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México 1900–1950: Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, José Clemente Orozco, and the Avant-Garde

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Dallas Museum of Art
Diego Rivera, Juchitán River (Río Juchitán), 1953–1955, oil on canvas on wood, Mexico, INBA, Museo Nacional de Arte © 2017 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F.  / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


Diego Rivera, Juchitán River (Río Juchitán), 1953–1955, oil on canvas on wood, Mexico, INBA, Museo Nacional de Arte © 2017 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


This March, the Dallas Museum of Art, in collaboration with the Mexican Secretariat of Culture, hosts the exclusive U.S. presentation of México 1900–1950: Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, José Clemente Orozco, and the Avant-Garde, a sweeping survey featuring almost 200 works of painting, sculpture, photography, drawings, and films that document the country’s artistic Renaissance during the first half of the 20th century. Curated by Agustín Arteaga, the DMA’s new Eugene McDermott Director, and the result of a combined cultural endeavor between Mexico and France, this major traveling exhibition showcases the work of titans of Mexican Modernism alongside that of lesser-known pioneers, including a number of rarely seen works by female artists, to reveal the history and development of modern Mexico and its cultural identity.



Frida Kahlo, The Two Fridas (Las dos Fridas), 1939, oil on canvas, Mexico, INBA, collection Museo de Arte Moderno © 2017 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


On view from March 12 through July 16, 2017, México 1900–1950 will be enhanced in Dallas by the inclusion of key works from the Museum’s own exquisite collection of Mexican art, encompassing over 1,000 works that span across three millennia. The exhibition, which premiered in October 2016 at the Grand Palais in Paris to both popular and critical acclaim, is organized by the Secretaría de Cultura/Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes/Museo Nacional de Arte, México (MUNAL) and the Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais (Rmn-GP) of France.

“The DMA has a rich history of collecting and presenting Mexican art, and this exhibition offers our visitors the opportunity to explore in-depth the diverse and vibrant voices that distinguish Mexican art during the first half of the 20th century,” said Arteaga. “México 1900–1950 showcases not only the greats of Mexican art but also those who may have been eclipsed on the international level by names like Rivera and Kahlo. The exhibition helps broaden our understanding of what modern Mexican art means, and diversify the artistic narratives attributed to the country.”





José Clemente Orozco, The “Soldaderas” (Las soldaderas) , 1926, oil on canvas, Mexico, INBA, collection Museo de Arte Moderno © 2017 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SOMAAP, Mexico City


Organized thematically and presented in both English and Spanish, México 1900–1950 reveals how Mexican 20th-century art is both directly linked to the international avant-garde and distinguished by an incredible singularity, forged in part by the upheaval and transformation caused by the Mexican Revolution in the early 1900s. The exhibition begins with an introduction to the 19th-century imagery and traditions that pre-dated and, in turn, inspired Mexican Modernism, and includes work produced by Mexican artists living and working in Paris at the turn of the century. It then examines how the Revolution helped cement both a new national identity and a visual culture in Mexico, as embodied most famously by the murals of Rivera, Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros.


Rosa Rolanda, Self-Portrait (Autorretrato), 1952. Courtesy of El Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes Y Literatura

At the same time, México 1900–1950 goes beyond these mythic artists to reveal alternative narratives in Mexican art, including a significant emphasis on the work of female artists, who were supported by patrons like Dolores Olmedo and María Izquierdo. The thematic section “Strong Women” includes work by Frida Kahlo and her lesser-known but equally distinguished compatriots, including artists like Nahui Olin, photographer Tina Modotti, multidisciplinary artist Rosa Rolanda, and photographer Lola Álvarez Bravo, among others.



Diego Rivera, Río Juchitán, 1953-1955 - Museo Nacional de Arte, INBA Asignación al Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes a través del Sistema de Administración y Enajenación de Bienes de la Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público, 2015 ©Jorge Vertíz Gargoll

Representing the response of Mexican artists to art movements from around the world with a cosmopolitan vision, the exhibition also features the artwork of abstract sculptor German Cueto, Manuel Rodríguez Lozano, Abraham Ángel, Roberto Montenegro and Rufino Tamayo.

A final section reveals the cross-pollination specifically between American and Mexican artists and the resulting profound effect this had on art production in both countries.

The Dallas presentation, in partnership with the Latino Center for Leadership Development and with support from Patrón Tequila, gathers perhaps for the first time in decades mural-sized works by Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, Rufino Tamayo, Saturnino Herrán, Miguel Covarrubias, and Roberto Montenegro.

Other exhibition highlights include:


La futbolista (The Footballer) (1926) by Ángel Zárraga  

Autorretrato (el Coronelazo) (Self-Portrait (el Coronelazo)) (1945) by David Alfaro Siqueiros

La vendedora de frutas (The Fruit Vendor) (1951) by Olga Costa
 

Guitarra, canana y boz (Guitar, bandolier, and sickle) (1929) by Tina Modotti  


La pasarela (The Walkway) (n.d.) by Gabriel Fernández Ledesma  

La Dame ovale (Green Tea) (1942) by Leonora Carrington 

El Sueño de la Malinche (The Dream of La Malinche) (1939) by Antonio Ruiz
As part of the exhibition, highlights from the DMA collection include, among others:


  • Perro Itzcuintli conmigo  (Itzcuintli Dog with Me) (1933) by Frida Kahlo, an oil-on-canvas self-portrait of the artist with a hairless dog, a long-term loan to the Museum, was likely painted at the artist’s home in Mexico City and completed immediately before her solo debut in New York;

  • Adam y Eve Mexicanos (Mexican Adam & Eve) by Alfredo Ramos Martinez, the 1933 painting by the acknowledged “Father of Mexican Modernism” combines Ramos Martinez’s nationalist technical ability with an active response to a folkloric vision of Mexico shared by Mexican artists living in Southern California;

  • El Hombre (Man) by Rufino Tamayo, a portable mural of a man reaching toward a shooting star that was commissioned by the DMA in 1953 reflects the Museum’s early interest in and dedication to expanding its collection of Latin American paintings; and

  • Génesis, el Don de la Vida (Genesis, the Gift of Life), the iconic 60-foot-long glass mosaic mural by Miguel Covarrubias on permanent view at the DMA; originally created for another building in Dallas in 1954, the work is based on an ancient Mexican myth that four worlds preceded the world we currently live in, and incorporates imagery from numerous historic cultures in Central and North America.

The exhibition will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue, coordinated by the DMA and the Secretaría de Cultura/Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes. It is edited by Agustín Arteaga and available in both English and Spanish, a nod to the language of México 1900–1950 and a continuation of Dr. Arteaga’s initiatives to include multilingual materials across a variety of formats in DMA exhibitions. The book, translated from the original French is distributed by Yale University Press in English and by Ediciones El Viso in Spanish.


Andrew Wyeth: In Retrospect

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Brandywine River Museum of Art

June 24 through September 17, 2017 

 

Seattle Art Museum 

October 19, 2017 through January 15, 2018

Andrew Wyeth: In Retrospect, a once-in-a-lifetime exhibition of iconic works by this master painter, commemorates the centennial of the artist’s birth. It will include over 100 works spanning his entire career, from the early works that quickly established his reputation to his final painting, Goodbye, completed months before his death in 2009. The Brandywine is the only East Coast venue for the exhibition and the only location where visitors can immerse themselves in the world of Wyeth through tours of his studio and Kuerner Farm. Public tours of these locations add insight to his work offering an intimate look at the personal space of this very private artist and an opportunity to see the farm, which inspired nearly 1,000 works of art.

Wyeth’s life extended from World War I—a period that sparked the imagination of the artist as a young boy—to the new millennium. He once said that painting to him was “following a long thread leading like time to change and evolution.” This comprehensive retrospective follows that thread over the decades as it unwinds, progressing forward and at times altering course. The exhibition will offer new interpretations of his work, noting the significance, for example, of such influences as popular film and images of war, and on the relatively unstudied but numerous portrayals of African Americans from the Chadds Ford community. Visitors will also be given a view into Wyeth’s working process through studies rarely exhibited in the artist’s lifetime and through comparisons of Wyeth’s widely divergent approaches to watercolor—which inspired him to paint quickly and with abandon at times—and to tempera—a more controlled medium in which he built up paint slowly and deliberately.

