission Freud’s grandson to do the illustrations for her book in 1947 when translated from the French by John Rodker’s Imago Publishing Company, thoughhis illustrations did not end up being included in the edition. As a gift the drawing couldn't have been more suitable for the ‘girl from the fiction department’-an image created initially to accompany a text, but one that pulsates with the emotional intensity between the artist and model/lover, a theme that Freud was to explore for the next 60 years.
Christie's POST-WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART EVENING SALE
12 November 2014 


 LUCIAN FREUD (1922-2011)
JULIE AND MARTIN
PR.$16,965,000

 Sotheby's 2015



Lucian Freud
ROBERT FELLOWES

Estimate     600,000 — 800,000  GBP
 LOT SOLD. 785,000 GBP

Sotheby's 2014



Lucian Freud
HEAD ON A GREEN SOFA
Estimate   2,500,000 — 3,500,000  GBP
 LOT SOLD. 2,994,500 GBP 

Sotheby's 2011



Lucian Freud
BOY'S HEAD
Estimate   3,000,000 — 4,000,000  GBP
 LOT SOLD. 3,177,250 GBP

Sotheby's November 2015 Results

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Pablo Picasso, La Gommeuse, 1901 $67,450,000 (£43,841,404)



Vincent van Gogh, Paysage sous un ciel mouvemente, 1889
$54,010,000 (£35,105,622)



Kazimir Malevich, Mystic Suprematism (Black Cross on Red Oval), 1920-22 $37,770,000(£24,549,886)




Claude Monet, Nymphéas, circa 1908 $33,850,000 (£22,001,950)




Pablo Picasso, Nu aux jambes croisées, 1903 12,010,000 (£7,806,305)



Vincent van Gogh, Le Bébé Marcelle Roulin, 1888 $7,642,000 (£4,967,176)



James Ensor, Les Poissardes melancoliques, 1892  $6,970,000 (£4,530,387)


Gustave Caillebotte, Bateaux au mouillage sur la Seine à Argenteuil, 1892 5 $6,746,000 (£4,384,790) 



René Magritte, Le Maître D'École, 1955 $6,410,000 (£4,166,396) 




Wassily Kandinsky, Deepened Impulse, 1928 6,410,000 (£4,166,396)



Pablo Picasso, Violin, 1912 $6,410,000 (£4,166,396) (Similar to abov)


 
Pablo Picasso, Tête à l'oiseau, Oil on canvas, 1971 $2,230,000 (£1,467,974) 



Joan Miró, Femme et oiseau III/X, Oil on burlap, 1960 $1,810,000 (£1,191,495)



Pierre-Auguste Renoir, La Cagnes—Paysage avec rivière, Oil on canvas, 1917 $1,570,000 (£1,033,507)



Marc Chagall, Vision des mariés, Oil, tempera and pen and ink on canvas, 1977 $1,570,000 (£1,033,507)




Fernand Léger
ETUDE POUR "LA GRANDE PARADE"
LOT SOLD. 1,690,000 USD 




Fernand Léger, La Petite parade, Oil on canvas, 1953 $1,450,000 (£954,513)


Henri Matisse, Jazz (Portfolio of 20), The complete portfolio, comprising 20 pochoirs printed in color, published in 1947
$1,090,000 (£717,530)




 Max Ernst, Ohne Titel (Untitled), Oil on canvas, 1946 $1,030,000 (£678,033)





Hermann Max Pechstein, Drei Badende Akte (Three Nude Bathers), Oil on canvas laid down on canvas $1,570,000 (£1,020,474) 




Egon Schiele, Stehender Akt mit weissen Tuch, Gouache and watercolor over pencil on paper $1,390,000 (£903,477)




Pablo Picasso, Femme à la guitare dans un fauteuil, Watercolor and pencil on paper $1,150,000 (£747,481)



Paul Gauguin, Sur l'Aven en amont de Pont-Aven, Oil on canvas  1,930,000 (£1,254,469)  




Pierre Bonnard, Cinq personnages, Oil on canvas $1,138,000 (£739,682) 



Odilon Redon, Le monde des chimères , Distemper on canvas 1,090,000 (£708,482) 


Daniel Richter. Hello, I love you

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From October 9, 2015 the Schirn Kunsthalle Frank­furt is exhibiting a new series by the German painter Daniel Richter in a focused solo presen­ta­tion. Around 25 paint­ings, which will be presented to the public for the first time in the Schirn, mark a caesura in the artist’s oeuvre. Daniel Richter (* 1962) is one of the influ­en­tial artists of his gener­a­tion; since the late 1990s his works have been cele­brated in numerous exhi­bi­tions.

In his new works Richter breaks with all that seemed familiar in his painting hith­erto. In the past two years he has focused on a ques­tion which repre­sents a chal­lenge for him: “How can a picture be reduced formally while being charged at the same time as regards content?” In his search for answers and solu­tions Richter has devel­oped a new picto­rial language which defies the customary motifs and painting methods as well as the familiar colours and themes.

His works are char­ac­terised by a remark­able styl­istic complexity and versa­tility: From about the year 2000 he confronted the abstract-orna­mental paint­ings created from the mid-1990s with large-format, more strongly figu­ra­tive and narra­tive pictures of a socio-polit­ical reality. Through the inter­sec­tion of art-histor­ical, mass-media and pop-culture clichés he has created idio­syn­cratic worlds. In 2015 he reduced the picto­rial means, simpli­fied the painting method; the tried and tested picto­rial themes have disap­peared and the picture has been brought back to its abstract primal state. The paint­ings in the new series seek an unusual confronta­tion. On a formal and content-based level the artist brings about a clash between simpli­fied masses of colours and signif­i­cance.

Richter’s painting against his own routine has resulted in fascinating works which not only reveal a transformation, but also a remarkable new development stage in the artist’s oeuvre.

The new series included two groups of works. In one of them Richter focuses on the obser­va­tion of the body and corpo­re­ality. In his previous works the human body was strongly contoured and always embedded in a super­or­di­nate narra­tive. Richter has retained the stereo­typed and flesh­less char­acter of the figures, but now goes further. His interest lies above all in the surface. He allows the forms to blur and thereby lets the figures dissolve. In this way a frag­mented, shat­tered phys­i­cality prevails. The figures are flat and inter­twined; the forms crash merci­lessly into each other and hint at the uncon­trolled human sexu­ality, which becomes visu­ally rein­forced in pornog­raphy. Richter devel­oped his latest works by starting out with the line and paint.

In his new works the line is not only a purely formal means of reduc­tion, but also the starting point for picto­rial design. At the same time it symbol­ises Richter’s ideas of picto­rial systems and schemes which help humans to compre­hend and to repre­sent picto­ri­ally the phenomena of reality. The latter becomes espe­cially clear in the other group of works. Based on diagrams with which data, content or infor­ma­tion are visu­alised, Richter paints amoeba-like areas on a subse­quently designed mono­chrome back­ground. The works recall maps or repre­sen­ta­tions of terri­to­rial bound­aries.

All the paint­ings in the new series impress with their mate­ri­ality. Richter dispenses almost entirely with painting with a paint­brush. Unlike his older works he shades all the colours he uses with white. With the excep­tion of the back­ground of the picture he uses only oil pastels for these new works. This leads to a funda­men­tally trans­formed appear­ance. Richter also avoids a clear symbolism and leaves no room for anec­dotal inter­pre­ta­tions. And yet his pictures reflect his powerful atti­tude to art and the world.


 Images:




Schirn_Presse_DanielRichter_FrancisderFroehliche.jpg
Daniel Richter, Francis, der Fröhliche, 2015, Oil on canvas 200 x 170 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe, Courtesy the artist




Schirn_Presse_DanielRichter_GONZO.jpg
Daniel Richter, Gonzo, 2015, Oil on canvas, 200 x 270 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe, Courtesy the artist 




Schirn_Presse_DanielRichter_Hello_i_love_you.jpg
Daniel Richter, Hello, I love you, 2015, 200 x 300 cm, Oil on canvas, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe Courtesy the artist 




Schirn_Presse_DanielRichter_LobderKleinstaaterei.jpg
Daniel Richter, Lob der Kleinstaaterei, 2015, Oil on canvas, 200 x 300 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe, Courtesy the artist 




Schirn_Presse_DanielRichter_Werden_die_Roten_die_Schwar zen_schlagen.jpg
Daniel Richter, Werden die Roten die Schwarzen schlagen?, 2015, 200 x 300 cm, Oil on canvas, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe, Courtesy the artist 




Daniel Richter, The Katzengang, 2015, 210 x 160 cm, Oil on canvas, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015, Photo: Jens Ziehe, Courtesy the artist






Alphonse Mucha: In Quest of Beauty

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Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts 7 November 2015 –20 March 2016

The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the University of East Anglia, Norwich is offering a new exhibition Alphonse Mucha: In Quest of Beauty. The Sainsbury Centre is one of the UK’s principal places for the study and display of Art Nouveau.

Following on from the 2012 exhibition, The First Moderns: Art Nouveau from Nature to Abstraction and 2014 Sense and Sensuality: Art Nouveau 1890-1914this exhibition continues the Sainsbury Centre’s continued dedication to the study and presentation of the style that, more than any other, inaugurated the push towards Modern design. Czech-born Alphonse Mucha (1860 –1939) is one of the most celebrated artists of the fin-de-siècle, and a founding figure in the development of Art Nouveau. 



Alphonse Mucha
Sarah Bernhardt as La Princesse Lointaine: Poster for La Plume magazine
1897
Colour lithograph
© Mucha Trust 2015.


He rose to international fame incredibly quickly, mainly with his elegant designs for decorative panels, and stunning advertising posters, including those designed for actress Sarah Bernhardt, the greatest stage personality of her era and an influential figure in Mucha’s life. 




Perhaps his poster Gismonda, designed in 1895 for Bernhardt, was the key to his rapid rise. It caused a sensation in Paris, with its unusually tall format, restrained colours and elegantly flowing outlines. Within a year of its appearance, ‘Le style Mucha’ became synonymous with the phenomenon that was becoming Art Nouveau. 

Alphonse Mucha: In Quest of Beauty explores the work of the artist, through the theme of beauty, which was the core principle underlying his artistic philosophy, whilst also highlighting his contribution to the Art Nouveau style. The exhibition also recognises the fact that Mucha considered himself a painter, and shows the way his work changed as he came to embrace painting more exclusively, and how he sought to develop a Modern Czech style following his return to his native Czechoslovakia. 

The show includes over 65 works drawn primarily from the collection of the Mucha Trust, focusing on drawings, paintings, photographs and iconic posters. Alongside these extraordinary works are masterpieces by artists such as Larche, Lalique Fouquet and Gallé, from the Sainsbury Centre’s own renowned Anderson Collection of Art Nouveau. These latter works provide a context for Mucha, and explain the extraordinary flourishing of the decorative arts in the period.


Detail, see below



Alphonse Mucha, Rêverie. 1897. Colour lithograph. © Mucha Trust 2015





Alphonse Mucha, Zodiac

Nice review, more images

 

STORM WOMEN. WOMEN ARTISTS OF THE AVANT-GARDE IN BERLIN 1910-1932

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The Schirn Kunsthalle Frank­furt is devoting an exten­sive topical exhi­bi­tion to the women of the STURM begin­ning on October 30, 2015.

For the first time ever, eighteen women STURM artists representing Expressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, and the New Objectivity will be presented in a comprehensive exhibition featuring around 280 works of art. 

The presentation is a somewhat different survey of the most important currents in avant-garde art in Berlin in the early years of the twentieth century.

The STURM heralded the advent of modern art. Orig­i­nally the name of a maga­zine founded in 1910 devoted to promoting expres­sionist art, the term STURM (English: STORM) soon assumed the char­acter of a trade­mark. Herwarth Walden, the publisher of the journal, also founded the STURM gallery in Berlin in 1912. Numerous women artists, including many from other coun­tries, were presented in Germany for the first time at his gallery. As a move­ment, the STURM repre­sented a program—one that opposed concep­tual barriers, the estab­lish­ment in general, and the bour­geois char­acter of Wilhelminian society and advo­cated the total freedom of all arts and styles. Composed of friends with similar inter­ests, the STURM network served as a forum for inten­sive and animated discourse on the ideas, theo­ries, and concepts of the avant-garde. The addi­tional STURM evenings, the newly founded STURM academy, the STURM theater and book­shop as well as occa­sional balls and a cabaret offered the artists of the STURM a variety of plat­forms and made the diverse artistic currents and tenden­cies in Berlin during the years from 1910 to 1930 acces­sible to a broad public.

Among the best-known artists repre­sented in the show are Sonia Delaunay, Alexandra Exter, Natalja Goncharova, Else Lasker-Schüler, Gabriele Münter, and Mari­anne von Were­fkin. They are joined by a number of largely unknown or less familiar artists, among them Marthe Donas, Jacoba van Heemskerck, Hilla von Rebay, Lavinia Schulz, and Maria Uhden.
Each of the eigh­teen women artists of the STURM will be presented along with her most impor­tant works in a sepa­rate room at the exhi­bi­tion. They are artists from Germany, the Nether­lands, Belgium, France, Sweden, Ukraine, and Russia whose works were exhib­ited at the STURM gallery or published in DER STURM maga­zine.

The writer and composer Herwarth Walden (1878−1941) exhib­ited works by Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Oskar Kokoschka, and Marc Chagall, the artists of Der Blaue Reiter, and the Italian Futur­ists, but he also actively promoted well over thirty women painters and sculp­tors strate­gi­cally and without bias. He was regarded as a visionary and a pioneer on behalf of abstrac­tion and modern art in general, and he united the inter­na­tional avant-garde with his programs. For many women artists, the STURM repre­sented their first big chance, for in the early years of the twen­tieth century they were neither fully recog­nized by society nor did they have access to acad­emic training compa­rable to that of their male colleagues. The life stories, personal circum­stances, and crit­ical recep­tion of the eigh­teen women artists of the STURM are all very different, and their styles vary consid­er­ably as well. Yet viewed as a group, they repre­sent an impres­sive panorama of modern art.

For this exhi­bi­tion, the Schirn is presenting a selec­tion of outstanding paint­ings, works on paper, prints, wood­cuts, stage sets, costumes, masks, and histor­ical photographs acquired on loan from promi­nent museums as well as univer­sity and private collec­tions, including, among others, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Yale Univer­sity Art Gallery in New Haven, the Theater Museum in St. Peters­burg, the Tate and Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the National Museum in Belgrade, the Museo Thyssen-Borne­misza in Madrid, the Moderna Museet in Stock­holm, the Städtische Galerie im Lenbach­haus in Munich, and the Von-der-Heydt-Museum in Wuppertal.