Co-organized by the Brandywine River Museum of Art and the Seattle Art Museum, Andrew Wyeth in Retrospect examines four major periods in the artist’s career:

1935-1949: This section looks at Wyeth’s emerging presence in the art world—from the colorful, expressive watercolors of the Maine coast that reveal a debt to Winslow Homer and brought him to the attention of the art world in the late 1930s, to his early forays into the medium of tempera, and to the powerful, dramatic works of the mid to late 1940s.



Highlights include Lobsterman (1937), painted the summer before his first, momentous New York show;



his early temperas, such as Frog Hunters (1941)—which was featured in the landmark Museum of Modern Art show, Americans 1943: Realists and Magic Realists;



and the now iconic works—such as Winter 1946 (1946)—that were crafted after October 1945, when the death of his father caused a profound shift in Andrew Wyeth’s outlook on his art.

1950-1967: By 1950, Wyeth’s attention was focused on his own visceral responses to the landscape around his home in Chadds Ford, and Maine, most particularly the Christina Olson property and the coastline. Wyeth divided his time between these places. In Chadds Ford, he painted the Kuerner Farm (now part of the Brandywine River Museum of Art), which was long at the center of Wyeth’s world there and forever linked in his mind to the nearby railroad crossing where his father, N.C. Wyeth, had met a tragic death. He also painted friends who were the last of the Black community that had been established in Chadds Ford during the Civil War. In Maine, Wyeth expressed his compelling emotional connection to the siblings Christina and Alvaro Olson and their house and property in Cushing.


Significant works from this period include  




Northern Point (1950);


Miss Olson (1952);



 and Spring Fed (1967).


Examples of Wyeth’s extensive studies in pencil and watercolor of his African American subjects



Tom Clark,



Adam Johnson, and



Willard Snowden (The Drifter, 1967), are also included.

1968-1988: By now one of America’s most famous artists, in 1968 Wyeth began to explore the realm of erotic art. This is the period that saw his first extended series of nudes, of the adolescent Siri Erickson in Maine and of Helga Testorf in Chadds Ford. The paintings of Helga, famously kept secret by the artist until the mid-1980s, when their revelation created a national sensation, have occupied an outsize place in the narrative of Wyeth’s multi-decade career. The exhibition will show that while he was working on these nude subjects, he also painted for public view some of his most psychologically complex, symbolically rich, and compositionally ambitious works. Highlights include the now iconic paintings focused on his neighbors, the Kuerners: examples are  



Evening at Kuerners (1970);  



The Kuerners (1971);



and Spring (1979).

1989-2009: Beginning in 1989, Wyeth’s work became particularly self-reflective as he looked backward—partly in response to the critical backlash he experienced from the revelation of the Helga paintings. His late works are often infused with mystery and a surreal quality, recalling his earliest work and at times, in fact, directly referencing it.



Highlights include the large tempera Snow Hill (1989), filled with autobiographical allusions,


andGoodbye (2008), a painting completed just months before his death that has not been widely seen or published.



The catalogue accompanying the exhibition will be co-published by Yale University Press, the Brandywine River Museum of Art and the Seattle Art Museum. It will provide a full visual document of the works in the exhibition, as well as lay out the first detailed timeline of Wyeth’s career. In addition to Patricia Junker’s insightful contextual analysis of the four periods described above, the catalogue will include seven provocative essays on key aspects of Wyeth’s work by scholars from both the United States and Japan. The catalogue is intended to be a foundation for subsequent Wyeth studies.

The co-curators for the exhibition are Audrey Lewis, Curator, Brandywine River Museum of Art, and Patricia Junker, the Ann M. Barwick Curator of American Art at the Seattle Art Museum. The exhibition will be on view at the Seattle Art Museum from October 19, 2017 through January 15, 2018.

May 15, Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale

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Pablo Picasso. Femme assise, robe bleue. Oil on canvas. Painted on 25 October 1939. Estimate: $35,000,000-50,000,000.
On May 15, Christie’s will offer Femme assise, robe bleue by Pablo Picasso as a highlight of its Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale (Estimate: $35,000,000-50,000,000). Painted on 25 October 1939, Femme assise, robe bleue is a searing portrait of Picasso’s lover, Dora Maar. Painted on the artist's birthday just after the beginning of the World War II, the work is filled with the unique character, distortions and tension that mark Picasso’s greatest portraits of Dora; at the same time, there is a tender sensuality present in the organic, curvaceous forms of the face which provides some insight into their relationship. This picture was formerly owned by G. David Thompson, to whom the great curator and art historian Alfred H. Barr, Jr. referred as, 'one of the great collectors of the art of our time.' (A.H. Barr, Jr., 'Foreword', auction catalogue, Parke-Bernet, New York, 1966, n.p.).

Giovanna Bertazzoni, Deputy Chairman, Impressionist and Modern Art, remarked,  

Femme assise, robe bleue is an extraordinary portrait of Picasso’s great Muse and love, Dora Maar. It exhibits all of the most exhilarating qualities that Dora brought out in Picasso’s work: the striking palette, ornate headwear, and remarkable complexity conveyed by Dora’s distorted features. The rich, thick twirls of oil depicting the mass of her hair (which Picasso was mesmerised by) and the shapes of her hat convey ‎the impetus and passion at the core of this portrait. We are bringing Femme assise, robe bleue to the market at a time when the demand for Picasso’s portraits of one of his greatest subjects, Dora Maar, is at an all-time high. The canvas is a powerful example of Picasso’s creative imagination and the passion which Dora inspired in him.”
Francis Outred, Chairman and Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art, EMERI continued:  

Femme assise, robe bleue is a timeless icon of artist and muse which speaks to collectors across the centuries and continents.  Coming from a major European collection, the picture holds within it an incredible story.  It originally belonged to Picasso’s dealer, Paul Rosenberg but was confiscated in 1940 soon after its creation.  Later in the War it was intended to be transported to Germany but was famously intercepted and captured by members of the French Resistance, an event immortalised, albeit in fictional form, in the 1966 movie The Train, starring Burt Lancaster and Jeanne Moreau. In real life, one of the people who helped to sabotage the National Socialists’ attempt to remove countless artworks from France towards the end of the war was in fact Alexandre Rosenberg. The son of Paul Rosenberg, he had enlisted with the Free French Forces after the invasion of France in 1940.  The painting was subsequently owned by the Pittsburgh steel magnate and legendary collector, George David Thompson, from whose collection many works now grace the walls of museums in the United States and Europe.  We fully expect the romance and power of this painting and its remarkable story to capture the hearts and minds of our global collectors of masterpieces from Old Masters to Contemporary, this May.”

Dora Maar was one of Picasso's most important Muses. His affair with Dora came in the latter years of his relationship with Marie-Thérèse Walter. Marie-Thérèse had been young, blond and athletic, with a sunny disposition and a sweet character; Picasso's time with her had resulted in flowing, sensual images. Dora was a marked contrast, as is demonstrated by Femme assise, robe bleue: a complex, troubled character, intellectual and creative, a photographer and an artist in her own right. She was a sparring partner for Picasso, a challenging voice, having already been an established figure in Surreal circles by the time the pair were introduced.

Picasso often presented Dora with her signature hats that she often sported, a quality that distinguishes her among Picasso’s muses at first glance. Certainly in Femme assise, robe bleue the hat is present and correct, a striped purple confection with what appears to be a green feather or foliage of some sort. These hats often add a playful air to Picasso's paintings of Dora. They also serve as a counterbalance to the severity with which he presented her features, as is the case in the shifting, vulnerable flesh of Femme assise, robe bleue. Some critics have linked the pictures of Dora specifically to tension caused by the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War. However, it appears that Picasso, whose paintings often functioned as a barometer for his own state of mind, had found a Muse who was perfectly suited to his tense depictions of that period. It was both Dora's personality and a wider sense of unease at the situation in the world that Picasso managed to express in these bracing paintings.


On May 15, Christie’s will also offer Property from the Collection of Greta Garbo in its Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art, including prime examples from artists including Jan Alexej Von Jawlensky, Chaim Soutine and Robert Delaunay. In the history of cinema, few individuals remain as enigmatic and iconic as the actress Greta Garbo. “Of all the stars who have ever fired the imaginations of audiences,” film historian Ephraim Katz wrote, “none has quite projected a magnetism and a mystique equal to [hers].”

Derek Reisfield, Greta Garbo’s great nephew, remarked:  

“Greta Garbo had a real love of art and paintings, and she was very passionate about certain artists and pictures. She was particularly enamored with these three canvases, which offer a particularly modern representation of women, especially for their time. This was a concept that that really resonated with her. Another factor that drove her collecting tastes was color. She was absolutely entranced by the vibrancy of the Delaunay. It was the central focal point of her living room in New York, and all of the furniture that she chose to surround the canvas played into its incredible colors. In essence, when we talk about Garbo we call her the first ‘modern woman,’ and I think that these three works speak to both her fundamental strength and striking aesthetic.

Much of the public’s fascination with Garbo stemmed from the actress’s successful evasion of the Hollywood publicity machine. From her earliest years in film to her death in 1990, Garbo granted few interviews, declined to sign autographs, and avoided public functions such as the Academy Awards. After retiring from cinema at just thirty-five years old, the actress transitioned to a life dedicated to fine art, scholarship, and the many friends she held dear. From the 1940s, Garbo began to assemble a remarkable private collection of painting, sculpture, works on paper, and decorative art. For those fortunate enough to be welcomed into the actress’s wood-paneled Manhattan residence, the ‘real’ Garbo would be revealed: a vivacious, quick-witted woman who lived each day surrounded by beauty.

Through both personal erudition and friendships with luminaries such as the Barnes Foundation’s visionary founder Albert Barnes, and Alfred Barr, the Museum of Modern Art’s first director, Garbo steadily acquired works by a range of artists. Dynamically composed in brilliant hues, the collection was largely hidden from public view—a treasure to be absorbed through intimate contemplation and conversation.

The evening sale of Impressionist and Modern art will encompass three canvases that exemplify Garbo’s sophisticated taste and proclivity for dazzling color.


Robert Delaunay, La femme à l’ombrelle ou La Parisienne, oil on canvas, 48 3/8 x 35 1/2 in. (122.8 x 90.2 cm.), Painted in Paris, 1913. Estimate: $4-7million
These works include Robert Delaunay’s La femme à l’ombrelle ou La Parisienne, 1913 (estimate: $4-7million) ;

Chaïm Soutine’s Femme à la poupée, 1923-1924. Estimate: $3.5-4.5million

Chaïm Soutine’s Femme à la poupée, 1923-1924 (estimate: $3.5-4.5million),

 
Alexej von Jawlensky (1864-1941), Das blasse Mädchen mit grauen Zopfen, signed ‘A. Jawlensky’ (lower left) and signed again 'A. Jawlensky' (upper left), oil over pencil on linen-finish paper laid down on Masonite, 25 x 19 1/2 in. (63.5 x 49.5 cm.), Painted circa 1916, Estimate $1-1.5M

and Alexej von Jawlensky’s Das blasse Mädchen mit Grauen Zopfen, 1916 (estimate $1-1.5million)

Garbo’s grandniece, Gray Reisfield Horan, recalled her aunt’s profound love for the collection. “What are they talking about?” she would ask visitors about the pictures. “What do they say to each other?” It was a tremendously personal assemblage, one the actress arranged and re-hung with each new purchase. Horan described the image Garbo sitting each night in front of her favorite paintings, “enjoying her evening scotch and a Nat Sherman cigarettello… held so elegantly with her gemstone encrusted Van Cleef & Arpels holder.”

In many ways, the collection both reflected and rebutted Garbo’s illustrious career: suffused with undeniable visual power, its boldness of color stood in contrast with the argent mystique of early Hollywood. “Color,” Horan recalled of her aunt’s acquisitions, “was always the essential component…. The works meshed and flowed in a wondrous explosion of enveloping hues…. Nothing was black and white.” Garbo herself, mesmerized by Delaunay’s vibrant La femme à l’ombrelle, would often remark of the canvas, “It makes a dour Swede happy.” If Garbo managed to enchant audiences via movement and gaze, so did the artists in her collection similarly capture the viewer through their pioneering use of brushwork and palette. “Color,” she enthused, “is just the starting point. There is so much more.”
Christie’s will also present works formerly from The Collection of Hunt Henderson, which comprises one of the earliest important groupings of Impressionist & Post-Impressionist Art privately held in the Southern region of the United States.

Thoughtfully assembled in New Orleans during the opening years of the twentieth century, a large portion of works have remained in the family’s collection since 1913. At that time, New Orleans was an epicenter of culture, more artistically engaged than any other city in the American South, owing to its well-established cosmopolitanism and its historical and cultural ties to France. Yet the city had only one art collector of truly national standing – the sugar magnate Hunt Henderson. The resulting collection is a world-class assemblage of avant-garde art, from Impressionism through early modernism, with the selection featured in the spring season sales to encompass works by Paul Cézanne, Honoré Daumier, Edgar Degas, Raoul Dufy, Paul Gauguin, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renior, and James McNeil Whistler expected to realize in excess of $23 million.


Claude Monet (1840-1926), La route de Vétheuil, effet de neige, oil on canvas, 24 1/8 x 32 1/8 in. Painted in 1879.
Estimate: $10,000,000-15,000,000

Leading the collection is Claude Monet’s, La route de Vétheuil, effet de neige, painted in 1879 (estimate: $10,000,000-15,000,000). Monet painted this exquisitely subtle and delicate view of Vétheuil under heavy snow in 1879, during his first full year living in the rural hamlet about sixty kilometers northwest of Paris. This canvas is the first in a sequence of three painted from approximately the same vantage point, exploring the changes in the winter landscape over a period of days. The three years spent at Vétheuil represent a decisive moment of artistic reassessment for the Impressionist painter. It was here that Monet abandoned scenes of modern life and leisure that had dominated his earlier work and began to focus on capturing the fleeting aspects of nature, employing a nascent serial technique that laid the groundwork for his most important later production.


Paul Cézanne (1839–1906), La côte Saint-Denis à Pointoise, oil on canvas, 25 3/4 x 21 3/8 in. Painted circa 1877.
Estimate: $5,000,000-7,000,000
Also on offer will be an exemplary canvas by Paul Cézanne, La côte Saint-Denis à Pontoise, painted circa 1877 (estimate: $5,000,000-7,000,000). This landscape, which Cézanne painted during a visit with Pissarro at Pontoise, bears witness to the extraordinary creative partnership between the artist and his Impressionist mentor. Pissarro produced a view of the identical motif in the same year, the two artists very possibly setting up their easels side-by-side. The paintings both depict a cluster of red- and blue-roofed houses on the rue Vieille-de-l’Hermitage, just a short walk from Pissarro’s home. Equally significant, however, are the differences between the two artists’ interpretations of their shared motif. While Pissarro continued to work within the Impressionist idiom, Cézanne had already begun to experiment with an increasingly abstract construction of the landscape, transmuting the vagaries of the natural world into the forms of an ideal order.

Rubens and Rembrandt

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National Gallery, London
22 March – 16 July 2017

Compare two great masters of the 17th century, profoundly different in style and approach yet united in their genius

Peter Paul Rubens and Rembrandt van Rijn are two of the most revered artists of Northern Europe; each had enormous impact on the art of their own time and on the generations that followed, yet their individual styles and approaches differed immensely.

The suave, erudite artist and diplomat Rubens, a native of Antwerp, was the dominant force in Flemish art of his generation, who found success among prestigious patrons across Europe.

In contrast, in Leiden and Amsterdam, Rembrandt forged a bold and independent path that often went against prevailing taste. Choosing to focus on his close surroundings and to explore the depths of human emotion, he rarely, if ever, traveled beyond the Dutch border.

This special display of selected works by the two artists – among the most represented in the National Gallery Collection – provides an opportunity to absorb the depth and diversity of their work, and to recognise the individual character of these giants of northern European Baroque.




Self Portrait at the Age of 34
Rembrandt
1640    The National Gallery, London




Portrait of Aechje Claesdr,
Rembrandt
© The National Gallery, London    NG775    1634 Oil on oak 71.1 x 55.9 cm



Belshazzar’s Feast, Rembrandt
© The National Gallery, London    NG6350    Oil on canvas 167.6 x 209.2 cm



Self Portrait at the Age of 63
Rembrandt
1669    © The National Gallery, London The National Gallery, London.