IMAGES

 


Natalja Sergejewna Gontscharowa, Gardening, 1908, Oil on canvas, 102.9 x 123.2 cm, Photo © Tate, London 2015, VG Bild- Kunst, Bonn 2015





Sonia Delaunay, Portuguese Market, 1915, Oil and wax-paint on canvas, 90.5 x 90.5 cm, Digital image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Firenze
 



Magda Langenstraß-Uhlig, Movement, c. 1925, Gouache over graphite on paper, 25.1 x 34.8 cm, Karl Peter Röhl Stiftung, Weimar KPRS-2007/4928 © Photo Stefan Renno, Weimar, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015 



 
Marthe Donas, Still Life with Bottle and Cup, 1917, Collage of lace, sandpaper, cloth, netting, and paint on composition board, 53 x 38.6 cm, Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Collection Société Anonyme, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015 



Marcelle Cahn, Woman and Sail, c. 1926/27, Oil on canvas, 66 x 50 cm, Musée d'Art Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg (MAMCS) © Photo Musées de Strasbourg, A. Plisson 



Sigrid Hjertén, Woman with Fur and Red Hat, 1915, Oil on canvas, 116 x 90 cm, Private collection, Photo: Reproduction © per@myrehed.com 



Gabriele Münter, Apples on Blue, 1908/09, Oil on cardboard, 52,5 x 39 cm, Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz - MUSEUM GUNZENHAUSER, Property of Stiftung Gunzenhauser, Chemnitz, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015


Gabriele Münter, Portrait of Marianne von Werefkin, c. 1909, Oil on cardboard, 81 x 55 cm, Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau, München, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015





Marianne von Werefkin, City in Lithuania, 1913/14, Tempera on paper over cardboard, 56,5 x 71,5 cm, Fondazione Marianne Werefkin Museo Comunale d'Arte Moderna, Ascona



Alexandra Exter, Costume design inhabitant of Mars in Aelita, 1924, Watercolor and gouache on paper, 53 x 36 cm, Collection Nina and Nikita Lobanov-Rostovsky, Donation to the Charitable Fund “Konstantinovsky”, 2013 © St Petersburg State Museum of Theater



Jacoba van Heemskerck, Houses in Suiderland, Drawing No. 13, 1914, Ink, 48 x 63 cm, Kunstmuseum Bern, Donation Nell Walden


Emmy Klinker, Portrait of a Young Woman, 1920/21, Oil on cardboard, 44 x 35.5 cm / 56 x 47.5 x 4.5 cm, Von der Heydt- Museum Wuppertal © Photo Medienzentrum, Antje Zeis-Loi




Else Lasker Schüler, The Snake-Worshipper on the Market Square of Thebes, 1912, Ink, colored pencils, collaged silver paper, 28,3 x 22,5 cm, Franz Marc Stiftung, Donation Stiftung Etta und Otto Stangl © Franz Marc Museum, Kochel a. See




Marcelle Cahn, Abstract Composition, 1925, Oil on canvas, 72.4 x 49.7 cm, Musée de Grenoble © Photo Musée de Grenoble



Sonia Delaunay, Dessin B53, 1924, Gouache and pencil on paper, 100 x 75 (122 x 87 cm), Private Collection, Photo © Private Archives 



Marthe Donas, Cubist Head, 1917, Pencil on paper, 27.5 x 22 / 60 x 65 cm, Private collection © Photo Cedric Verhelst, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Marcelle Cahn, Woman and Sail, c. 1926/27, Oil on canvas, 66 x 50 cm, Musée d'Art Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg (MAMCS) © Photo Musées de Strasbourg, A. Plisson
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Marcelle Cahn, Abstract Composition, 1925, Oil on canvas, 72.4 x 49.7 cm, Musée de Grenoble © Photo Musée de Grenoble
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Sonia Delaunay, Portuguese Market, 1915, Oil and wax-paint on canvas, 90.5 x 90.5 cm, Digital image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Firenze
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Sonia Delaunay, Dessin B53, 1924, Gouache and pencil on paper, 100 x 75 (122 x 87 cm), Private Collection, Photo © Private Archives
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Marthe Donas, Still Life with Bottle and Cup, 1917, Collage of lace, sandpaper, cloth, netting, and paint on composition board, 53 x 38.6 cm, Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Collection Société Anonyme, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Marthe Donas, Cubist Head, 1917, Pencil on paper, 27.5 x 22 / 60 x 65 cm, Private collection © Photo Cedric Verhelst, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Alexandra Exter, Costume design inhabitant of Mars in Aelita, 1924, Watercolor and gouache on paper, 53 x 36 cm, Collection Nina and Nikita Lobanov-Rostovsky, Donation to the Charitable Fund “Konstantinovsky”, 2013 © St Petersburg State Museum of Theater
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Natalja Sergejewna Gontscharowa, Gardening, 1908, Oil on canvas, 102.9 x 123.2 cm, Photo © Tate, London 2015, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Jacoba van Heemskerck, Houses in Suiderland, Drawing No. 13, 1914, Ink, 48 x 63 cm, Kunstmuseum Bern, Donation Nell Walden
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Sigrid Hjertén, Woman with Fur and Red Hat, 1915, Oil on canvas, 116 x 90 cm, Private collection, Photo: Reproduction © per@myrehed.com
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Emmy Klinker, Portrait of a Young Woman, 1920/21, Oil on cardboard, 44 x 35.5 cm / 56 x 47.5 x 4.5 cm, Von der Heydt-Museum Wuppertal © Photo Medienzentrum, Antje Zeis-Loi
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Magda Langenstraß-Uhlig, Movement, c. 1925, Gouache over graphite on paper, 25.1 x 34.8 cm, Karl Peter Röhl Stiftung, Weimar KPRS-2007/4928 © Photo Stefan Renno, Weimar, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Else Lasker Schüler, The Snake-Worshipper on the Market Square of Thebes, 1912, Ink, colored pencils, collaged silver paper, 28,3 x 22,5 cm, Franz Marc Stiftung, Donation Stiftung Etta und Otto Stangl © Franz Marc Museum, Kochel a. See
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Gabriele Münter, Apples on Blue, 1908/09, Oil on cardboard, 52,5 x 39 cm, Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz - MUSEUM GUNZENHAUSER, Property of Stiftung Gunzenhauser, Chemnitz, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Gabriele Münter, Portrait of Marianne von Werefkin, c. 1909, Oil on cardboard, 81 x 55 cm, Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau, München, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
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Marianne von Werefkin, City in Lithuania, 1913/14, Tempera on paper over cardboard, 56,5 x 71,5 cm, Fondazione Marianne Werefkin Museo Comunale d'Arte Moderna, Ascona

Egon Schiele: Offensive or Avant-Garde? Ketterer Kunst Auction Munich, Germany from 3 - 5 December, 2015

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 Immoral and depraved or just explicit and simply different? What earned the artist disrepute in the early 20th century makes him one of the greatest protagonists of Viennese Expressionism. Now his masterpiece 





Egon Schiele, Mädchen mit Federboa Watercolor, opaque paint and chalk, around 1910. 43,5 x 30,5 cm / 17.1 x 12 in. Estimate: € 600.000-800.000 / US$ 660,000-880,000.
"Mädchen mit Federboa" will be called up in the auction of Modern Art / Post War / Contemporary Art at Ketterer Kunst in Munich, Germany from 3 - 5 December, 2015.

The frontality and permissiveness of the nude from 1910, coupled with an unsparing aggressive coloring, neither matched contemporary taste and aesthetic principles nor prevailing morals. Accordingly, it was no surprise that this work was seen as a provocation. However, the year 1910 saw great progress in the development of Schiele's stylistic means, which found expression in an intensified coloring and the figures' positioning in front of an undefined blank background. Early that year Schiele contoured his models with strong lines of charcoal, while he made increasing use of the pencil later on; he also put less emphasis on a detailed illustration of the carnation than he used to, instead he preferred a more intensive treatment of face and hair. Additionally, the choice of young and impatient models forced the artist to a more spontaneous and liberal performance. Half way into the year, Schiele began to experiment with gouache colors, which, as it is the case in our work, he used to accentuate draperies and cloths. Accordingly, this nude, estimated at € 600,000-800,000, is a prime example of the artistic progress Egon Schiele made in this time.

Other highlights in the section of Modern Art come from Erich Heckel ("Hügellandschaft", estimate: € 450,000-550,000), Paula Modersohn-Becker ("Kinder vor Bauernhaus/Birkenstämme und Haus", estimate: € 300,000-400,000), Lyonel Feininger ("The Baltic (V-Cloud)", estimate: € 250,000-350,000), Ernst Barlach ("Der Bettler", estimate: € 200,000-250,000), Emil Nolde ("Das Meer (Bewegte blaue See mit mächtigen Wogen)", estimate: € 150,000-250,000), Karl Schmidt-Rottluff ("Stillleben mit Astern-Strauss", estimate: € 150.000-200.000) and Georg Schrimpf ("Stillende Mutter", estimate: € 140,000-180,000), as well as from Otto Dix, Conrad Felixmüller, Karl Hofer, Alexej von Jawlensky, Max Liebermann, Franz Marc, Otto Mueller and Pablo Picasso.


It surely is going to be a small sensation when more than twenty works by Gabriele Münter will be called up in one single auction. But it is not only the quantity of works on offer in the auction of Modern Art / Post War / Contemporary Art from 3-5 December 2015 that impresses, moreover, the works' quality is even more convincing.

Half a dozen works alone date from Gabriele Münter's most important period of creation, the years between 1908 and 1911. Next to



"Stillleben im Kreis" (estimate: € 150.000-250.000) they are led by the oil painting


"Gehöft in Murnau (Holzhauer)". They were both made during a period that gave direction to the artist's individual style which would dominate her entire later creation henceforward. Gabriele Münter wrote about these years of change: "After a short but agonizing period I made a great leap forward - from imitating nature (…) to the abstraction thereof, to rendering an extract".*

The artist's swift development from Post-Impressionism to Expressionism also becomes obvious in the two small oil paintings "Häuser in Murnau" and "Kirchgarten in Murnau (Friedhof mit frischem Grab)" from 1908, both have been estimated at € 80,000-120,000 each. Additionally, her later works, such as the



"Straßendurchstich (Die Kurve bei Berggeist)" from 1935 also knows to fascinate the observer. The spirited oil painting will enter the race with an estimate of € 180,000-240,000.

The section of Post War Art offers several masterpieces with estimates in six digit realms by ZERO artists such as Günther Uecker, Otto Piene and Heinz Mack, as well as by Gerhard Richter ("Abstraktes Bild", estimate: € 400,000-600,000), Robert Longo ("Untitled (Starfield #2), estimate: € 250,000-350,000), Anselm Kiefer ("Maria im Rosenhag", estimate: € 250,000-350,000), Sean Scully ("Uist", estimate: € 200,000-300,000), Shozo Shimamoto (estimate: € 150,000-250,000), Gotthard Graubner ("Camelionid", estiamte: € 150,000-250,000) and Josef Albers ("Study for Homage to the Square", estimate: € 120,000-150,000). Further exciting works come from artists such as Agostino Bonalumi, Günther Förg, Rupprecht Geiger, Roy Lichtenstein, Marino Marini and Sigmar Polke.

GEORGIA O’KEEFFE and her photographer friends Musée de Grenoble 7 nov.2015 - 7 feb.2016

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As the first solo show in France to be devoted to the American painter Georgia O’Keeffe, the exhibition scheduled this autumn at the Musée de Grenoble is an outstanding event. Put on with the participation of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe (New Mexico, USA), and the backing of the French American Museum Exchange [FRAME], it goes back over the career of an icon of American art, who is as famous in the United States as Jackson Pollock. From her earliest works in New York to when she settled in New Mexico in 1949, Georgia O’Keeffe was greatly influenced by modern photography. To encompass this factor, the exhibition will create a dialogue between her paintings and her photographer friends, forming a total selection of 90 works coming from fifteen prestigious international museums, as well as from major German, Spanish and French institutions.

Georgia O’Keeffe has a special place in the American art context. Her eminently recognizable paintings have a distinctive immediacy, due to the sensuality of their colours and the clarity of the motifs which lodge emphatically in the memory. The power of these images, which question the visible, has to do with the confusion created by enigmatic forms, often wavering between abstraction and figuration. In the 1920s, the artist came to notice through paintings of flowers and buildings, imbued with photographic realism. She then assimilated the precisionist aesthetics of the painters in the Stieglitz circle—Arthur Dove, John Marin, Charles Demuth and Marsden Hartley—and duly produced a unique formal repertory, deeply marked by her life in the New Mexico desert. In the 1960s, in spiritual communion with her southwest environment, O’Keeffe painted abstract compositions, whose formal purity and tonal sensuality echoed the works of Mark Rothko, Ellsworth Kelly and Agnes Martin. 

Born in 1887, in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, at a very early age O’Keeffe developed a personal body of work inspired by the endless plains of Texas and marked by the arabesques of Art Nouveau. After her meeting with the photographer Alfred Stieglitz, champion of the avant-gardes, she settled in New York in 1918 and devoted her time entirely to her work. As the photographer’s muse and then wife, in 1924 O’Keeffe discovered the European avant-garde at the 291 Gallery, and spent time with the Stieglitz circle.

As the outcome of her powerful individualistic personality, her unique oeuvre found its sources in nature. Somewhere between abstraction and figuration, her work developed in series, based on a resolutely modernist stance. Her compositions came about above all from her observation of the world. First it was the skies of Texas, the mountains of Lake George, the buildings of New York, and flowers. In 1929, the artist chose to spend her summers in Santa Fe, before moving permanently to New Mexico in 1949. From then on she lived in close communion with nature, relishing the solitude of those wide open spaces, and going on drives through the desert. That experience drew out new subjects: vernacular architecture. canyons, bones, skies and rivers. 

Throughout her career, O’Keeffe paid close attention to the developments of modern photography. The photographic vision that she adopted partly explains the strength of her images. So staking out the exhibition circuit, over and above the famous photos taken by Stieglitz, who was the first to grasp the artist’s beauty, seven photographers who influenced her painted oeuvre, and whom she in turn influenced—Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand, Edward Weston, Imogen Cunningham, Ansel Adams, Eliot Porter and Todd Webb—will be on view. With them Georgia O’Keeffe shared not only a common store of motifs but also certain favourite places—New York, New Mexico—which forged their respective ways of looking at the world.