Saskia van Uylenburgh in Arcadian Costume, Rembrandt
© The National Gallery, London    NG4930    Oil on canvas 123.5 x 97.5 cm   
1635    The National Gallery, London



Portrait of Susanna Lunden(?) ('Le Chapeau de Paille'), Peter Paul Rubens
© The National Gallery, London    NG852    Oil on oak 79 x 54.6 cm  
Probably 1622-5    The National Gallery, London



The Judgment of Paris, Peter Paul Rubens
© The National Gallery, London    NG194    Oil on oak 144.8 x 193.7 cm   
Probably 1632-5    The National Gallery, London


Samson and Delilah, Peter Paul Rubens
© The National Gallery, London    NG6461    Oil on wood 185 x 205 cm   
about 1609-10    The National Gallery, London



Portrait of Ludovicus Nonnius, Peter Paul Rubens
© The National Gallery, London    NG6393    Oil on wood 124.4 x 92 cm   
Peter Paul Rubens
about 1627 The National Gallery, London

THE WOMAN QUESTION Klimt, Schiele, and Kokoschka

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Galerie St. Etienne
March 14—June 30, 2017


THE WOMAN QUESTION: Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka, on view at Galerie St. Etienne, March 14 - June 30, 2017, explores three Austrian masters of Modernism and their shared fixation on the female body. The artists’ works reflect turn-of-the-century Vienna’s preoccupation with gender relations, which at the time were undergoing a radical transformation. More than 65 paintings, watercolors and drawings reveal how the three artists probed and defined modern sexual identity.

Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), Egon Schiele (1890-1918), and Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980) each approached what was then commonly referred to as the “woman question” in slightly different, albeit overlapping, ways. The exhibitionfocuses on four principal subjects: the formal portrait, the nude, the couple, and the mother. Klimt’s sensuous, flattering drawings of women contrast with the contorted bodies depicted by Kokoschka. Schiele’s nudes were so provocative that some could not, at the time, be publically exhibited.

Many of the works in THE WOMAN QUESTION were part of a major exhibition at Vienna’s Belvedere Museum that was curated by Jane Kallir, co-director of Galerie St. Etienne. 

The exhibition, The Women of Klimt, Schiele andKokoschka, which had a four-month run ending February 28, 2016, was one of the most popular shows in the Belvedere’s history.


In turn-of-the-century Vienna, females were viewed as closer to nature and hence more inherently “primitive” than males. Prompted by Darwin’s theories, men hypothesized that allowing women to have influence or power outside the home would lead to a dangerous “devolution” of the human species. Gustav Klimt repeatedly depicted women as amphibious creatures, as in Moving Water, 1898, an oil on canvas painting presented in THE WOMAN QUESTION. The wanton sexuality of Klimt’s nudes symbolizes not liberation but inequality.

Schiele’s nudes and semi-nudes are, arguably, the first modern women in art. Only 20 years old when he executed his first mature work, he had an adolescent’s fascination with and fear of the opposite sex. He was one of the few male artists to openly acknowledge the power of female sexuality, in the process granting his models a rare aura of autonomy. 




Egon Schiele, Reclining Woman with Green Stockings, 1917, gouache and black crayon on paper. 11 1/2” x 18 1/8"

The subject in Reclining Woman with Green Stockings, 1917, a gouache and black crayon work on paper on view during the exhibition, owns her sexuality, takes pride in her seductive body, and is empowered by her allure. 


Another highlight of THE WOMAN QUESTION is Pietà - "It is Enough," 1914, which depicts one of the most famous love affairs in the history of modern art: the ultimately doomed relationship between Oskar Kokoschka and Alma Mahler, widow of the composer Gustav Mahler. Though their passion was, in the beginning, mutual, Alma was terrorized by Oskar’s irrational jealousy and attempts to control her. When, after two-and-a-half tumultuous years, she ended the affair, the artist memorialized the event in a series of lithographs based on a Bach cantata, “O Eternity - Thou Word of Thunder” (“O Ewigkeit - Du Donnerwort”). Pieta is a charcoal on paper study for the final plate, number 11 from the cycle, and portrays Kokoschka as the dead Christ and Mahler as the Virgin Mary.

Galerie St. Etienne’s relationship with Klimt, Schiele, and Kokoschka goes back to Austria in the early 1920s. All three artists were represented by Neue Galerie, founded in Vienna by Otto Kallir, Jane Kallir’s grandfather. Soon after the Nazi invasion of Austria, Otto arrived in New York City with a small inventory in tow, eager to introduce these artists to America. He spent a lifetime nurturing their reputations with exhibitions, publications, sales, and donations to America’s top museums. Jane, along with Otto’s longtime assistant, Hildegard Bachert, has continued to specialize in Austrian Expressionism. Jane Kallir is the author of the catalogue raisonné, Egon Schiele: The Complete Works, first published in 1990 and revised in 1998.

Background
Around the turn of the 20th century, the traditional relationship between the sexes was challenged by a series of sweeping social, economic, and philosophical changes. Vienna was ground zero for the exploration of human sexuality, a prime subject for psychologists like Sigmund Freud and writers such as Arthur Schnitzler. Visual artists, too, naturally responded to this new interest in sexuality.  The incipient move toward gender parity provoked vehement counter-arguments on the part of popular theorists such as Otto Weininger. On the other hand, to the extent that both men and women wished to escape from the confining moral taboos of the 19th century, sexual liberation may be viewed as a shared goal. The more forthright acknowledgment of male and female sexual desire sent thrills and chills through early 20th-century Austrian art, infusing the work of Klimt, Schiele and Kokoschka with a mix of terror and exhilaration.   

About Galerie St. Etienne
Galerie St. Etienne, located at 24 West 57th Street in New York City, is the oldest gallery in the United States specializing in Expressionism and Self-Taught artists. It was established in 1939 by Otto Kallir, previously founder of the Neue Galerie in Vienna, a principal exponent of German and Austrian modernism. Galerie St. Etienne provided America with a first look at the art of Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka, Alfred Kubin, Paula Modersohn-Becker and Egon Schiele. Today, its venerable standing continues under the direction of Jane Kallir, Otto’s granddaughter, and Hildegard Bachert, whose scholarship and expertise extend around the world. Jane Kallir recently curated the enormously popular show The Women of Klimt, Schiele and Kokoschka at the Belvedere Museum in Vienna. Galerie St. Etienne participates in the Winter Antiques Show, The ADAA Art Show, Art Basel, and the IFPDA Print Fair.

 







Egon Schiele, Elizabeth Lederer Seated with Hands Folded, 1913, gouache and pencil on paper, 19” x 12 3/4"



 Gustav Klimt, Moving Water, 1898. Oil on canvas, 21" x 26 1/8"






Oskar Kokoschka, Girl on Red Sofa, 1921, watercolor on machine-made Bütten paper, 26” x 19 ½”


Oskar Kokoschka, Portrait of a Woman with Hand at Chin, c. 1920-22, Charcoal on buff paper. Signed, lower right, and dedicated to Carl Moll, upper right. 27 3/4" x 19 5/8"




Egon Schiele, Crouching Woman, 1914, gouache and pencil on paper, 12 1/8" x 17 3/8"

Christie’s Old Masters Evening Sale, 6 July 2017

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Christie’s Classic Week will present a remarkable collection of Tuscan Renaissance Cassone panels as part of the Old Masters Evening Sale on 6 July 2017. The collection, comprising nine panels in total, is incredibly rare to the market.  Typically commissioned to commemorate marriages of the Florentine or Sienese elite until the mid-fifteenth century, this comprehensive collection of cassoni represent the artistic development of this important Italian tradition including early examples of the genre by the Master of Charles III of Durazzo (active circa 1382) to some of the finest cassone painters of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries including Giovanni Toscani and Lo Scheggia. Ahead of the auction, part of the collection will be exhibited in Milan (30 & 31 March), New York (22-26 April) and Hong Kong Hong Kong (26-29 May).

Giovanni Toscani (Florence 1370/80–1430). Scenes from the tale of Ginevra and Bernabò of Genoa and Ambrogiuolo of Piacenza (Boccaccio, Decameron): a cassone front, tempera and gold on panel. Estimate: £700,000–1,000,000.
Highlighting the collection is an exceptional and unusually well-preserved cassone front by Giovanni Toscani (1370/80–1430). The panel has been recognised as the pendant to that in the National Gallery of Scotland and depicts Scenes from the tale of Ginevra and Bernabò of Genoa and Ambrogiuolo of Piacenza (estimate: £700,000–1,000,000), a story illustrating the triumphs of female virtue. As the story of Ginerva had not been represented by earlier illuminators, Toscani was not constrained by any traditional iconography.

Giovanni Di Ser Giovanni Guidi, Lo Scheggia (1406–1486). Trajan and the Widow. Estimate: £400,000–600,000.
The collection also includes a panel by Giovanni Di Ser Giovanni Guidi, Lo Scheggia (1406–1486) depicting Trajan and the Widow (estimate: £400,000–600,000). Lo Scheggia was the younger brother of Masaccio, and his work and, in particular, skill for narrative earned him important commissions during his career including executing the desco da parto for the birth of Lorenzo de’ Medici in 1449.


Apollonio Di Giovanni (C. 1416–1465). The Triumph of Scipio Africanus. Estimate: £300,000–500,000.
The Triumph of Scipio Africanus (estimate: £300,000–500,000) by Apollonio Di Giovanni (C. 1416–1465), one of the most successful cassone painter of mid-quattrocento Florence, is another highlight of the collection. Scipio, the hero of republican Rome had an obvious appeal in ostensibly republican Florence; it is therefore unsurprising that five cassone fronts celebrating him by Apollonio are known. This panel is almost certainly the pendant to the Triumph of Caesar, formerly in the Faringdon collection.

Cassoni, literally translated as ‘large chests’, were amongst the most prestigious and luxurious objects made for wealthy patrons in Renaissance Italy and are today recognised for the exceptional artistry of their decoration and ornamentation. Usually commissioned in pairs and made to commemorate marriages of the city and court elite, cassoni were, until the mid-fifteenth century, frequently used as part of the bridal procession which accompanied the bride and her trousseau (carried in a cassone) from the house of her father to that of her husband. The use of arms and heraldry would publically announce the alliances of families and the extent of decoration could display the wealth and status of the patrons. In a more intimate context, the painted panels which usually decorated the front and sides of these chests were frequently selected to portray scenes with a moralising message by using classical, historical and literary subjects illustrating masculine valour and honour and feminine virtue.

Salvador Dalí: Surrealist and Classicist

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Fabergé Museum, Saint Petersburg (Russia)
1st April until 2nd July, 2017

The Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí announced that a new Dalí temporary exhibition opened at Fabergé Museum in Saint Petersburg (Russia). It’s devoted to his Surrealist and his Classical production. The show is on view from 1st April until 2nd July. It was previously seen at Palazzo Blu in Pisa, Italy, from 1st October 2016 until 19th February in a version adapted to the Italian audience.

Contents of the exhibition Salvador Dalí. Surrealist and Classicist
 
The exhibition emphasizes the different periods of the artistic career of Salvador Dalí, from Surrealism and Classicism to the importance of the Italian Renaissance in his work. It includes 145 works ranging from 1934 to 1982: 142 from the Dalí Foundation, one from the Tate Modern in London and two works from Russian private collections. The Foundation loans 22 paintings, 100 photogravures of The Divine Comedy and 20 original illustrations for The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini. During the show, the documentary Dalí, the last masterpiece will be displayed, a film produced by the Foundation and executed by DocDoc Films that will allow the public to delve into Dalí’s life and work. Surrealism

The exhibition begins with a selection of surrealist oil paintings (1934-1937) that include elements arranged in an enigmatic landscape of the Empordà region. Through his paranoiac-critical method, Dalí represents his obsessions in the landscape, a landscape that evokes childhood memories, ghostly spectrums, characters hidden or revealed. The landscape is a leitmotif in the work of Dali, an ultra-local element to which Dalí gives a universal value. A good example of which is the painting Enigmatic Elements in a Landscape, included in the show.

Since he was expelled from the Surrealist group at the beginning of the 40s, the Catalan painter adopts a classicist defence for Renaissance. Dalí’s intellectual interests continue to expand like those of a Renaissance humanist. It is in this context that the illustrations for The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini were executed, one of the most influential artists of the Florentine Renaissance whom Dalí liked for his rebel and controversial attitude. The illustrations for The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri were also produced in this period.

The core of the exhibition focuses on unfamiliar oil paintings, four of which are very unknown:



Untitled. After Michelangelo’s “Crouching Boy”;



Untitled. Moses after Michelangelo’s "Tomb of Pope Julius II”,



Untitled. Christ after Michelangelo‘s "The Pietà Palestrina";



Untitled. Giuliano de 'Medici after Michelangelo’s "Tomb of Giuliano de Medici".

These are part of his latest creations of the 80s, when the artist reinterprets Michelangelo’s masterpieces.

By presenting these works for the first time as a stylistic and thematic whole, we are allowed to investigate Dalí’s creative process at that particular moment in terms of technique and style, a period that is largely unknown. We see how his concerns are translated into artistic expression. He is basically in a desperate search for immortality. By reworking Michelangelo’s pieces, Dalí shows, on the one hand, a huge respect for tradition and the past and he, on the other hand, warns about the need to overcome them through constant innovation directed towards contemporaneity.

Dalí and Michelangelo 
 
The set of paintings inspired by Michelangelo’s creations corresponds to the last period of Dalí. They are works created throughout 1982, shortly before and shortly after the death of his wife and muse Gala, which occurred in June that year. Gala’s true name was Elena Diakonova Ivanovna. Born in Kazan, she was a woman of great mystery and intuition, able to recognize the artistic and creative genius and associated with many intellectuals and artists. Her influence can be seen in the signature of many of Dalí’s works since he signs with both names.

Dalí reinterprets Michelangelos’s characters: he takes them out of their original iconographic context and represents them isolated, providing them with their own strength. Dalí gets inspiration from Michelangelo’s sculptures and paintings and more precisely from the tension of titanic bodies with a lot of muscular strength and colossal structure.

With these works, the artist invites us to take a unique journey in search of his own self, his philosophical, artistic and humanist DNA.

The study on the technical procedures and working methods of the artist confirms that the execution of this set of paintings was fast. In over a year, Dalí painted about 25 works inspired by Michelangelo’s themes, plus 13 others by Velázquez. Antoni Pitxot’s, former director of the Dalí Theatre-Museum, opinion is very accurate, when he describes this particular moment of Dalí in terms of his vitality and creativity: "it’s pure expression, pure communication."

The Divine Comedy 











The Divine Comedy suite consists of 100 color wood engravings created between 1960 and 1964 after 100 watercolors painted by Salvador Dali between 1951 and 1960. More than 3,000 blocks were necessary to complete the engraving process.

In the early 1950’s Salvador Dali was invited by the Italian government to commemorate the birth of Dante, Italy’s most famous poet, by producing a series of illustrations for a full-text, deluxe edition of Dante’s masterpiece, the Divine Comedy. Ultimately, the illustrations were not well received by the Italians, as it was deemed inappropriate for a Spanish painter (rather than an Italian painter) to have illustrated the work of Italy’s greatest poet.

Even though the project was dropped in Italy, Dali and French publisher Joseph Foret continued to pursue publication of the Divine Comedy. Mr. Foret acted as broker between Salvador Dali and Les Heures Claires, a French editing and publishing house that ultimately took full charge of the project.

The Engraving Process

Working in conjunction with Salvador Dali, Raymond Jacquet, with his assistant Jean Taricco, created the blocks necessary for the engraving process. While frequently referred to as “wood” blocks, they were actually a resin-based matrix.

Salvador Dali directly supervised the production of the works and gave final approval for each of the finished engravings.

Once the project was complete, all of the blocks were destroyed. The engraving process required the block be cut, a single color applied, then printed to the substrate (e.g. paper, silk, etc.). The block was then cleaned and cut away for the next color.

As the engravings were made, the image was progressively “printed,” and the block was progressively destroyed. The process required great skill and resulted in works of spectacular beauty which cannot be reproduced in a manner that is not detectable as a reproduction, even to the casual observer.

The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini


More images
 
In 1945, Dalí was commissioned by publishing house Doubleday & Company to illustrate a new English edition of The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini. The technique of these illustrations is watercolour and ink on paper. The artist shows great admiration for Cellini and his skill in many artistic fields. Cellini, who was a sculptor, goldsmith and writer embodies the multidisciplinary artist whom Dalí aspired.