1. Georgia O’Keeffe
Stries rouge, jaune et noir
[Red, yellow and black streak], 1924
Huile sur toile, 100 x 80,6 cm
Musée National d’Art Moderne MNAM / Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
Photo © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, Dist. RMN- Grand Palais / Philippe Migeat
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




2. Georgia O’Keeffe
Pétunias, 1925
Huile sur panneau, 45,7 x 76,2 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




3. Georgia O’Keeffe
Nuit sur la ville [City Night ], 1926
Huile sur toile, 121,9 x 76,2 cm
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




4. Georgia O’Keeffe
Gris, Bleu & Noir – Cercle Rose
[Grey Blue & Black – Pink Circle], 1929
Huile sur toile, 91,4 x 121,9 cm
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




5. Georgia O’Keeffe
Iris Blanc [White Iris], 1930
Huile sur toile, 101,6 x 76,2 cm
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond
© Virginia Museum of Fine Arts»
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




6. Georgia O’Keeffe
Sans Titre (Falaises rouges et jaunes)
[Untitled (red and yellow cliffs)], 1940
Huile sur toile, 61 x 91,4 cm
Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015 



7. Georgia O’Keeffe
C’était jaune et rose, II
[It was yellow and pink, II], 1959
Huile sur toile, 91,4 x 76, 2 cm
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015



8. Alfred Stieglitz
La ville de l’ambition [The City of ambition] Entre 1910 et 1915
Epreuve photomécanique 33,7 x 25,9 cm Musée d’Orsay, Paris
Photo © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d’Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




9. Alfred Stieglitz
Georgia O’Keeffe, 1919/20
Épreuve au Platinum, 25,3 x 20,3 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015




10. Alfred Stieglitz
Georgia O’Keeffe, 1922
Tirage gélatino-argentique, 18,9 x 24,2 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago
© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / ADAGP, Paris 2015 

MONET AND THE IMPRESSIONIST REVOLUTION, 1860–1910

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 On November 15, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery opened a new exhibition comprising prominent works by Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) and other leading artists associated with the Impressionist movement. Monet and the Impressionist Revolution, 1860–1910, conceived by Peggy Pierce Elfvin Director Janne Sirén and organized by Sirén and Godin-Spaulding Curator & Curator for the Collection Holly E. Hughes, will feature forty late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century works from the Albright-Knox’s renowned Collection, as well as a carefully selected group of paintings by Monet on loan from museums around the United States. The exhibition will illustrate the artist’s seminal contributions to the modernist revolution.

Monet and the Impressionist Revolution will reveal the arc of five decades of artistic innovation, from the late nineteenth-century en plein-air painters, early Impressionists, and so-called post-Impressionists and Fauves, to the abstractions of Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973) and Wassily Kandinsky (Russian, 1866–1944) at the turn of the century.



Claude Monet c, 1875, “Chemin de Halage a Argenteuil (Tow-path at Argenteuil)

Monet believed that the constantly changing conditions he strove to capture by painting outdoors imbued his subjects with true value. In this pursuit, he broke away from linear perspective and other techniques and forms associated with traditional, academic painting. Instead, he experimented with the introduction of bold colors, looser handling of paint, and an emphasis on color and light.



Les Glaçons (The Ice Floes), 1880. Oil on canvas, 46 3/16 x 66 1/4 x 3 1/2 inches (117.32 x 168.28 x 8.89 cm). Collection of Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, 

The trajectory of Monet’s work in this exhibition will be illuminated by a selection of key works from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s Collection dating from the 1860s, the heyday of Realism in Western art, through the years leading to World War I and the birth of abstract painting.



On the occasion of this exhibition, the museum will publish The Impressionist Revolution and the Advent of Abstract Art. Authored by Dr. Sirén and available in Shop AK and on the AK’s website in February 2016, this book will explore the transformative moments and formal innovations in avant-garde Western art in the second half of the nineteenth century that tilled the ground for the advent of abstract painting around 1910. It will be the first catalogue dedicated to this particular segment of the museum’s holdings, highlighting fifty Impressionist, post-Impressionist, and early abstract paintings and sculptures from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s world-renowned Collection.




Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926). Water Lilies, 1908. Oil on canvas, 31 1/2 inches (80 cm) in diameter. Collection Dallas Museum of Art, Gift of the Meadows Foundation, Incorporated. Image courtesy Dallas Museum of Art.

THE COLLECTIONS OF THE PRINCE OF LIECHTENSTEIN

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Autumn of 2015, the Caumont Centre d’Art in Aix-en-Provence

Art lovers and patrons since the 16th century, the Princes of Liechtenstein have amassed one of the largest private art collections in Europe. Primarily dedicated to Western art, from the Renaissance to the late 18th century, the Princely Collections include paintings (approximately 1,700), sculptures, drawings, engravings, furniture, books and precious objects. The collection was started in the 17thcentury, inspired by the ideals of princely patronage of the arts, characteristic of the Baroque period, ideals which the family continue to promote today. If the majority of the Princely Collections is to be found in Vaduz, a selection is nevertheless accessible to the public in some of the other family residences, notably in Vienna: the Liechtenstein City Palace (with its neoclassical and Biedermeier style) and the Liechtenstein Garden Palace (with its Renaissance and Baroque influences).

THE PRINCIPALITY OF LIECHTENSTEIN

Bordered by the Rhine and the Alps, the State of Liechtenstein is situated between the Austrian province of Vorarlberg and the Swiss cantons of St. Gallen and Graubünden. This small principality of 160 km2is the last surviving remnant of the Holy Roman Empire, founded in 962. A constitutional monarchy, with German as its official language, today it is closely linked to Switzerland. Switzerland represents Liechtenstein’s diplomatic interests abroad. The two countries share the same postal system and form a customs and monetary union. The Principality comprises the former feudal territories of Schellenberg (current-day Oberland) and Vaduz (current-day Unterland), acquired by Prince Johann Adam Andreas I von Liechtenstein, respectively in 1699 and 1712. on 23 January 1719, these lands were united and elevated to the rank of Principality by Emperor Charles VI. In 1806, Liechtenstein became a sovereign state of the Confederation of the Rhine (1806-1814) with Napoleon’s aid. Between 1815 and 1866, it was part of the German Confederation and was later attached to Austria, from which it separated after the revolution of 1921. It was from that time onward that Liechtenstein forged close ties with Switzerland. Neutral during the Second World War, Liechtenstein benefitted from an industrial and economic boom in the 1950s.The current sovereign, Hans-Adam II (b. 1945) has significantly increased the importance of Liechtenstein on the world stage.

THE GRAND GALLERY OF THE 16TH CENTURY
With the exception of the Italian artworks, the quasi totality of the 16th-century paintings displayed in this room are representative of the most significant and recent acquisitions by Prince Hans-Adam II. These include Renaissance paintings from Germany 




Quentin Massys (1466-1530)The Tax Collectors Late 1520s oil on panel - 86,4 x 71,2 cm Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–ViennaEntered the collections in 2008, acquired by Prince Hans-Adam II

(The Tax Collectors by Massys, acquired in 2008, and  





Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553)
Venus
1531
oil on panel, 38.7 x 24.5 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienn


Venus by Cranach, acquired in 2013), 




Flanders (Virgin and Child by Gossaert acquired in 2015), 




Holland (Saint Sebastian by Cornelisz. von Haarlem 




and Portrait of Alessandro Farnese by Mor, acquired in 2010 and 2015 respectively),




and Spain (Portrait of Don Diego by Sánchez Coello, acquired in 2007).

The human figure is omnipresent in all thirteen paintings, attesting to the return to favour of the human figure in Renaissance art. In painting, this triumphant advent of the individual may be seen in both the prevalence of the portrait and of nudes, as well as the large-scale representation of sacred, historical or mythological figures. 

Focused on the physiognomic and psychological representation of an individual, the art of portraiture, in the Flemish and Italian traditions, comes in the form of intimate likenesses, three-quarter view





(Raphael’s and 








Franciabigio’s Portrait of a Man  



Bernardino Zaganelli da Cotignola (c.1470-c.1510)
Portrait of a Lady
circa 1500
oil on panel - 32,7 x 25 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
This piece entered the collections in 1882, sold in 1950, and acquired a second time in 2003 

and Portrait of a Lady by Bernardino da Cotignola), and ceremonial portraits, where the subjects are depicted standing (for example, the portrait of Alessandro Farnese by Antonis Mor) (above). Another aspect of Renaissance art is the prevalence of sacred figures, imbued with human attributes, and oftentimes depicted within an intimate or private setting, such as  Jan Gossaert’s Virgin and Child (above.)

Also common were representations of the saints by Cranach the Elder and Cornelis Cornelisz. van Haarlem for example, or 



Cristofano Allori
Judith with the Head of Holofernes,
1613 - oil on canvas - 141 x 117 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna © LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


figures from the Old Testament (Cristofano Allori). These figures tended to dominate the entire composition. 

 From 1509 onward, Lucas Cranach the Elder painted a large amount of naked Venuses, standing, sitting or lying down. If some convey an explicit moral message, by means of the presence of the goddess of love or a moralizing inscription in Latin, others, like this one, do not. According to a formula of which he was particularly fond, the German artist paints the young woman against a black background, with her feet on stony ground. He displays his mastery of the female canon through this slender body, endowed with small high breasts and a doll-like face. The long wavy blond hair, almond-shaped eyes and necklace—a gold band decorated with stones and pearls—are also typical of the painter. Another trademark, the transparent veil that covers her sexual organs, revealing more than it covers. Moreover, the female subject fixes the viewer with an insolent look. This nude is decidedly ambiguous: is this a heroic nude of a chaste Venus or an erotic nude of the priestess of love?


RUBENS


Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)
Mars and Rhea Silvia
circa 1616/1617 - oil on canvas - 207,5 x 271,5 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

This artwork depicts Mars and Rhea Silvia, the parents of Romulus and Remus, whose myth evokes the founding of Rome. The enterprising god of war benefits from the aid of the matchmaking Love in order to approach the frightened priestess, seated before the altar of the goddess Vesta. Between 1610 and 1620, Rubens was at the head of a flourishing workshop in Antwerp. The master executed preparatory studies and detailed sketches which his students then painted under his direction, with the exception of the faces, hands and other delicate sections. Particularly representative of the painter’s pictorial verve, the ample drapes or folds of the fabric, and the skin colour accented with tones of pink, yellow or purple may be clearly seen in this work.


The Princely Collections boast thirty-five signed works by Rubens—one of the largest ensembles of Rubens in the world. The oldest date from the early 17thcentury, while the most recent, the monumental  





Assumption of the Virgin Mary was painted by the Flemish master in 1637, three years before his death. The latter was acquired by Karl Eusebius I von Liechtenstein, who met the artist at the court of the Archduchess Isabella in Brussels in 1628. 


However it was Karl Eusebius’s son, Johann Adam Andreas I who amassed the majority of the Rubens collection, with the aid of the Forchondt brothers, merchants from Antwerp and Berlin.Thanks to the latter, in 1693 he acquired the eight monumental canvases of the Decius Mus cycle (the name is in reference to the history of the Roman consul, Decius Mus), which at that time, had been attributed to Van Dyck, as well as  



Venus in Front of a Mirror (circa 1614). 

Furthermore, thanks to the assistance of Jan Peeter Bredael, another important Antwerp merchant, Johann Adam Andreas I acquired the monumental Mars and Rhea Silvia in 1710. He also succeeded in acquiring another jewel for the collection:  




Portrait of Clara Serena Rubens, at the age of five, as well as the 





double portrait of Albert and Nikolaus, the painter’s sons (circa 1626). 


Several of the Rubens acquired by Johann Adam Andreas I would later leave the Liechtenstein Collection. However, these shortcomings were filled, in part, thanks to the acquisitions of Franz Josef II—the Modello of Mars and Rhea Silvia—and by Hans-Adam II—



The Conversion of Saint Paul, 



Christ Triumphant over Sin and Death, 

sketches for The hunt of Meleager and Atalanta and Diana’s Hunt.

AN ECLECTIC TASTE

The paintings in this room, each with a strong narrative dimension, depicting objects, animals or figures, may be characterized by their eclecticism. In this, they can be said to illustrate the stylistic and iconographic evolution of European painting between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries, resulting in the advent of different pictorial genres. 

Alongside ‘high genre painting’ devoted to sacred and profane history, which continued to be the subject of numerous commissions, new subject matter presented itself, including landscapes, genre scenes and still lifes.Particularly present in the Princely Collections, religious painting can be seen in all its stylistic and iconographic diversity. 

When Hans-Adam II acquired in 2008 



The Finding of Mosesby Francesco Solimena (circa 1690), his intention was to continue the tradition linking the Princely family to the Neapolitan painter who had painted a portrait of Josef Wenzel I when he visited the Imperial Court of Naples, in 1725. The Princes of Liechtenstein have always had a particular penchant for Classical antiquity and mythology. Indeed, it was during a trip to Rome in 1748 that Josef Wenzel I commissioned 



Batoni’s Venus Presenting Aeneas with Armour forged by Vulcan and Hercules at the Crossroads for his Viennese palace on the Herrengasse.



THE GOLDEN AGE OF DUTCH AND FLEMISH PAINTING


Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (1606-1669)
Cupid with the Soap Bubble
1634 - oil on canvas - 74,7 x 92,5 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Pompeo Girolamo Batoni (1708-1787)
Hercules at the Crossroads
1748 - oil on panel - 99 x 74 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienn

Among the jewels of the Princely Collections can be seen a remarkable series of Flemish and Dutch paintings dating from the 17thcentury. Some are representative of the Flemish Baroque style—beginning with two of the most prestigious collaborators of Rubens, Frans Snyders and Anthonis van Dyck, while others evoke the austere context experienced by many of the great Dutch Masters working in the Northern Netherlands, including Rembrandt and Frans Hals. Talented portraitists, capable of adding a psychological dimension to a face, the two latter artists revolutionized the genre of portraiture, whether individual or collective, which at that time was increasingly popular. In the second half of the century, in Amsterdam, Rembrandt also provided history painting with a new lease of life, both religious and secular (historical and mythological). From the outset, Dutch and Flemish painting of the Golden Age was one of the preferred domains of the Liechtenstein family, advised in this matter by veritable experts, such as Berlin art historian, Wilhelm von Bode, during the reign of Johann II.



Frans Hals (1582-1666)
Portrait of a Man
circa 1650/1652 - oil on convas - 108 x 80 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

This portrait of a non-identified male subject is emblematic of the production of the famous Haarlem portraitist, Frans Hals. The work is typical of the artist’s oeuvre on the one hand, for its rapid execution, and the large, visible brush strokes making use of a sober palette of blacks, browns, greys and whites, and on the other hand, through the expressiveness of the face. The model’s raised eyebrows and hint of a smile seem to address the viewer with a rather mischievous look.Hals’ narrative device is both simple and effective: he focuses on the face and the hands, rendering these in great detail, whereas the rest appears very rough, almost sketched. The magic therefore, comes from this very paradox: the figure seems to come alive on the canvas despite its unfinished aspect. The ability to inject life into his models is synonymous here with the instantaneousness expression of his character portraits.Hals is one of the most skilled portraitists in terms of capturing and expressing the psychological traits of his models.



Anthonis van Dyck (1599-1641)Portrait of Maria de Tassis (1611-1638)circa 1629/1630 - oil on convas - 129 x 92,8 cmLiechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna © LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

Painted at the age of nineteen, Maria de Tassis came from the Antwerp branch of the family. The subject’s family originally came from Bergamo and were credited with introducing the first European postal system at the end of the 15th century.Van Dyck also produced two likenesses of Maria’s father, Antonio, which are also part of the Princely Collections.This portrait perfectly illustrates the painter’s skill and his innate sense of elegance. The rendering of the silk and the lace of the French-style dress, but also the pearls, precious stones and ostrich feather is typical of Van Dyck’s style between 1627 and 1632.Parallels may be drawn between this portrait of Maria de Tassis and the portrait by Van Dyck of a non-identified female model housed at the National Gallery of Washington. The rendering of the women’s clothing seems to suggest a type of signature or hallmark from this particular period of the artist’s production. 



Giovanni Paolo Pannini (1691-176 5)Interior of the Pantheon, Rome 1735 - oil on canvas - 127,3 x 99,4 cm Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna © LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna



Josef Höger (1801-1877), View of Palais Rasumofsky from the Garden Pavilion circa 1837, watercolour over pencil, 22.5 x 32.3 cmThe Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna © LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


THE PRINCELY RESIDENCES

The Princes of Liechtenstein are the owners of numerous properties, each built in a different architectural style. Some of these have been beautifully depicted in some remarkable gouaches and watercolours, which provide the viewer with an insight into the princes’ elegant taste in decor. At the request of Johann I Ferdinand Runk, a gouache series of thirty views of the Liechtenstein family properties was painted between 1813 and 1824, including views of the unfinished Baroque chateau in Plumlov, the facade of the Garden Palace in Rossau, and the colonnades of Feldsberg and Adamsthal. Furthermore, in the 1830s, Josef Höger executed exterior views of Liechtenstein Fortress near Mödling, the ‘Frontier Chateau’ and of the Palais Rasumofsky in Vienna. During the reign of Alois II, Rudolf von Alt executed several watercolours of the Liechtenstein properties in Moravia and Vienna. He reproduced the intimate atmosphere of various Viennese princely mansions, at Eisgrub and Maria Enzersdorf, with their furniture and works of art in situ. The views of the living rooms, bedrooms, libraries and offices are as much an illustration of the interior design, as they are a testimony to the taste and art de vivre of the various members of the Princely family.

LANDSCAPES AND STILL LIFES

Paintings of landscapes and still lifes emerged in the 16thcentury in northern Europe, but became widespread in the following century. Despite being classified as ‘minor genres’, they proved to be extremely popular with art lovers. The Liechtenstein family were no exception and collected both the Great Masters, such as Jan Davidszoon de Heem whose still lifes were already being sold at astronomical prices during his lifetime, as well as rarer names such as the Dutch painter of flowers, Jan van Huysum. 








Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714-1789)
Bathers
1759
oil on convas, 66,5 x 82,5 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
This piece entered the collections in 2007, acquired by Prince Hans-Adam I

The princes’ abiding interest in antiquity was centred on the theme of Arcadia as evidenced in the neoclassical-style landscapes painted by Giovanni Paolo Panini, Claude Joseph Vernet and Hubert Robert. First appearing in the 17th century, the taste for urban landscapes known as ‘vedute’ continued to gain in popularity during the 18thcentury. The imaginary landscapes of Hubert Robert combined nature and the lyricism of ruins, a subject matter specific to the Enlightenment, in works such as 




Hubert Robert (1733-1808)
Capriccio with the Pantheon and the Porto di Ripetta
1761
oil on canvas - 101,9 x 145,9 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
Capriccio with the Pantheon and the Porto di Ripetta (1761), a prototype of the reception piece that would allow him to enter the Académie Royale in 1766. Jan Davidszoon de Heem ranks high amongst the Dutch and Flemish painters specializing in still lifes, a genre imbued with a poetic, even metaphysical dimension.


KAROLINE, FRANZ-JOSEF, MARIE FRANZISKA



Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun (1755-1842)
Portrait of Princess Karoline von Liechtenstein, née Countess von
Manderscheidt-Blankenheim (1768-1831), as Iris
1793 - oil on canvas - 222 x 159 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

The famous French portraitist Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun painted this portrait of the wife of Prince Alois I during a sojourn in Vienna. Forced into exile between 1792 and 1795, the former official painter of Marie-Antoinette toured Europe and painted portraits of aristocrats and high society.In 1793, she executed for the Liechtenstein Palace on the Herrengasse, pendants of Princess Karoline as Iris, 




and of her sister-in-law, Maria Josepha Hermenegilde von Esterhazy, as Ariadne on Naxos. 

Amongst the traditional attributes of Iris, the female messenger of the gods—usually represented with wings, the caduceus and winged shoes—the artist retains only the veil. The latter symbolizes the connection between heaven and earth, and is traditionally painted in the colours of the rainbow, although this is not the case here. In mythology, Iris is the personification of the rainbow and according to Homer, the rainbow represents the trail of Iris’s ‘storm-swift feet’ across the sky. This is why Vigée-Lebrun depicts the princess as flying in this portrait.  



Friedrich von Amerling (1803-1887)
Portrait of Princess Marie Franziska von Liechtenstein (1834–1909) at the
age of two,
1836 - oil on board - 56,7 x 50,5 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


In 1836, Friedrich von Amerling painted the tender portrait of Princess Marie Franziska at age two, which is one in a series of portraits of the children of Alois II. Close to the prince, of whom he painted an official portrait in 1845, at that time Amerling was the preferred portraitist of the Liechtenstein family. Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, famous for his landscape paintings, depicted the future Emperor, Franz Josef I of Austria at the age of two, dressed in a soldier’s outfit, a kind of state portrait in miniature. The Biedermeier style developed in Germany and Austria between 1815 and the revolution of 1848. The Biedermeier style is evocative of a comfortable homely lifestyle, and is characterized by its fine craftsmanship showcasing the materials and regional expertise. In painting, the style is distinguished by its sensitive approach to nature, meticulous execution and a predilection for the smaller format. The Liechtenstein family played an important role in the spread of the Biedermeier style. Their wealth, coupled with the desire to decorate some of their homes in a more contemporary, less ornate style, for example the Liechtenstein City Palace in Vienna, contributed to the style’s growing renown. The Liechtenstein family is the owner of the most complete Biedermeier collection in the world despite the sale of numerous pieces to the Wien Museum and the Belvedere Museum.





Friedrich von Amerling
Lost in Her Dreams,
circa 1835 - oil on canvas - 55,3 x 45,1 cm
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna © LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna




Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
Portrait of the Future Emperor Franz Josef I of Austria (1830-1916) as a Grenadier with Toy Soldiers
1832 - oil on panel - 34,8 x 29 cm - Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Frank Stella: A Retrospective

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The most comprehensive U.S. career retrospective to date of the work of Frank Stella, co-organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, debuted at the Whitney on October 30, 2015. 

The exhibition will be on view at the Whitney from October 30, 2015 through February 7, 2016, and at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth from April 17 through September 4, 2016; it will subsequently travel to the de Young Museum, San Francisco, from November 5, 2016, to February 27, 2017. 


Frank Stella: A Retrospective brings together the artist’s best-known works installed alongside lesser known examples to reveal the extraordinary scope and diversity of his nearly sixty-year career. Approximately 100 works, including icons of major museum and private collections, will be shown. Along with paintings, reliefs, sculptures, and prints, a selection of drawings and maquettes have been included to shed light on Stella’s conceptual and material process. 

With the close collaboration of the artist, Frank Stella: A Retrospective is organized by Michael Auping, Chief Curator, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, in association with Adam D. Weinberg, Alice Pratt Brown Director, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, with the involvement of Carrie Springer, Assistant Curator, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. 

This will be the inaugural special exhibition and the first career retrospective devoted to a living artist in the Whitney’s new downtown home on Gansevoort Street. It will fill the entire 18,000-square-foot fifth floor—the Museum’s largest gallery for temporary exhibitions. Selldorf Architects is doing the exhibition design for the Whitney installation.This is the first comprehensive Stella exhibition to be assembled in the United States since the 1987 retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. 

“A Stella retrospective presents many challenges,” remarks Michael Auping, “given Frank’s need from the beginning of his career to immediately and continually make new work in response to previous series. And he has never been timid about making large, even monumental, works. The result has been an enormous body of work represented by many different series. Our goal has been to summarize without losing the raw texture of his many innovations.”“It’s not merely the length of his career, it is the intensity of his work and his ability to reinvent himself as an artist over and over again over six decades that make his contribution so important,” said Adam D. Weinberg. 

“Frank is a radical innovator who has, from the beginning, absorbed the lessons of art history and then remade the world on his own artistic terms. He is a singular American master and we are thrilled to be celebrating his astonishing accomplishment.”Throughout his career, Stella has challenged the boundaries of painting and accepted notions of style. Though his early work allied him with the emerging minimalist approach, Stella’s style has evolved to become more complex and dynamic over the years as he has continued his investigation into the nature of abstract painting. 

Adam Weinberg and Marla Price, Director of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, note in the directors’ foreword to the catalogue, “Abstract art constitutes the major, and in many ways, defining artistic statement of the twentieth century and it remains a strong presence in this century. Many artists have played a role in its development, but there are a few who stand out in terms of both their innovations and perseverance. Frank Stella is one of those. As institutions devoted to the history and continued development of contemporary art, we are honored to present this tribute to one of the greatest abstract painters of our time.” 

Although the thrust of the exhibition is chronological, the artist, who has been closely involved in the installation, has juxtaposed works from various periods allowing some rooms to function as medleys. The presentation highlights the relationships among works executed across the years, suggesting that even the most minimalist compositions may invite associations with architecture, landscapes, and literature. 


The earliest works in the exhibition are rarely seen early paintings, such as 

 



Frank Stella, East Broadway, 1958. Oil on canvas. 85 1/4 x 81 in. (216.5 x 205.7 cm). Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts; gift of the artist (PA 1954) 1980.14. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


East Broadway(1958), from the collection of Addison Gallery of American Art, which show Stella’s absorption of Abstract Expressionism and predilections for bold color and all-over compositions that would appear throughout the artist’s career. Stella’s highly acclaimed Black Paintings follow. Their black stripes executed with enamel house paint were a critical step in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Minimalism. 


The exhibition includes such major works as 




Die Fahne hoch! ( 1959), a masterpiece from the Whitney’s own collection, and 



The Marriage of Reason and Squalor II( 1959) from The Museum of Modern Art’s collection. 

A selection of the artist’s Aluminum and Copper Paintings of 1960–61, featuring metallic paint and shaped canvases, further establish Stella’s key role in the development of American Minimalism. Even with his early success, Stella continued to experiment in order to advance the language of abstraction. 

The presentation of Stella’s work highlights the artist’s exploration of the relationship between color, structure, and abstract illusionism, beginning with his Benjamin Moore series and Concentric Square Paintingsof the early 1960s and 70s—including the masterpiece 



Jasper’s Dilemma (1962). 

In his Dartmouth, Notched V, and Running V paintings, Stella combines metallic color with complex shaped canvases that mirror the increasingly dynamic movement of his painted bands. 

These were followed by the even more radically shaped Irregular Polygon Paintings, such as 


Frank Stella, Chocorua IV, 1966. Fluorescent alkyd and epoxy paint on canvas. 120 x 128 x 4 in. (304.8 x 325.1 x 10.2 cm). Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; purchased through the Miriam and Sidney Stoneman Acquisition Fund, a gift from Judson and Carol Bemis, Class of 1976, and gifts from the Lathrop Fellows, in honor of Brian P. Kennedy, Director of the Hood Museum of Art, 2005–2010. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


Chocorua IV (1966) from the Hood Museum, with internally contrasting geometric forms painted in vibrant fluorescent hues; 


and the monumental Protractor Paintings, such as 



Frank Stella, Harran II, 1967. Polymer and fluorescent polymer paint on canvas. 120 x 240 in. (304.8 x 609.6 cm). Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; gift, Mr. Irving Blum, 1982. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Harran II (1967) from the Guggenheim's collection, composed of curvilinear forms with complex chromatic variations.

The Polish Village series marks the beginning of Stella’s work in collage. He begins to build paintings and incorporate various materials into large-scale constructions, further probing questions of surface, line, and geometry. In works like Bechhofen (1972), from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the interlocking geometric planes of unpainted wood stretch the purely pictorial into literal space.The work of the mid-1970s and 1980s constitutes yet another form of expressive abstraction and illustrates Stella’s absolute insistence on extending his paintings into the viewer’s space. During his tenure as the Charles Eliot Norton Professor in Poetry at Harvard University (1983-4), Stella said that “what painting wants more than anything else is working space—space to grow with and expand into, pictorial space that is capable of direction and movement, pictorial space that encourages unlimited orientation and extension. Painting does not want to be confined by boundaries of edge and surface.” 

Works from the artist’s Brazilian; Exotic Bird; Indian Bird; Circuit; and Cones and Pillarsseries, including 




St. Michael’s Counterguard (1984) from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, address this interest. 

In these works, sheets of cut metal project out from the picture plane, creating gestures that are further activated with drawing and the addition of various reflective materials. The radical physical and material nature of these works was quite influential to a younger generation of painters in the 1980s. In the last thirty years, much of Stella’s work has been related in spirit to literature and music. 

The large-scale painted metallic reliefs in the Moby Dick series (1985-97), titled after each of the chapters of Melville’s novel, also exemplify Stella’s idea of “working space.” The complexity of this series, made primarily in metallic relief with fabricated, cast, and found parts; prints; and freestanding sculpture, is a tour de force. 

Extraordinary abstractions such as 




Loomings from the Walker Art Center and 




The Grand Armada (IRS-6, 1X) from the Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, suggest an abstract narrative composed of visual elements, such as waves and fins, which recur in Melville’s novel. 