Frédéric Bazille and the Birth of Impressionism

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National Gallery of Art
April 9–July 9, 2017

Frédéric Bazille, "Portraits of the *** Family, called The Family Gathering", 1867, oil on canvas. Musée d'Orsay, Paris, purchased with the assistance of Marc Bazille, 1924


Frédéric Bazille, Portraits of the *** Family, called The Family Gathering, 1867
oil on canvas, Musée d'Orsay, Paris, purchased with the assistance of Marc Bazille, 1924

Frédéric Bazille (1841–1870) created paintings inspired by contemporary life that challenged the aesthetic conventions of his day and helped to lay the groundwork of impressionism. In celebration of the 175th anniversary of the artist's birth, Frédéric Bazille and the Birth of Impressionism brings together some 75 paintings that examine Bazille as a central figure of impressionism. The National Gallery of Art, which holds the largest group of Bazille's works outside of France, as well as important related impressionist paintings of the 1860s, is the sole American venue for the exhibition. The first major presentation of Bazille's work in America in 25 years, the exhibition is on view in the East Building from April 9 through July 9, 2017.

Bazille was actively engaged with the most significant pictorial issues of his era—the revival of the still-life form, realist landscapes, plein-air figural painting, and the modern nude. Drawing inspiration from the vibrant cultural life of Paris as well as from his native Provence, Bazille painted with a style that was distinctly his own.

"This exhibition shows Bazille's key role in the developments of French painting and provides new insight into this period of impressionism," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art, Washington. "The outstanding partnership between the National Gallery of Art, the Musée Fabre in Montpelier, and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris made it possible to undertake this new study of Bazille's work. We are delighted to reveal brand-new scientific examinations that offer new analyses, identifications, dates, and attributions."

The exhibition was organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington; the Musée Fabre, Montpellier; and the Musée d'Orsay, Paris.

Exhibition Highlights

Frédéric Bazille and the Birth of Impressionism is the most comprehensive retrospective of Bazille's career, featuring nearly three-quarters of his artistic output. Organized thematically, this exhibition juxtaposes works by Bazille with important works by the predecessors who inspired him—Théodore Rousseau, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, and Gustave Courbet—and by contemporaries such as Édouard Manet and Claude Monet with whom he was closely associated.

"Frédéric Bazille is such an extraordinary talent, though he still remains relatively unknown. This exhibition offers a rare opportunity to bring together the majority of the artist's work for the first time in almost 25 years," said Kimberly A. Jones, curator of 19th-century French paintings, National Gallery of Art. "They are remarkable paintings and people are going to be astonished by their quality and their vibrancy. It is such a pleasure to be able to introduce Bazille to a new generation of admirers."

The exhibition begins with his student works, self-portraits, still lifes, small portraits, and luminous landscapes painted in the forest of Fontainebleau and the coast of Normandy. Portraits of fellow artists are juxtaposed with interior scenes of Bazille's studio depicting the dynamic circle of avant-garde artists and writers to which he belonged. The fifth and sixth galleries explore Bazille's plein-air figural paintings, created while he was in Montpellier, and the male and female nude as subjects. The exhibition continues with a gallery dedicated to floral still-life paintings and concludes with a return to outdoors with seascapes painted in the south of France.

In preparation for this exhibition, the National Gallery of Art and the Centre de Recherche et de Restauration des Musées de France, Paris (C2RMF), performed extensive conservation and research on nearly half of the artist's known works. In 11 of those paintings, earlier compositions of fruit, flowers, or figural works were discovered underneath the surface of the visible painting. 

The conservation efforts revealed Young Woman at the Piano—Bazille's first submission to the Salon in 1866 and a work previously believed to have been lost—underneath Ruth and Boaz (1870), as well as a study of Renior's 1867 painting Diana the Huntress beneath The Studio on the Rue La Condamine (1869–1870).

Curators, Catalog, and Related Activities

The exhibition was organized by Kimberly A. Jones, curator of 19th-century French paintings, National Gallery of Art; Michel Hilaire, General Heritage Curator, director of the Musée Fabre, Montpellier; and Paul Perrin, curator of paintings, Musée d'Orsay, Paris.

Made possible in part thanks to the support of the American Friends of the Musée d'Orsay, the 300-page, fully illustrated exhibition catalog includes scholarly essays by Jones, Hilaire, and Perrin, a detailed chronology, maps, and a family tree. Published by Flammarion, the catalog is available in hardcover.





Frédéric Bazille
Soup Bowl Lids, 1864
oil on canvas
27 x 35 x 1.6 cm (10 5/8 x 13 3/4 x 5/8 in.)
framed: 41.5 x 49.7 x 5.5 cm (16 5/16 x 19 9/16 x 2 3/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
Reclining Nude, 1864
oil on canvas
unframed: 70.5 x 190.5 x 2.7 cm (27 3/4 x 75 x 1 1/16 in.)
framed: 88.5 x 199.5 x 8 cm (34 13/16 x 78 9/16 x 3 1/8 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
The Dog Rita, Asleep, 1864
oil on canvas
unframed: 38 x 46 cm (14 15/16 x 18 1/8 in.)
Private collection


Frédéric Bazille
The Scoter-Duck, 1864
oil on canvas
43 x 39 cm (16 15/16 x 15 3/8 in.)
framed: 72.5 x 63.5 x 11 cm (28 9/16 x 25 x 4 5/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
The Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine, copy after Veronese, 1863
oil on canvas
125 x 125 cm (49 3/16 x 49 3/16 in.)
framed: 174 x 174 x 30 cm (68 1/2 x 68 1/2 x 11 13/16 in.)
Commune de Beaune-la-Rolande



Frédéric Bazille
The Pink Dress, 1864
oil on canvas
147 x 110 cm (57 7/8 x 43 5/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, bequest of Marc Bazille, 1924




Frédéric Bazille
The Artist's Studio on the Rue de Furstenberg, 1865
oil on canvas
81.2 x 65 x 1.8 cm (31 15/16 x 25 9/16 x 11/16 in.)
framed: 98.5 x 82.5 x 6.5 cm (38 3/4 x 32 1/2 x 2 9/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
Self Portrait with Palette, 1865
oil on canvas
108.9 x 71.1 cm (42 7/8 x 28 in.)
framed: 135 x 80 cm (53 1/8 x 31 1/2 in.)
The Art Institute of Chicago, restricted gift of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Woods in memory of Mrs.Edward Harris Brewer


Frédéric Bazille
Self-Portrait with Detachable Collar, 1867-1868
oil on canvas
54 x 46 cm (21 1/4 x 18 1/8 in.)
framed: 74.3 x 66 x 7.62 cm (29 1/4 x 26 x 3 in.)
Lent by The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, The John R. Van Derlip Fund



Frédéric Bazille
The Beach at Sainte-Adresse, 1865
oil on canvas
58.4 x 140 cm (23 x 55 1/8 in.)
framed: 88.3 x 169.5 x 14.61 cm (34 3/4 x 66 3/4 x 5 3/4 in.)
High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia; Gift of the Forward Arts Foundation in honor of Frances
Floyd Cocke


Frédéric Bazille
Forest of Fontainebleau, 1865
oil on canvas
60 x 73 cm (23 5/8 x 28 3/4 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, gift of Mrs. Fantin-Latour, 1905





Frédéric Bazille
Landscape at Chailly, 1865
oil on canvas
81 x 100.3 cm (31 7/8 x 39 1/2 in.)
The Art Institute of Chicago, Charles H. and Mary F. S. Worcester Collection


Frédéric Bazille
Village Street, Chailly, 1865
oil on canvas
32.5 x 24.5 x 1.7 cm (12 13/16 x 9 5/8 x 11/16 in.)
framed: 47.5 x 39.5 x 4 cm (18 11/16 x 15 9/16 x 1 9/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole




Frédéric Bazille
The Improvised Field Hospital, 1865
oil on canvas
48 x 65 cm (18 7/8 x 25 9/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris



Frédéric Bazille
Two Herrings, 1864
oil on canvas
41 x 27.5 x 2.5 cm (16 1/8 x 10 13/16 x 1 in.)
framed: 55 x 42 x 7 cm (21 5/8 x 16 9/16 x 2 3/4 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
Still Life with Fish, 1866
oil on canvas
unframed: 62 x 81.3 cm (24 7/16 x 32 in.)
Detroit Institute of Arts, Purchased by the Founders Society, Robert H. Tannahill Foundation.Fund