Since the 1990s Stella has explored this concept in increasingly complex two-and three-dimensional works of various materials, 




such as the large-scale aluminum and steel sculpture Raft of the Medusa(Part I)( 1990) from the collection of The Glass House; 




and the mural-size painting Earthquake in Chile (1999), part of the artist’s Heinrich von Kleist series (1996-2008), which takes as its point of departure the writings of the early 19thcentury German author. 

Extraordinary metal reliefs from his Bali series (2002-2009), as well as the lightweight and dynamic sculpture from his Scarlatti Sonata Kirkpatrick series (2006-present), whose delicacy and intricacy suggest the musical compositions of the Baroque master, represent the later work in the exhibition. In many of these works Stella has used computer generated images and modeling to extend the complexity, layers, and allusions of his material process well beyond traditional media for painting and sculpture. Two of Stella’s recent sculptures, 




Black Star (2014) 




and Wooden Star I (2014), 


are installed on the fifth-floor roof terrace.

Frank Stella: A Retrospective underscores the important role Stella’s work plays within the art historical framework of the last half century. It provides a rare opportunity for viewers to discover the visual and conceptual connections within the extraordinarily expansive and generative body of work of an artist restless with new ideas.

About Frank Stella

Born in Malden, Massachusetts, in 1936, Stella attended Phillips Academy and then Princeton University, where he studied art history and painting. In college, he produced a number of sophisticated paintings that demonstrated his understanding of the various vocabularies that had brought abstract painting into international prominence. After graduating in 1958, Stella moved to New York and achieved almost immediate fame with his Black Paintings(1958–60), which were included in The Museum of Modern Art’s seminal exhibition Sixteen Americansin 1959-60. The Leo Castelli Gallery in New York held Stella’s first one-person show in 1960. The Museum of Modern Art presented his first retrospective in 1970, under William Rubin’s stewardship, when Stella was only thirty-four years old. A second retrospective was held at MoMA in 1987. Since then, Stella has been the subject of countless exhibitions throughout the world, including a major retrospective in Wolfsburg in 2012. 

Frank Stella: A Retrospective is the first survey of the artist’s career in the U.S. since 1987. He was appointed the Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University in 1983. “Working Space,” his provocative lecture series (later published as a book), addresses the issue of pictorial space in postmodern art. Stella has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including the 2009 National Medal of Arts and the 2011 Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award from the International Sculpture Center, as well as the Isabella and Theodor Dalenson Lifetime Achievement Award from Americans for the Arts (2011) and the National Artist Award at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Aspen (2015).

More images from the exhibition:





Frank Stella, Plant City, 1963. Zinc chromate on canvas. 102 1/2 x 102 1/2 in. (260.4 x 260.4 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art; gift of Agnes Gund in memory of Anne d’Harnoncourt, 2008. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.



Frank Stella, Marrakech, 1964. Fluorescent alkyd on canvas. 77 x 77 x 2 7/8 in. (195.6 x 195.6 x 7.6 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Scull, 1971 (1971.5). © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

 




Frank Stella, Eskimo Curlew, 1976. Litho crayon, etching, lacquer, ink, glass, acrylic paint, and oil stick on aluminum. 98 3/4 x 127 x 18 in. (250.8 x 322.6 x 45.7 cm). Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon; museum purchase: funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Howard Vollum 79.36. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
 
 
Frank Stella, Gobba, zoppa e collotorto, 1985. Oil, urethane enamel, fluorescent alkyd, acrylic, and printing ink on etched magnesium and aluminum. 137 x 120 1/8 x 34 3/8 in. (348 x 305 x 87.5 cm). The Art Institute of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Logan Purchase Prize Fund; Ada Turnbull Hertle Endowment 1986.93. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.



Frank Stella, The Whiteness of the Whale (IRS-1, 2X),1987. Paint on aluminum. 149 x 121 3/4 x 45 1/4 in. (378.5 x 309.2 x 114.9 cm). Private collection. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph by Steven Sloman.




Frank Stella, The Fountain, 1992. Woodcut, etching, aquatint, relief, drypoint, collage, and airbrush. 91 x 275 3/4 in. (231.1 x 700.4 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art; gift of Marabeth Cohen-Tyler and Kenneth Tyler 2015.97a-c. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph by Steven Sloman.



Frank Stella, redjang, 2009. Fiberglass with stainless steel tubing. 155 x 212 x 64 in. (393.7 x 538.5 x 162.6 cm). Private collection. © 2015 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


About the Catalogue



The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated scholarly catalogue, published by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and Yale University Press. The publication addresses in depth such themes as the artist’s complex balancing of expressionist gesture and geometric structure, his catholic referencing of the history of art (abstract, figurative, and decorative), the importance of seriality in Stella’s process, and his work’s impact on subsequent generations of American artists.

 The book’s spectacular plate section comprises more than 100 works, including paintings, sculptures, reliefs, and works on paper. Notable inclusions are his seminal Black Paintings, recent high-relief aluminum works, and a selection of drawings, maquettes, and digital renderings—many of which are reproduced here for the first time—that offer fresh insight into Stella’s thinking and process.

The catalogue includes an essay by Michael Auping that encompasses Stella’s entire artistic output and connects the many different series and transitions in the artist’s 60-year career. Adam Weinberg addresses Stella’s formative years at Andover and Princeton and his earliest influences. Art historian and artist Jordan Kantor contributes an essay about the artist’s more recent work, and artist Laura Owens interviews Stella. Stella’s highly articulate Pratt Lecture(1960) is also included. The book concludes with a substantial chronology. 

Frank Stella: A Retrospective is jointly organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.

Great review. more images

Another good review


Ingres at The Museo del Prado

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24 November 2015 - 27 March 2016

The Museo del Prado and Fundación AXA are presenting Ingres, the first monographic exhibition in Spain on one of the most important painters in the history of art but an artist who, for complex historical reasons, is not represented in Spanish public collections. For this reason, the present comprehensive reassessment of the work of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres offers visitors to the Prado a unique and outstanding opportunity to appreciate and analyse this French painter’s relationship with the artistic movements of his day – Neo-classicism, Romanticism and Realism – from which his style and ideology remained resolutely unaffected.

Inspired by the Romantic quest for ideal beauty, which for Ingres arose from his fascination with the classical past and with the art of Raphael, he broadened the genres of portraiture, the nude and history painting. Ingres’ remarkable skills as a draughtsman also make him an outstanding exponent of this technique while revealing his ceaseless quest for perfection.

Nonetheless, Ingres’ art defies categorisation, given that he explored all the themes and aesthetic approaches of his time and rejected the hindrances implied by affiliating himself with a particular school, movement or style. His uniqueness is evident in the importance of the role he has played as a key forerunner of the language of the avant-garde movements and abstraction and the influence that he exercised on some of Spain’s most important painters, such as Federico de Madrazo, Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí.

As the generous lender of some of its most important works, the Musée Ingres in Montauban has been crucial for the presentation of this exhibition at the Prado. For this reason and with the collaboration of Acción Cultural Española as the co-organiser of the project, on 3 December and during the time the exhibition on Ingres is on display, the Prado will be exhibiting a series of 11 works from its collections at the Musée Ingres with the aim of offering a survey of portraiture in Spanish art.

The exhibition

Ingres offers a unique chronological survey of the artist’s career as a whole, revealing him in all his splendour. The exhibition thus opens with a seductive self-portrait that conveys his youthful energy, loaned from the Metropolitan Museum in New York, and closes with Self-portrait of Ingres aged 78 loaned from the Gallerie degli Uffizi in Florence, a work that transmits the master’s supreme artistic authority in his final years.

The exhibition pays close attention to Ingres’ activities as a portraitist, which gave rise to one of the most beautiful chapters of 19th-century art. Perfectly capable of precisely capturing his sitters’ characters, Ingres was able to depict both the imposing presence of an Emperor in the iconic  



Napoleon I on his Imperial Throne



and the dreamy nature of an artist in François-Marius Granet from the Musée Granet in France.


All these images reveal an authentic language that arose from the artist’s ongoing dialogue with the portraits he had studied in the Musée Napoleón and the ones he later saw in Italy.



The portrait of Monsieur Bertin, loaned from the Louvre, which is a dynamic image of the fourth estate, or that of the



The Countess of Haussonville. Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Oil on canvas, 132 x 92 cm. 1845. New York, The Frick Collection, 1927.

The Countess of Haussonville. Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Oil on canvas, 132 x 92 cm. 1845. New York, The Frick Collection, 1927.

Countess of Haussonville from the Frick Collection in New York offer a superb conclusion to Ingres’ endeavours in this genre.

Displayed alongside these work is a marvelous series of sensual female nudes.



The Grande Odalisque from the Musée du Louvre, an image of pure nudity with no narrative justification, has been one of the most influential images in the history of modern painting.  



Ruggiero rescuing Angelica depicts a sensual, voluptuous woman who is a clear paradigm of contemporary eroticism,



while The Turkish Bath from the Louvre, a legendary work that summarizes Ingres’ fascination with repetition, champions the curve as the ideal form for expressing his tireless enthusiasm with the female body, once again located in an exotic context.

This survey of Ingres’ work also includes a focus on his interest in the genre of history painting, represented by works painted in Rome in which the artist measured himself against the power of the myths of Greco-Roman literature and of Homer and Virgil, as in  



Virgil reading the Aeneid (loaned from Brussels)



and the Studies for “The Apotheosis of Homer”.

This section also includes examples of Ingres’ “troubadour” paintings in which he gave free rein to his obsession with the artists of the past whom he most admired, including Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci, in works such as








Raphael and La Fornarina (loaned from Ohio) (one of the many versions he produced)



and François I at the Deathbed of Leonardo da Vinci (from the Petit Palais, Paris).

Finally, the exhibition analyses Ingres’ relationship with religious painting, represented in all its variants, from small-scale intimate works such as the moving




Virgin adoring the Host from the Louvre

to monumental compositions such as  




Christ among the Doctors.


73 works donated to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts for permanent installation in the McGlothlin American Art Galleries

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Longtime patrons James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin have given their collection of 73 works to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts for permanent installation in the McGlothlin American Art Galleries. The value of the McGlothlin Collection exceeds $200 million and will open to the public on November 24.



Tennis at Newport
George Wesley Bellows, (1882-1925)
1920, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.5)



Venetian Wineshop
John Singer Sargent, (1856-1925)
ca 1902, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.51)





Scotch Whaler Working Through Ice
William Bradford, (1827-1892)
ca 1878, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.10)



The Hitch Team (Horses in the Snow)
George Luks, (1867-1933)
1916, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.36)



Yachting the Mediterranean
Julius LeBlanc Stewart, (1855-1919)
1896, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection




Evening
George Inness, (1825-1894)
1863,oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection


“We originally intended to give these paintings to VMFA after our lifetime,” Jim McGlothlin said, “but we’ve recently decided it’s more important for them to reach the hundreds of thousands of patrons who visit the museum. We would rather share in the public’s enjoyment of these works, and hope visitors receive as much pleasure from them as we have.”

VMFA Director Alex Nyerges said: “The McGlothlins’ unexpected gift is a magnanimous gesture of national importance. These works greatly strengthen our American collection with 12 artworks by John Singer Sargent, five new Bellows and 56 additional major works for visitors to enjoy.

“We are indebted to the McGlothlin family for endowing Virginians with their great collection.”
Twenty of these works have not been exhibited at VMFA before and the breadth of the new collection will add appreciably to VMFA’s American holdings. Spanning the formative century from 1830 to 1930, from the Hudson River School to Modernism, it is one of the most important collections of historic American art in private hands and will contribute significant depth to VMFA’s collection from this period, said Susan J. Rawles, PhD, VMFA’s associate curator of American painting and decorative art. Renowned artists include Childe Hassam, John Singer Sargent, George Bellows, James A.M. Whistler, and Mary Cassatt, among others.

Such a historically representative and significant collection of American art has not been gifted to a North American museum in more than 30 years. In 1985, David and Eula Wintermann gave more than 50 American paintings dating from 1880 to 1925 to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, providing a foundation for the development of that collection.

“The addition of the McGlothlin Collection anticipates the strong future trajectory of American Art at VMFA,” Rawles said, “complementing our current holdings of approximately 2,000 works.”
The expansive historic scope of the McGlothlin collection will be reflected in the installation, where visitors will encounter broad themes, including Westward the Course of Empire: American Landscape, The Gilded Age of Realism and Impressionism, and All That Glitters Is Not Gold: Modernism.

History of the McGlothlin Collection

Virginia-born James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin began acquiring works in 1996 and quickly established themselves among a small circle collecting American art at the highest level. Guided by their own sense of a work’s intrinsic beauty, they made strategic acquisitions, resulting in a collection that has grown to represent the major currents of mid-19th- to mid-20th-century American art. The first exhibition of their work at VMFA was Capturing Beauty: American Impressionist and Realist Paintings from the McGlothlin Collection in 2005(catalogue:



During the same year, the McGlothlins promised to bequeath their collection to VMFA. In addition, they made a $30 million gift toward the museum’s 2010 expansion. The result is the 165,000-square-foot James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin Wing.

In anticipation of the McGlothlin wing opening and the publication of the accompanying American collection catalogue, the McGlothlins made their first outright gift of art –





The Wounded Poacher
William Merritt Chase, (1849-1916)
1878, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (2009.310)


William Merritt Chase’s Wounded Poacher (1878).

A second exhibition of more than 70 works from their collection, Private Passion, Public Promise: The James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin Collection of American Art, coincided with the museum’s reopening.



The Rialto
John Singer Sargent, (1856-1925)
1909, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (2014.415)

In December 2014, they made a second gift of art to VMFA, John Singer Sargent’s The Rialto (1909).



Madame Errazuriz
John Singer Sargent, (1856-1925)
ca. 1883-4, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.48)



Flowers in Her Hair
Julius LeBlanc Stewart, (1855-1919)
1900, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.59)



In the Sun
Theodore Robinson, (1852-1896)
1891, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.46)





L'Aperitif
William Glackens, (1870-1938)
1926, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection (L.2015.13.21)



At the Opera
Seymour Joseph Guy, (1824-1910)
1887, oil on canvas
The James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin Collection



John Singer Sargent, A Gust of Wind (Judith Gautier)



Robert Frederick Blum, In the Laundry

About the McGlothlin family

Jim McGlothlin is chairman, CEO, and the sole owner of The United Co., a 44-year-old Bristol, Va., company that sold its coal mine holdings for an estimated $1 billion in 2009 to the Ukrainian firm Metinvest. The company’s businesses interests — which over the years have included coal, steel, oil and natural gas, a cogeneration plant, roofing materials, and pharmaceuticals — now are focused on financial services and golf courses. Jim serves on the boards of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Mountain Mission School, and the PGA Tour. Jim is a current member of the VMFA Board of Trustees and serves on the Executive Committee. Fran McGlothlin served on the VMFA Board of Trustees from 1998-2008. While on the VMFA Board of Trustees Fran was a member of the Art Acquisitions Sub-Committee and the Director’s Search Committee in 2006. The couple has three children and six grandchildren.

About the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

VMFA’s permanent collection encompasses more than 33,000 works of art spanning 5,000 years of world history. Its collections of Art Nouveau and Art Deco, English silver, Fabergé, and the art of South Asia are among the finest in the nation. With acclaimed holdings in American, British Sporting, Impressionist and Post-Impressionist, and Modern and Contemporary art – and additional strengths in African, Ancient, East Asian, and European – VMFA ranks as one of the top comprehensive art museums in the United States. Programs include educational activities and studio classes for all ages, plus lively after-hours events. VMFA’s Statewide Partnership program includes traveling exhibitions, artist and teacher workshops, and lectures across the Commonwealth. VMFA, a certified Virginia Green attraction, is open 365 days a year and general admission is always free.


George Wesley Bellows (1882-1925)
May Day in Central Park, ca. 1905
Oil on canvas
Signed: "Bellows"
18 x 22 inches (45.7 x 55.9 cm)

 
Robert Frederick Blum (1857-1903)
Flora de Stephano, the artist's model, 1889
Pastel on linen
Signed and dated: "Blum - 89"
20 1/2 x 18 1/4 inches (52.1 x 46.4 cm)


 
Dennis Miller Bunker (1861-1890)
Larmor, 1884
Oil on canvas
Signed, dated, and inscribed: "Dennis M. Bunker -/ Lamour - 1884"
18 x 25 1/2 inches (45.7 x 64.8 cm)

 
Mary Cassatt (1844-1926)
Lydia Seated on a Terrace, Crocheting, 1881-82 [title tentative]
Oil on canvas with tempera
Signed: "Mary Cassatt"
15 x 24 3/10 inches (38.1 x 61.6 cm)
 


Afternoon By the Sea," circa 1888, by William Merritt Chase (American, 1849-1916), pastel on linen, 20 x 30 inches. It is from the collection of James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin. Photo by Katherine Wetzel, © 2005 Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)

 
William Merritt Chase (1849-1916)
A Mandolin Player, ca. 1880
Oil on panel
10 x 7 inches (25.4 x 17.7 cm)

 
Frederick C. Frieseke (1874-1939)
Luxembourg Garden , 1901
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated "F. Frieseke 1901"
26 x 32 inches (66 x 81.3 cm)

 
Childe Hassam (1859-1935)
Moonlight, 1907
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated: "Hassam 1907"
Inscribed on verso: "C. H."
25 3/4 x 36 1/4 inches (65.4 x 83.8 cm)
 

 
Childe Hassam (1859-1935)
Winter Nightfall in the City, 1889
Oil on canvas
Signed, inscribed, and dated: "Childe Hassam Paris 1889"
25 1/2 x 33 inches (64.8 x 83.8 cm)

 
Martin Johnson Heade (1819-1904)
White Cherokee Roses in a Salamander Vase, ca. 1883-95
Oil on canvas
Signed: "M. J. Heade"
26 x 13 inches (66 x 33 cm)

 
Martin Johnson Heade (1819-1904)
Two Magnolias and a Bud on Teal Velvet, ca. 1885-95
Oil on canvas
Signed: "M. J. Heade"
15 x 24 inches (38.1 x 61 cm)

 
Robert Henri (1865-1929)
Listening Boy, 1924
Oil on canvas
Signed: "Robert Henri"
Signed and inscribed on verso: "Robert Henri 181/M Listening Boy"
24 x 20 inches (61 x 50.8 cm)

 
Robert Henri (1865-1929)
Miss Kaji Waki, 1909
Oil on canvas
Signed "Robert Henri"
77 x 37 inches (195.6 x 94 cm)

 
Robert Henri (1865-1929)
Sketchers in the Woods, 1918
Pastel on paper
Signed "R Henri"
12 1/5 x 19 4/5 inches (31.1 x 50.2 cm)

 
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
By the Shore, 1870s
Oil on canvas
Signed: "HOMER"
9 1/2 x 10 inches (24.1 x 25.4 cm)

 
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
Canoeing in the Adirondacks, 1892
Watercolor on paper
Signed and dated: "Homer 1892"
15 ? x 20 inches (39.4 x 50.8 cm)

 
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
Girl Reading Under an Oak Tree, 1879
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated: "Homer 1879"
15 1/2 x 22 1/2 inches (39.4 x 57.2 cm)
 

 
"The Watch, Eastern Shore, Prout's Neck," 1894, by Winslow Homer (American, 1836-1910), watercolor on paper, 15 1/2 x 20 inches. It is from the collection of James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin. Photo by Katherine Wetzel, © 2005 Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)

 
William McGregor Paxton (1869-1941)
The Letter, 1908
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated: "Paxton - 1908"
30 x 25 inches (76.2 x 63.5 cm)

 
Maurice Prendergast (1859-1924)
Handkerchief Point, ca. 1896-97
Watercolor over graphite on paper
Signed: "Prendergast"
13 1/2 x 9 5/8 inches (34.3 x 24.4 cm)

 
Theodore Robinson (1852-1896)
Portrait of Madame Baudy, 1888
Oil on panel
Inscribed, signed, and dated: "To Madame Baudy/ Th. Robinson 1888"
13 x 9 1/2 inches (33 x 24.1 cm)

 
John Singer Sargent (1856-1925)
Gathering Blossoms, Valdemosa, 1908
Oil on canvas
28 x 22 inches (71.1 x 55.9 cm)


John Singer Sargent (1856-1925)
Portrait of Ambrogio Raffele, ca. 1904-11
Watercolor over graphite on paper
Inscribed and signed: "all' amico A Raffele John S. Sargent"
20 x 14 inches (50.8 x 35.6 cm)


 
John Singer Sargent (1856-1925)
Venetian Wineshop, ca. 1902
Oil on canvas
Signed: "John S. Sargent"
21 x 27 1/2 inches (53.4 x 69.9 cm)

 
Everett Shinn (1876-1953)
Back Row, Folies Bergere, 1900
Pastel on paper
20 1/2 x 27 inches (52.1 x 68.6 cm)

 
Everett Shinn (1876-1953)
Horsedrawn Bus, 1899
Pastel on paper
Signed and dated: "Everett Shinn / 99"
22 x 30 inches (56 x 76.2 cm)

 
John Sloan (1871-1951)
Gray Day, Jersey Coast, 1911
Oil on canvas
Signed: "John Sloan"
22 x 26 1/5 inches (56 x 66.6 cm)


 
John Henry Twachtman (1853-1902)
Gloucester, Fishermen's Houses, 1900
Oil on canvas
25 x 25 1/2 inches (63.5 x 64.8 cm)



James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)
Green and Silver - The Bright Sea, Dieppe, 1883-1885
Signed twice with artist's butterfly
Watercolor and gouache on paper
10 x 7 1/8 inches (25.4 x 18 cm)

Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder at Auction

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 Christie's 2015





From Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (1573- 1621), who along with Jan Brueghel the Elder and Jacques de Gheyn was the pioneering founder of European flower painting, Christie’s will offer a hitherto unknown, jewel-like panel (estimate £600,000-800,000), which constitutes a significant addition to the artist’s small oeuvre, of some seventy accepted works. Despite the seemingly anecdotal nature of its subject, Bosschaert’s still lifes encapsulate the two key transformations of the early modern era: the dawn of the scientific age, marked by a new curiosity and inquisitiveness about the natural world, and the discovery of the Americas, which resulted in the arrival of a series of exotic plants in Europe.

This painting is an archetypal work of Bosschaert’s maturity, when he was able to orchestrate a substantial number of flower species into a relatively small space while creating a real sense of volume, movement, and tonal harmony.  At the heart of the picture is a mature rose, soon to crumble, beautifully framed by a group of lively narcissi, a delicate viola and an exuberant red and white carnation Bosschaert’s subtle modulation of light creates a remarkable sense of depth and by setting the crisply designed and meticulously painted flowers against a dark background, he generates a stark contrast of patterns and colours that proves strikingly modern.



The panel is closely related to one of Bosschaert’s masterpieces dated from 1614 now in the National Gallery in London. According to Fred Meijer of the RLD, who dates the present panel to the same year, the two pictures were probably painted side by side, a common practice for Bosschaert who would sometimes repeat his most accomplished compositions.  Parrot tulips, a rose, a fritillary, daffodils, narcissi and other flowers in a roemer, with a Meadow Brown butterfly and a fly, on a stone table will be offered from a private collection.



Sotheby's 2014 
600,000900,000
LOT SOLD. 1,022,500 GB


Christie's 2007




Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder Antwerp 1573-1621 The Hague


A still life of flowers in a vase


Price Realized

  • $1,833,000 


Estimate


  • $1,700,000 - $2,700,000 
 
 Sotheby's 2013
 

Estimate

4,000,0006,000,000
USD 

Christie’s Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale in London on Tuesday 8 December 2015

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Christie’s Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale in London on Tuesday 8 December 2015 will offer an exceptional selection of pictures from private collections, several of which have never before been offered at auction.



The sale is led by an exceptionally rare work, in excellent condition, from a private collection: A hare among plants by Hans Hoffmann(Nürnberg 1545-1591 Prague), (estimate: £4-6 million). Monogrammed and dated 1582, just three years before Hoffmann went to Prague to become court painter to Emperor Rudolf II (1552-1612), at the time “the greatest art patron in the world” (Karel van Mander, 1548–1606, Het Schilderboek, 1604), the drawing is inspired by



Albrecht Dürer’s magnificent Hare of 1502, today in the Albertina in Vienna.

One of Hoffmann’s largest drawings and greatest masterpieces, the present work can be seen as a paragon of the so called Dürer Renaissance, an intense revival of interest in Dürer’s work at the end of the 16th Century, about fifty years after the artist’s death.  

A hare among plants is not a direct copy but an inventive adaptation and variation of Dürer’s iconic Hare. Hoffmann represents the hare among plants while in the Albertina drawing the background is left blank. Every species is individualised and the artist excels equally at representing beautiful flowers in full bloom, lively insects, a lizard and a frog as well as faded, diseased, or pest-eaten foliage. Cobwebs and a faded dandelion and even a tick attached to the hare’s fur are drawn with extraordinary detail.  

A hare among plants was part of the extraordinary collection assembled by Nürnberg born trading businessman Paulus Praun (1548-1616), very probably its first owner and the artist’s most important patron. After 1801 it was acquired by Johann Friedrich Frauenholz, Nürnberg, and after 1945 sold to the Stapf family in Tyrol, from where it was acquired in 1975 by the father of the present owner. Christie’s is proud to be able to offer international collectors the rare opportunity to acquire a technical tour de force in remarkable condition, which stands as a perfect embodiment of the Dürer Renaissance, a movement that lasted not more than twenty years but certainly helped fix the perception of Dürer’s work and affected the way in which succeeding generations were to receive him.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



From Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (1573- 1621), who along with Jan Brueghel the Elder and Jacques de Gheyn was the pioneering founder of European flower painting, Christie’s will offer a hitherto unknown, jewel-like panel (estimate £600,000-800,000), which constitutes a significant addition to the artist’s small oeuvre, of some seventy accepted works. Despite the seemingly anecdotal nature of its subject, Bosschaert’s still lifes encapsulate the two key transformations of the early modern era: the dawn of the scientific age, marked by a new curiosity and inquisitiveness about the natural world, and the discovery of the Americas, which resulted in the arrival of a series of exotic plants in Europe.

This painting is an archetypal work of Bosschaert’s maturity, when he was able to orchestrate a substantial number of flower species into a relatively small space while creating a real sense of volume, movement, and tonal harmony.  At the heart of the picture is a mature rose, soon to crumble, beautifully framed by a group of lively narcissi, a delicate viola and an exuberant red and white carnation Bosschaert’s subtle modulation of light creates a remarkable sense of depth and by setting the crisply designed and meticulously painted flowers against a dark background, he generates a stark contrast of patterns and colours that proves strikingly modern.

The panel is closely related to



one of Bosschaert’s masterpieces dated from 1614 now in the National Gallery in London.

According to Fred Meijer of the RLD, who dates the present panel to the same year, the two pictures were probably painted side by side, a common practice for Bosschaert who would sometimes repeat his most accomplished compositions.  Parrot tulips, a rose, a fritillary, daffodils, narcissi and other flowers in a roemer, with a Meadow Brown butterfly and a fly, on a stone table will be offered from a private collection.

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Also offered for sale at auction for the first time is an exceptional nocturne, The Agony in the Garden, by Jacopo Bassano (1510-1592), (estimate £500,000-800,000). Bassano was a contemporary of Titian and Tintoretto and was hugely influential on El Greco. This picture, which was first published in 2004, dates to the 1570s and is a key example of Bassano’s speciality and talent in depicting nocturnes. It has previously been on loan to the Museo Civico in Bassano, the artist’s hometown, and was included in an exhibition at the Louvre, Titien, Tintoret, Véronèse, Rivalités à Venise, in 2009-2010.

A copy of this image (by a son?) is owned by the Pushkin Museum:




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Jacob van Ruisdael's (1628/9-1682) A wooded river landscape with figures crossing a bridge is offered for sale for the first time in over 100 years (estimate £250,000-350,000). It was once part of the collection of Alexander Hugh Baring (1835-1889), 4th Lord Ashburton, of the legendary Baring dynasty of bankers, philanthropists, and art collectors. Ashburton’s collection included paintings by Greuze and Weenix now in the Wallace Collection and Murillo’s The Infant Saint John with the Lamb today in the National Gallery in London. The reappearance of this picture, known through an engraving, but untraced since it was sold in Paris in 1879, returns one of Ruisdael’s celebrated wooded landscapes to his documented oeuvre. This classic subject by the greatest landscape painter of the Dutch Golden Age depicts a transitional space, where the wild forest and the cultivated cornfield and nearby hamlet meet. From the Baring collection the painting went to the collection of Max Kahn in Paris before entering the collection of Léon Emile Brault (1825-1910) in 1879, in whose family it has remained ever since.

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The sale also includes a beautifully preserved view painting by Francesco Guardi (1712-1793), The Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, (estimate £1,500,000-2,500,000), one of his and his patron’s most celebrated vedute. This view, taken from the Molo and showing the island monastery of San Giorgio Maggiore with its façade designed by Andrea Palladio and the eastern end of the Giudecca, now the site of the Cipriani Hotel, is a work from the artist’s full maturity. Throughout the 1770s and 1780s, the period when this picture and its pendant,




Santa Maria della Salute with the Dogana di Mare (detail) (now Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena) can be dated, Guardi gradually developed his technique to what was to become his most admired style; the brushwork became looser and freer, his palette lightened and his images softened into a suffused pale glow.


The tow were sold together 
  
at a Christie's auction in 2012.
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The sale will also feature a Holy Family by Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), (estimate £400,000-600,000), formerly in the renowned collection of Lucien Bonaparte,

a rare still life by Jacques de Gheyn II (1565-1629), (estimate £100,000-150,000, one of only five surviving flower pieces by the artist,

and a fine version of the Birdtrap by Pieter Brueghel the Younger (estimate £1-1.5 million).
 

Sotheby’s Old Master & British Paintings Sale 9th December 2015: Constable, Gossaert, van Dyck

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John Constable (1776-1837), The Lock, c.1824-5, oil on canvas, 55 x 48 inches, £8-12m



On 9th December this year, Sotheby’s London will offer for sale John Constable's The Lock -one of the small group of monumental landscapes, known as the 'Six Footers', which for many define the pinnacle of the artist's career. Depicting a bucolic scene on the River Stour in the artist’s native Suffolk, and painted in response to the huge critical acclaim that greeted Constable's first treatment of the composition (exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1824), the picture was treasured by the artist –retained by him in his studio till the end of his life, singled out by him for prestigious exhibitions, and chosen as the basis for the engraving that was to make it among the most familiar, and celebrated, images in the canon of British art. 

Having remained in the same family collection for over 150 years, it now comes to the market for the first time since 1855 with an estimate of £8-12 million.



Major works by Constable are extremely rare in private hands. Of the other paintings forming part of the famous ‘six-footer series’ –the monumental Stour landscapes which rank among the most celebrated of Constable’s paintings –all but two are currently in public institutions. Indeed this picture is one of only three major paintings by Constable left in a private collection.



Julian Gascoigne, Sotheby’s Senior British Pictures specialist, said: “This breath-taking painting belongs, together with 





The Hay Wain, to the small group of pictures that for many define Constable’s career. Constable’s absolute mastery as a landscape painter is everywhere in this picture –in the vigour of the almost impressionistic brushwork, in the drama of the clouds and the changing weather, even in the movement of the grass in the fields and the sparkle of water as it cascades through the lock. It is one of those pictures that captivates, and the more one looks, the more one sees.”



David Moore-Gwyn, British Paintings consultant to Sotheby’s, said: “For many people, Constable captures, like no other artist, the essence and beauty of the English countryside. This is quite simply one of the most loved and celebrated works in the history of British Art and also one of a very small handful of great Constables still in private hands.”



CONSTABLE AND THE LOCK



Unlike his contemporary J.W.M.Turner, Constable did not achieve great commercial success in his lifetime. Critical acclaim and acceptance by the art establishment came late for him too. He was 54 before he was elected to the Royal Academy in 1829, so when, in 1824,the first version of The Lock was exhibited at the R.A. to huge acclaim, selling within moments to an illustrious and eager collector, it is perhaps not surprising that Constable immediately set about painting another version of the composition that had proved so successful. With The Lock,it seemed, he had found a composition that spoke both to his own, very personal and rigorous standards and that at the same time resonated with a hitherto largely uninterested public.



When revisiting the composition, however, Constable did not slavishly reproduce his earlier rendering. Instead, he made small but important changes, most notably intensifying the atmosphere. Touches like the inclusion of more dramatic rainclouds than those in the previous version subtly hint to the move towards the more romantic sensibility of Constable’s final years. (The storm clouds brewing in The Lock compare very well with those in renowned 




Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows of 1831, now in the Tate, London).

 Constable remained deeply attached to this picture throughout his life. Possibly because for him it represented a ‘break-through’ moment, but also, no doubt, because of his deep affection for the landscape it depicts -the local area around East Bergholt which first inspired his imagination and made him a painter. His great satisfaction with, and affection for, the painting meant that he chose it both for major exhibitions (in Brussels in 1833 and in Worcester in 1834) and as the basis for the much-loved and widely circulated print by David Lucas. 

Also in the auction: 




Jan Gossaert, called Mabuse
THE VIRGIN AND CHILD
Estimate     4,000,000 — 6,000,000  GBP




Sir Anthony van Dyck
PORTRAIT OF QUEEN HENRIETTA MARIA (1609–1669)
Estimate     1,500,000 — 2,500,000  GBP




Freeman's December 6 Auction: American Art & Pennsylvania Impressionists: Wyeth, Parrish, Rockwell, Eakins, Stuart

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Represented in this sale are three generations of the iconic  Wyeth family, with works from N.C., Andrew,  and Jamie on offer. The  distinctive genre of  American illustrative art  as  characterized by Norman  Rockwell and  Maxfield Parrish is also featured in this sale, as are early American  painters like Gilbert Stuart . Artists and subjects of special significance to Philadelphia society ( like  the subject of Stuart's "Portrait of Anne (Nancy) Lee" ) and  its rich  artistic  community (including Thomas Eakins) are peppered  throughout the sale.  

 Barely known and rarely seen, the undisputed star of the sale is  




Andrew Wyeth's "Winter Corn Fields" (Lot 81,  Estimate $600,000 - 800,000) The work  comes to auction from The Estate of  Nancy duPont Reynolds Cooch, who had been a childhood friend of Wyeth's .   

"Every so often a painting comes along  that resonates deeply, and for me, this is  one," said Vice Chairman  Alasdair  Nichol of the work. He went on to remark  that "I consider this to be the most exciting period of Wyeth's career - he's  just coming into his own and  escaping his father's influence. This is six  years before his masterpiece ' Christina's World,' and  already we're seeing the  symbolism he would become known for - that ominous, brooding sense of  uncertainty.

 Once dismissed as merely commercial work unworthy of serious consideration , Illustration  A rt is now  enjoys a reputation  as a vital and  highly  influential genre, with collectors clamoring for works by icons of  the American "Golden Age of Illustration." Two pillars of  the style , Norman Rockwell and  Maxfield Parrish,  are represented in this auction.   

Arguably one of the most beloved of American artists,  Norman Rockwell worked in opposition to the avant garde style of his contemporaries. Lots 36 - 39  in Freeman's December auction is a series of four pencil drawings, (Estimated at $60,000-$100,000 each) studies for oil  paintings which appeared in Brown & Bigelow's Four Seasons calendar in 1950. The illustrations depict  the seasonal adventures of "Two Old Men and Dog ."  :














Philadelphia native Maxfield Parrish is another celebrated illustration artist featured in the sale. His oil on board work,   




"Blue Fountain" (Study for  Reveries) , is an excellent example of the artist's  fantastical landscapes.  Lot 35 (Estimate $150,000 - 250,000) is d ream - like and alluring, the rich hues  draw i n g the view er in.   

Also highlighted in the auction are  Gilbert Stuart and  Thomas Eakins , two early American artists with ties to Philadelphia . 





Stuart's "Portrait of Anne  (Nancy) Lee" (Lot 6, Estimate $30,000 - 60,000) is  sure draw attention from collectors of fine early  American art and historical portraiture.  A favorite of  Philadelphia society and a great beauty of her time , Anne Lee is depicted by Gilbert wearing a bonnet  in the height of fashion.  The portrait is unfinished ; it's  bare, unfinished edges add to the  overall  charm  of the work.  

In a letter to the editor of  Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly in 1896 , an admirer of  the painting remarked that rather than finishing the work, Stuart "flung away his brush, exclaiming 'It breaks my heart  to paint loveliness that must fade so soon!'" Whether or not this incident actually happened cannot be  determined, but the story adds romance to an already enchanting painting. 






Lot 7 is  "Study of a Spectator"  for





"Taking the  Count " by Thomas Eakins , 

The great detail and effort Eakins places in this  small  subject are representative of the artist's meticulous nature.  

 Other  notable works in this auction include  p a i n t i n g s by  preeminent Pennsylvania Impressionists  Daniel Garber and  Edward Willis Redfield:




  
Daniel Garber "The Mary Maxwell House" (The Milk Wagon) Estimate $150,000 - 250,000 · 




Edward Willis Redfield "The South Window" Estimate $100,000 - 150,000 ·

Gauguin. Tales from Paradise

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Gauguin. Tales from Paradise
MUDEC - Museo delle Culture di Milano
28 October 2015 – 21 February 2016


Organized by 24 ORE Cultura – Gruppo 24 Ore and curated by the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen, the exhibition “Gauguin. Tales from Paradise” features approximately 70 works from twelve international museums and private collections, together with artefacts and pictures documenting the places visited by the artist. Next spring the Glyptotek will show a version of the exhibition back in Copenhagen, based on the experiences of this Danish-Italian collaboration.

The Glyptotek collection of works by Paul Gauguin is one of the world’s most comprehensive, and this exhibition features no less than 35 of the Danish museum’s Gauguins – along with significant works by Cézanne, Pissarro and Van Gogh. It is the first time that such a large part of the Glyptotek Gauguin collection is displayed outside of the museum.

Among its highlights is



Vahine no te Tiare (Woman with a Flower), one of the first paintings which the artist sent back to France from Tahiti in 1891, as an ambassador of a new and radical art, “made in Polynesia”.

Besides the significant works from the Glyptotek “Gauguin. Tales from Paradise” includes outstanding masterpieces such as




Self-Portrait with Yellow Christ (Musèe d’Orsay, Paris),



Mahana no atua (Day of the God) (Art Institute of Chicago















and Volpini Suite (Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen).

The art works on display will allow visitors to recognize and analyse the sources of Paul Gauguin’s art, which range from the folk art of Brittany to Egyptian, Peruvian, Cambodian and Javanese art, to the life and culture of Polynesia. By examining some of the artist’s masterpieces in the light of these sources of inspiration, the exhibition aims to illustrate his peculiar and original approach to “primitivism”.

Through the display of a series of works and artefacts created by Paul Gauguin during his travels – real and imaginary – the exhibition aims to highlight the originality of his life-long quest for “the primitive”. Gauguin's interest in other cultures took the form of a constant search for original material that could be integrated and merged with his own creations. Ranging from paintings and wooden sculptures to ceramics and engravings, the works illustrate Gauguin's “primitivism” as an artistic vision, lifestyle and journey to escape from contemporary society, in the pursuit of a different world, a pristine one pregnant with ancient meanings and inhabited by ancestral powers and spirits.

The variety of artistic means of expression employed by Gauguin is itself proof of the creativeness and complexity of his vision. The works on display show how Gauguin's imaginative and unique approach may serve as a prism through which to rethink the conventional Western view of “primitivism” according to new and unexpected perspectives.

Paul Gauguin's fascination with “the primitive” represents a recurrent theme in his artistic production. His approach springs from a deep-seated desire to make a break with the conventional rules of the society of his day and the criteria of French Impressionism, in order to attain a higher degree of truth and genuineness in both life and art. Gauguin's personal view of the “primitive” as the primordial power governing the world, as the fundamental essence of human nature, led him to artistically combine a vast range of figurative sources distant in space and time.

Alongside his initial interest in European medieval art, Gauguin was soon drawn to the search for something more authentic than contemporary European culture. This urge led the artist first to Brittany, a land of age-old traditions and simple ways of life, and then to Martinique, an island with an exotic and pristine nature. Following his discovery of traditional artefacts from the French colonies at the 1889 Universal Exhibition, Paul Gauguin travelled further and further, reaching the islands of French Polynesia. Here he pursued his dream of leading a primitive, ancestral existence, in which art and life, symbol and vision, are combined into a single reality.

“Gauguin. Tales from Paradise” is curated by Line Clausen Pedersen and Flemming Friborg, respectively the curator of the Department of French Art and the Director of the Glyptotek.

Spanish Masters from the Hermitage. The World of El Greco, Ribera, Zurbarán, Velázquez, Murillo & Goya

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Hermitage Amsterdam 28 November 2015 – 29 May 2016

The long-awaited art exhibition Spanish Masters from the Hermitage. The World of El Greco, Ribera, Zurbarán, Velázquez, Murillo & Goya opened at the Hermitage Amsterdam on Saturday 28 November 2015.

The exhibition includes more than sixty superior paintings and a rich collection of graphic works and applied arts masterpieces. Never before has the Netherlands hosted such a comprehensive survey of Spanish art, with work that is hardly represented in Dutch museum collections.

The exhibition features masterpieces such as 




The Apostles Peter and Paul (1587–92) by El Greco, © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Diego Velázquez de Silva (1599–1660), Head of a Man in Profile, c 1616 © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg 



Velázquez’s Portrait of the Count Duke of Olivares (c. 1638), © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Murillo’s Immaculate Conception (c. 1680) © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



and Goya’s Portrait of the Actress Antonia Zárate (1810–11), © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg

in addition to paintings by their pupils and later painters, up and including Picasso:



Pablo Picasso (1881 –1973), Boy with dog, 1905, © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Pablo Picasso (1881–1973)
Still Life with Glass Vessels, 1906
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg

Together they tell the story of the rise and glory of Spanish art in the Golden Age, which would continue to influence art into modern times.

Spain’s Golden Age

The Golden Age of Spanish painting began in the late sixteenth century and flourished throughout the seventeenth century, coinciding with the Dutch Golden Age. While the Netherlands was revolting against Spanish rule, Spain was developing its own artistic signature. Philip II, an absolute monarch in a society dominated by the Catholic Church, commissioned the construction of El Escorial in 1563. The enormous palace and monastery complex near Madrid was decorated by great Spanish and Italian masters. Spain’s unimaginable wealth, amassed largely during the country’s period of colonial gold fever – Spain called itself ‘the Empire on which the sun never sets’ – brought painters abundant commissions for the king, churches and private collectors. Spanish art flourished.

The works of the great Spanish painters are exceptional for their exquisite convergence of the spiritual and the theatrical. Influenced by the Italians, painters like El Greco, Ribera and Zurbarán developed a singular Spanish style marked by strong contrasts of light and dark. Their works exude the temperament and pride of the Iberian Peninsula. Murillo and in particular Velázquez, a trendsetter, added their own signature to that style and reached new heights.

Goya, an equally awe-inspiring talent, followed in their footsteps with his confrontational realism. Goya is also famous for his penetrating graphic cycles and a number of his dramatic etchings are featured in the exhibition, including pieces from Los Desastres de la Guerra, depicting the horrors of the Napoleonic occupation of Spain.

The artists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries continued the tradition, rendering the strong contrasts in society in works that reflect both the sun-drenched Spanish culture and the dark sides of history.

Spanish art is a unique chapter in art history. From 28 November 2015 to 29 May 2016, this compelling story will be illuminated by over a hundred superior works from the Hermitage in St Petersburg, which has the largest and most diverse collection of Spanish art outside Spain.

More images from the exhibition:



Francisco Ribalta (1565–1628)
Crucifixion, 1582
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



José de Ribera (1591–1652)
Saint Jerome and the Angel, 1626
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Francisco de Zurbarán (1598–1664)
San Fernando, 1630–34
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Juan de la Corte (ca. / c 1585–1662)
Battle, 1643 (?)
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg


Pedro de Moya (1610–1674)
Portrait of a Man, 1650–60
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Antonio Pereda (1611–1678)
Still Life with Chest, 1652
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Luca Giordano (1634–1705)
The Forge of Vulcanus, 1660
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Ignacio Iriarte (1621–1670)
Crossing at the Ford, c 1665
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg 



José Villegas Cordero (1844–1921)
Torero’s Farewell, 1880
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg



Ignacio Zuloaga (1870–1945)
Preparations for the Bullfight, 1903
© State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg







Van Dyck: The Anatomy of Portraiture at The Frick Collection, March 2 through June 5, 2016

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Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641), one of the most celebrated and influential portraitists of all time, enjoyed an international career that took him from his native Flanders to Italy, France, and, ultimately, the court of Charles I in England. Van Dyck’s elegant manner and convincing evocation of a sitter’s inner life—whether real or imagined—made him the favorite portraitist of many of the most powerful and interesting figures of the seventeenth century. His sitters—poets, duchesses, painters, and generals—represent the social and artistic elite of his age, and his achievement in portraiture marked a turning point in the history of European painting. 

Van Dyck: The Anatomy of Portraiture, on view only at New York’s Frick Collection, looks comprehensively at the artist’s activity and process as a portraitist. It is also the first major exhibition devoted to his work to be held in the United States in more than twenty years. Through approximately one hundred works, the show explores the versatility and inventiveness of a portrait specialist, the stylistic development of a draftsman and painter, and the efficiency and genius of an artist in action. 

Organized chronologically around the different geographic chapters of Van Dyck’s career, the exhibition documents the artist’s development from an ambitious young apprentice into the most sought-after portrait painter in Europe. 

The show also includes a small selection of comparative works by Van Dyck’s contemporaries, including Rubens, Jordaens, and Lely, and a special installation of the Iconographie, Van Dyck’s celebrated series of portrait prints. Lenders to the exhibition include the Palazzo Pitti in Florence, the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, the British Museum and National Gallery in London, the Prado Museum in Madrid, and major private collectors such as the Duke of Devonshire and the Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry. 

ABOUT VAN DYCK

Born in 1599 to a family of patrician merchants, Anthony van Dyck endured a childhood marred by his mother’s early death and his father’s financial instability. In 1610, he enrolled as an apprentice to the painter Hendrick van Balen, although Peter Paul Rubens, Antwerp’s most celebrated artist, would exert a far greater influence on his development. By his late teens, the young Van Dyck was already assisting Rubens on large-scale commissions. A brief sojourn in England followed by a stay of roughly six years in Italy cemented his emergence as a mature painter in his own right, familiar with the great masters of the Italian Renaissance and the most sophisticated courts of Europe. 



 Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, 1623 Oil on canvas Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence (Pal. 82)

 

One of the most important loans in the exhibition was painted during this period: Van Dyck’s 1623 portrait of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, from the Galleria Palatina at the Palazzo Pitti in Florence.. In the Baroque period, Van Dyck's depiction of Bentivogliowas much emulated and became the benchmark for any portrait of a prince of the Church. Its exclusive trip to the Frick marks only the second time in the painting's history that it has left Italy.

In 1632, Van Dyck was appointed principal painter to Charles I of England. The portraits he produced over the following decade, before his premature death in 1641, are among his most celebrated and feature heavily in the exhibition. 






Van Dyck, Charles I and Henrietta Maria Holding a Laurel Wreath, 1632, oil on canvas, Archiepiscopal Castle and Gardens, Kroměříž

Included in the exhibition is a horizontal portrait of Charles I and his queen Henrietta Maria, now in the collection of Archiepiscopal Castle and Gardens, Kroměříž, The Czech Republic. This remarkable canvas has never before traveled to the United States.




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Queen Henrietta Maria with Jeffery Hudson, 1633
Oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington; Samuel H. Kress Collection


Coming from the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., is Van Dyck’s portrait Queen Henrietta Maria with Jeffrey Hudson. 




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) The Princesses Elizabeth and Anne, Daughters of Charles I, 1637 Oil on canvas Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh; purchased with the aid of the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Scottish Office and the Art Fund 1996

A more intimate work of Princesses Elizabeth and Anne comes to New York from the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.

In addition to showcasing notable works from European collections, Van Dyck: The Anatomy of Portraiture will also shine a spotlight on important paintings by Van Dyck from American private and public collections, many of which have not been included in previous exhibitions on the artist. These paintings are a legacy of the longtime fascination that Van Dyck has exerted on American collectors, including Henry Clay Frick, who acquired no fewer than eight paintings by the artist. 





Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641)
Frans Snyders, ca. 1620
Oil on canvas
The Frick Collection;
Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb



Among these is the portrait of Frans Snyders, a fellow painter and close artistic collaborator, purchased in the summer of 1909 by Frick, who also acquired that same year 



Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641)
Margareta de Vos, ca. 1620
Oil on canvas
The Frick Collection; Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb 


the pendant portrait of Snyders’s wife, Margareta de Vos. 

Painted about 1620 when the artist was roughly twenty years old, the two portraits reveal the prodigy’s startling talent, expressed in likenesses that combine supreme elegance with a subtle element of melancholy. 

Other Frick-owned works included in the exhibition will be 



Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641)
Lady Anne Carey, Later Viscountess Claneboye and Countess of Clanbrassil, ca. 1636
Oil on canvas
The Frick Collection; Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb 


the full-length canvas Lady Anne Carey, Later Viscountess Claneboye and Countess of Clanbrassil, 




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Genoese Noblewoman, ca. 1625–27
Oil on canvas
The Frick Collection; Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb 



and the recently conserved Portrait of a Genoese Noblewoman.

APPROACH TO PREPARATION OF PORTRAITS A MAJOR THEME

Van Dyck’s singularity is most apparent in his approach to preparing a portrait, and initial sketches and unfinished paintings compose one of the major themes of the show. Portrait drawings by his contemporaries, including Peter Lely and Jacob Jordaens, will highlight the distinct way he created his celebrated portraits. Whereas many artists made detailed studies of a sitter’s face before beginning work on a painting, Van Dyck preferred rough sketches that mapped a sitter’s pose but left many details unresolved. He would then usually paint the sitter directly from life, studying his or her face without an intermediary drawing.

 Anthony Van Dyck, Portrait of a Woman, ca. 1640 Oil on canvas Speed Art Museum, Louisville; Museum Purchase, Preston Pope Satterwhite Fund


This approach is apparent especially in unfinished works, such as the Portrait of a Woman from the Speed Museum in Louisville, above. Here, the haunting depiction of the unknown woman’s face contrasts with passages intended to be completed by studio assistants. The Frick’s exhibition will reunite preparatory works and finished paintings, in some cases for the first time since they left Van Dyck’s studio several hundred years ago. 







Van Dyck, Portrait Study of Nicholas Lanier, ca. 1628, black chalk, heightened with white chalk,on blue paper, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh; Lady Murray of Henderland gift 1860 as a memorial of her husband, Lord Henderland

A preparatory drawing of the English court musician and painter Nicholas Lanier, above, from the Scottish National Gallery, for example, 



Van Dyck, Nicholas Lanier, ca. 1628, oil on canvas, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

will be displayed alongside the related portrait, on loan from Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum, above. 

In the drawing, Van Dyck worked with black and white chalk on blue paper, swiftly laying out the fall of fabric of Lanier’s cloak, the play of his curls, his elegant hands, and his almost supercilious expression. Nonetheless, the artist made a number of changes in the final composition: instead of holding out a glove in his right hand, Lanier’s arm is akimbo, the hand tucked invisibly at his side. Less obviously, Van Dyck removed a lock of hair to leave Lanier’s temple exposed. These alterations indicate how Van Dyck continued to think through his composition as he transitioned from preparatory drawing to canvas. Remarking on the artist’s meticulous process, Lanier told the painter Peter Lely that he “sat seven entire days” for his portrait, but “was not permitted so much as once to see it till [Van Dyck] had perfectly finished the face to his own satisfaction.” Such anecdotes combinewith the physical evidence of Van Dyck’s works to allow for the exhibition’s reconstruction of the artist’s working method.

PAN-EUROPEAN DISTRIBUTION OF HIS WORK IN PRINT

Van Dyck made astute use of reproductive prints to ensure that his portraits had apan-European distribution. This is particularly apparent in his so-called Iconographie series of printed portraits, depicting a range of sitters who included fellow Flemish artists, learned scholars, statesmen, and aristocratic ladies. The Iconographie will receive its own special installation at the Frick, encompassing prints, drawings, oil sketches, and one of the earliest bound volumes of Van Dyck’s portrait prints, on loan from the Rijksmuseum. As well as the work of professional engravers, the Iconographie features some of Van Dyck’s autograph etchings, which are among the greatest prints ever made.



Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Frans Snyders, ca. 1625–37 Etching Fogg Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge; Gift of Walter C. Klein, Class of 1939

These include Van Dyck’s etching, above after his portrait of Frans Snyders (illustrated above). 

In his paintings of Snyders and his wife, the young Van Dyck depicted the pair amidst various trappings of prosperity—elegant clothing, furniture, and a distant view of parkland. In his print, made more than a decade later, Van Dyck stripped Snyders’s portrait down to just head and shoulders. Translated from oil on canvas into a new medium, the etching reveals the variety of Van Dyck’s graphic vocabulary. Stippling maps the contours of Snyders’s brow, cheekbones, and forehead, yielding to loose crosshatching in areas of greater shadow. Calligraphic lines, meanwhile, convey Snyders’s nonchalantly arranged hair and upturned mustache. Such a minimal etching was intended to appeal to the most sophisticated collectors, but Van Dyck also collaborated with highly skilled professional engravers to create more traditional prints for wider distribution. To assist these engravers, Van Dyck prepared both drawings and exquisite grisailles, or gray-scale oil sketches. In the exhibition, four of these grisailles, will demonstrate Van Dyck’s unusual mastery of this refined medium.


BEYOND SOCIETY: FAMILY AND SELF-PORTRAITS

Van Dyck used portraiture to represent the very pinnacle of contemporary society, but it also provided him with a vehicle to explore intimate relationships and his own identity. The exhibition will include portraits of 




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Mary, Lady van Dyck, née Ruthven, ca. 1640 Oil on canvas Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid

Van Dyck’s wife, Mary, 






Van Dyck, Margaret Lemon, ca. 1638, private collection, New York


as well as the woman believed to have been his mistress, the courtesan Margaret Lemon. Lemon appears in three-quarter profile, delicately touching the fabric at her shoulder in a gesture of refinement that would fascinate subsequent generations of artists. The painting, long considered lost but now in a New York private collection, inspired a spate of imitations during the seventeenth century. 

Van Dyck was an avid self-portraitist throughout his career, and four of his self-portraits will be included in the exhibition. 


 

Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Self-Portrait, ca. 1613–15 Oil on panel Gemäldegalerie der Akademie der bildenden Künste, Vienna



Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Self-Portrait, ca. 1620–21 Oil on canvas The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Jules Bache Collection, 1949


In the earliest of these, executed about 1613–15, an adolescent Van Dyck turns his head to study his own likeness. His piercing stare and the boldness of his brushwork presaged a career that would prove seminal for the history of European painting. Visitors to Van Dyck: The Anatomy of Portraiture will have an unprecedented chance to immerse themselves in that achievement.

PUBLICATION




A landmark volume accompanies the exhibition, providing a comprehensive survey of the portrait drawings, paintings, and prints of Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641), one of the most celebrated portraitists of all time. Written by Stijn Alsteens and Adam Eaker with contributions by An Van Camp, Ashmolean Museum; Xavier F. Salomon, The Frick Collection; and Bert Watteeuw, Rubenianum, Antwerp; the book showcases the full range of Van Dyck’s fascinating international career and makes a compelling case for the distinctiveness and importance of his work. Published by Yale University Press in association with The Frick Collection, 9 ½ x 11 inches, 267 illustrations.

More images from the exhibition:




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Prince William of Orange and Mary, Princess Royal, 1641 Oil on canvas Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Pomponne II de Bellièvre, ca. 1637–40 Oil on canvas Seattle Art Museum


 Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) James Stanley, Lord Strange, Later Seventh Earl of Derby, with His Wife, Charlotte, and Their Daughter, ca. 1636 Oil on canvas The Frick Collection; Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb
·          


Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) John Suckling, ca. 1638 Oil on canvas The Frick Collection; Henry Clay Frick Bequest Photo: Michael Bodycomb




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Nicolaes Rockox, 1636 Oil on panel Private collection\

·         Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Adriaen Brouwer, ca. 1634 Oil on panel The Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry, KBE, Boughton House, Northamptonshire



·         Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Portrait Study of a Man on Horseback with His Groom, 1620– 21 (or 1628–32?) Pen and brown ink The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Gift of Harold K. Hochschild




·         Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) François Langlois Playing a Musette, 1641 (?) Black chalk, heightened with white chalk, on buff paper Frits Lugt Collection, Fondation Custodia, Paris




Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Inigo Jones, 1632–36 Black chalk, pen and brown ink, squared for transfer in black chalk; laid down The Duke of Devonshire and the Trustees of the Chatsworth Settlement, Chatsworth, Derbyshire




·         Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Self-Portrait, ca. 1627–35 Etching (first state) The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge



·         Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) Lucas Vorsterman, ca. 1631 (?) Etching (first state) The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge





One of the most important loans in the exhibition was painted during this period: Van Dyck’s 1623 portrait of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, from the Galleria Palatina at the Palazzo Pitti in Florence.. In the Baroque period, Van Dyck's depiction of Bentivogliowas much emulated and became the benchmark for any portrait of a prince of the Church. Its exclusive trip to the Frick marks only the second time in the painting's history that it has left Italy.

In 1632, Van Dyck was appointed principal painter to Charles I of England. The portraits he produced over the following decade, before his premature death in 1641, are among his most celebrated and feature heavily in the exhibition. 









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