Frédéric Bazille
Little Italian Street Singer, 1866
oil on canvas
131 x 98 x 3 cm (51 9/16 x 38 9/16 x 1 3/16 in.)
framed: 150 x 117 x 7.3 cm (59 1/16 x 46 1/16 x 2 7/8 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
The Terrace at Méric, 1867
oil on canvas
framed: 115.5 x 148.5 x 7.5 cm (45 1/2 x 58 7/16 x 2 15/16 in.)
unframed: 97 x 128 cm (38 3/16 x 50 3/8 in.)
Association des Amis du Petit Palais, Geneve


Frédéric Bazille
Young Woman with Lowered Eyes, 1868
oil on canvas
unframed: 46 x 38 cm (18 1/8 x 14 15/16 in.)
Private collection


Frédéric Bazille
A Studio on the Rue Visconti, 1867
oil on canvas
64.8 x 48.3 cm (25 1/2 x 19 in.)
framed: 87.2 x 70.8 x 10 cm (34 5/16 x 27 7/8 x 3 15/16 in.)
Virginia Museum of Fine Art, Richmond, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon




Frédéric Bazille
The Western Ramparts at Aigues-Mortes, 1867
oil on canvas
overall: 60 x 100 cm (23 5/8 x 39 3/8 in.)
framed: 78.7 x 116.2 x 7 cm (31 x 45 3/4 x 2 3/4 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon



Frédéric Bazille
Porte de la Reine at Aigues-Mortes, 1867
oil on canvas
80.6 x 99.7 cm (31 3/4 x 39 1/4 in.)
framed: 105.7 x 125.4 x 12.7 cm (41 5/8 x 49 3/8 x 5 in.)
Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Purchase, Gift of Raymonde Paul, in memory of her
brother, C. Michael Paul, by exchange, 1988




Frédéric Bazille
The Ramparts at Aigues-Mortes, 1867
oil on canvas
46 x 75.5 x 8.5 cm (18 1/8 x 29 3/4 x 3 3/8 in.)
framed: 67 x 76 x 12.5 cm (26 3/8 x 29 15/16 x 4 15/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
Oleanders, 1867
oil on canvas
55.2 x 91.4 cm (21 3/4 x 36 in.)
framed: 81.3 x 116.8 x 10.2 cm (32 x 46 x 4 in.)
Cincinnati Art Museum, Gift of Mark P. Herschede


 
Frédéric Bazille
Portraits of the *** Family, called The Family Gathering, 1867
oil on canvas
152 x 230 cm (59 13/16 x 90 9/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, purchased with the assistance of Marc Bazille, 1924



Frédéric Bazille
Still Life with Heron, 1867
oil on canvas
98 x 78 x 3 cm (38 9/16 x 30 11/16 x 1 3/16 in.)
framed: 116 x 97 x 10 cm (45 11/16 x 38 3/16 x 3 15/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole






Frédéric Bazille
View of the Village, 1868
oil on canvas
137.5 x 85.5 x 2.5 cm (54 1/8 x 33 11/16 x 1 in.)
framed: 157 x 107 x 8 cm (61 13/16 x 42 1/8 x 3 1/8 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
Fisherman with a Net, 1868
oil on canvas
137.8 x 86.6 cm (54 1/4 x 34 1/8 in.)
framed: 165.5 x 116 x 11 cm (65 3/16 x 45 11/16 x 4 5/16 in.)
weight: 60.186 lb. (27.3 kg)
Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck / Sammlung Rau für UNICEF


Frédéric Bazille
Studies for a Grape Harvest, 1868
oil on canvas
38 x 90 cm (14 15/16 x 35 7/16 in.)
framed: 52 x 106.5 cm (20 1/2 x 41 15/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
Pierre Auguste Renoir, 1868-1869
oil on canvas
61.2 x 50 cm (24 1/8 x 19 11/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, on loan from the National Fine Art Museum of Algiers


Frédéric Bazille
Portrait of Alphonse Tissié in Cavalryman's Uniform, 1868-1869
oil on canvas
61.5 x 50.5 x 4 cm (24 3/16 x 19 7/8 x 1 9/16 in.)
framed: 81.5 x 71.5 x 9.5 cm (32 1/16 x 28 1/8 x 3 3/4 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
Edmond Maître, 1869
oil on canvas
overall: 83.2 x 64 cm (32 3/4 x 25 3/16 in.)
framed: 109.2 x 90.2 x 8.9 cm (43 x 35 1/2 x 3 1/2 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon



Frédéric Bazille
Summer Scene (Bathers), 1869
oil on canvas
160 x 160.7 cm (63 x 63 1/4 in.)
framed: 192.1 x 192.4 x 12.4 cm (75 5/8 x 75 3/4 x 4 7/8 in.)
Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. F. Meynier de Salinelles



Frédéric Bazille
The Fortune-Teller, 1868
oil on canvas
unframed: 61 x 46 cm (24 x 18 1/8 in.)
Private collection



Frédéric Bazille
Édouard Blau, 1866
oil on canvas
overall: 59.5 x 43.2 cm (23 7/16 x 17 in.)
framed: 69.5 x 53 x 5.1 cm (27 3/8 x 20 7/8 x 2 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Chester Dale Collection


Frédéric Bazille
La Toilette, 1870
oil on canvas
130 x 128 x 2.7 cm (51 3/16 x 50 3/8 x 1 1/16 in.)
framed: 152.2 x 148.5 x 8.5 cm (59 15/16 x 58 7/16 x 3 3/8 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole




Frédéric Bazille
Bazille's Studio or The Studio on the Rue La Condamine, 1870
oil on canvas
98 x 128.5 cm (38 9/16 x 50 9/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, bequest of Marc Bazille, 1924


Frédéric Bazille
Flowers, 1869-1870
oil on canvas
63 x 48.5 x 3.3 cm (24 13/16 x 19 1/8 x 1 5/16 in.)
framed: 87.3 x 73.3 x 10 cm (34 3/8 x 28 7/8 x 3 15/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
Young Woman with Peonies, 1870
oil on canvas
overall: 60 x 75 cm (23 5/8 x 29 1/2 in.)
framed: 83.8 x 99.4 x 7.6 cm (33 x 39 1/8 x 3 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon


Frédéric Bazille
Young Woman with Peonies, 1870
oil on canvas
60.5 x 75.4 x 3.7 cm (23 13/16 x 29 11/16 x 1 7/16 in.)
framed: 83 x 97.5 x 10 cm (32 11/16 x 38 3/8 x 3 15/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Frédéric Bazille
Study for a Young Male Nude, 1870
oil on canvas
147.5 x 138 x 3.5 cm (58 1/16 x 54 5/16 x 1 3/8 in.)
framed: 168 x 159.5 x 9 cm (66 1/8 x 62 13/16 x 3 9/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Frédéric Bazille
Landscape on the Banks of Lez, 1870
oil on canvas
137.2 x 200.7 cm (54 x 79 in.)
framed: 168.3 x 232.4 x 10.2 cm (66 1/4 x 91 1/2 x 4 in.)



Frédéric Bazille
Ruth and Boaz, 1870
oil on canvas
137.5 x 202.8 x 4 cm (54 1/8 x 79 13/16 x 1 9/16 in.)
framed: 162.3 x 228 x 9 cm (63 7/8 x 89 3/4 x 3 9/16 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole


Paul Cézanne
Bather and Rocks, 1860-1866
oil on canvas
167.6 x 105.4 cm (66 x 41 1/2 in.)
framed: 196.2 x 133 x 8.9 cm (77 1/4 x 52 3/8 x 3 1/2 in.)
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA



Paul Cézanne
The Stove in the Studio, about 1865
oil on canvas
41 x 30 cm (16 1/8 x 11 13/16 in.)
framed: 59 x 45.7 x 9.5 cm (23 1/4 x 18 x 3 3/4 in.)
The National Gallery, London. Acquired from the estate of Mrs. Helen Chester Beatty under the
acceptance-in-lieu procedure, 1992.



Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
The Artist's Studio, c. 1868
oil on wood
overall: 61.8 x 40 cm (24 5/16 x 15 3/4 in.)
framed: 78.4 x 56.5 cm (30 7/8 x 22 1/4 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Widener Collection

Attributed to Eugène Delacroix
Corner of the Studio, between 1825 and 1850
oil on canvas
51 x 43.4 cm (20 1/16 x 17 1/16 in.)
framed: 71 x 64 cm (27 15/16 x 25 3/16 in.)
Musée du Louvre, Gift of the Société des Amis du Louvre, 1913


Paul Guigou
Washerwomen on the Banks of the Durance, 1866
oil on canvas
overall: 66 x 115 cm (26 x 45 1/4 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Chester Dale Fund

Edouard Manet
Eel and Red Mullet, 1864
oil on canvas
38 x 46.5 cm (14 15/16 x 18 5/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, gift of Dr. and Mrs. Albert Charpentier, 1951


Edouard Manet
Peony Stems and Pruning Shears, 1864
oil on canvas
56.6 x 46 cm (22 5/16 x 18 1/8 in.)
framed: 81.3 x 71.8 x 10.4 cm (32 x 28 1/4 x 4 1/8 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, legacy of Comte Isaac de Camondo, 1911



Claude Monet
The Beach at Honfleur, 1864
oil on canvas
60 x 81 cm (23 5/8 x 31 7/8 in.)
framed: 87 x 109.2 x 8.7 cm (34 1/4 x 43 x 3 7/16 in.)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of Mrs. Reese Hale Taylor




Claude Monet
Spring Flowers, 1864
oil on canvas
116.8 x 90.5 cm (46 x 35 5/8 in.)
framed: 144.5 x 117.2 x 12.1 cm (56 7/8 x 46 1/8 x 4 3/4 in.)
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of the Hanna Fund

Claude Monet
Portrait of Bazille at the Farm of Saint-Siméon, 1864
oil on panel
40.5 x 31.5 x 8.2 cm (15 15/16 x 12 3/8 x 3 1/4 in.)
framed: 66 x 57.8 x 11.7 cm (26 x 22 3/4 x 4 5/8 in.)
Musée Fabre, Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole



Claude Monet
Promenade (The Route to the Farm of Saint-Siméon), 1864
oil on canvas
81.6 x 46.4 cm (32 1/8 x 18 1/4 in.)
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo. Matsukata Collection


Claude Monet
Rue de la Bavole, Honfleur, c. 1864
oil on canvas
55.9 x 61 cm (22 x 24 in.)
framed: 76.8 x 83.2 x 11.4 cm (30 1/4 x 32 3/4 x 4 1/2 in.)
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Bequest of John T. Spaulding


Claude Monet
Bazille and Camille (Study for "Déjeuner sur l'Herbe"), 1865
oil on canvas
overall: 93 x 68.9 cm (36 5/8 x 27 1/8 in.)
framed: 121.9 x 98.4 x 10.7 cm (48 x 38 3/4 x 4 3/16 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Collection



Claude Monet
Women in the Garden, 1866
oil on canvas
255 x 205 cm (100 3/8 x 80 11/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris






Claude Monet
Sainte-Adresse, 1867
oil on canvas
overall: 57 x 80 cm (22 7/16 x 31 1/2 in.)
framed: 76.2 x 99.7 x 6.9 cm (30 x 39 1/4 x 2 11/16 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Catherine Gamble Curran and Family, in Honor ofthe 50th Anniversary of the National Gallery of Art

Berthe Morisot
The Harbor at Lorient, 1869
oil on canvas
overall: 43.5 x 73 cm (17 1/8 x 28 3/4 in.)
framed: 64.7 x 95.2 x 7.6 cm (25 1/2 x 37 1/2 x 3 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Collection



Auguste Renoir
Diana, 1867
oil on canvas
overall: 199.5 x 129.5 cm (78 9/16 x 51 in.)
framed: 222.6 x 159.1 cm (87 5/8 x 62 5/8 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, Chester Dale Collection


Auguste Renoir
Frédéric Bazille, 1867
oil on canvas
105 x 73.5 cm (41 5/16 x 28 15/16 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, on long-term loan at Musée Fabre/Montpellier, bequest of Marc Bazille,
1924



Auguste Renoir
Lise Sewing, c. 1867-1868
oil on canvas
56.52 x 46.36 cm (22 1/4 x 18 1/4 in.)
framed: 79.38 x 70.17 x 7.3 cm (31 1/4 x 27 5/8 x 2 7/8 in.)
Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection

Auguste Renoir
Boy with Cat, 1868
oil on canvas
123.5 x 66 cm (48 5/8 x 26 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris
Cat. No. 129



Gilbert de Séverac
Claude Monet, 1865
oil on canvas
unframed: 40 x 32 cm (15 3/4 x 12 5/8 in.)
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris



oil on canvas
80 x 100 x 3.2 cm (31 1/2 x 39 3/8 x 1 1/4 in.)
framed: 96.5 x 113.5 x 8 cm (38 x 44 11/16 x 3 1/8 in.)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, on long-term loan at Musée Fabre/Montpellier, gift of Mrs. Pierre Goujon, 1971



Samuel F.B. Morse’s Gallery of the Louvre and the Art of Invention 2

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November 2017–March 2018
Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, Stanford, California


A long-hidden treasure of American art, “Gallery of the Louvre,” will go on view at Reynolda House Museum of American Art in February. The masterpiece of Samuel F. B. Morse, yes that Samuel F. B. Morse, inventor of the telegraph and namesake Morse code, will form the core of a new exhibition:  “Samuel F. B. Morse’s ‘Gallery of the Louvre’ and the Art of Invention,” Feb.17 - June 4, 2017. The show will include early telegraph machines from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, 19th-century paintings and prints from Reynolda’s own nationally recognized collection and old master prints from Wake Forest University. Reynolda House is the only venue for this exhibition in the southeastern United States.



Reynolda House Museum of American Art recently pulled back the curtain on two American masterpieces:  a monumental painting titled Gallery of the Louvre and the telegraph – both the work of Samuel F. B. Morse. The new exhibition offers a rare look at a historical painting as well as a unique presentation of the diverse talents that made Morse one of America’s first Renaissance men. Samuel F. B Morse’s Gallery of the Louvre and the Art of Invention is on view at Reynolda House through June 4, 2017.

An Artist With Big Ideas
Morse was an accomplished artist in the early 1800s, noted for his portraiture and large-scale paintings, often in combination. His life-size Marquis de Lafayette, 1825, is installed at New York City Hall. Dying Hercules, 1812, 8 feet x 6 feet, hangs at Yale University Gallery of Art. The even grander 11 feet x 7.5 feet House of Representatives, 1822, is at the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
In 1831, Morse conceived of another large-scale painting, this one to introduce European masterpieces to American audiences decades before the founding of art museums here. His plan was to send the painting on tour to educate the public.
The artist spent months at the Louvre in Paris, painstakingly copying in miniature 38 Renaissance and Baroque masterpieces, including Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, and work by Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Rubens, Tintoretto, Titian, and others. He then ‘installed’ the works in an imagined gallery arrangement on his 6 feet x 9 feet canvas, titling his work, Gallery of the Louvre. Morse paints himself in the center, tutoring a young student as she works on her own copy of one of the masterpieces before her. Morse’s friend, author James Fenimore Cooper, can be glimpsed with his wife and daughter in the left corner.
Gallery of the Louvre was one of Morse’s last paintings. Disheartened when the tour he envisioned did not materialize, Morse turned his attention to a new means of communication:  the telegraph. He used wooden canvas stretcher bars from his studio to construct his earliest versions, a selection of which are on loan for the exhibition from Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.

Worth the Wait
Over the years, Gallery of the Louvre has seldom been exhibited. It was last purchased in 1982, setting a then record for an American work of art. The Terra Foundation, which owns the painting, commenced a national tour in 2015, the much-delayed culmination of the creator’s intent. The installation at Reynolda House Museum is the only venue that has included both of Morse’s greatest creations: Gallery of the Louvre and the telegraph.
The Reynolda House Museum of American Art exhibition of Gallery of the Louvre also includes 19th-century paintings and prints from its renowned collection of American art along with old master prints on loan from Wake Forest University. 

The massive six-by-nine foot canvas pictures 38 Renaissance and Baroque masterpieces, which Morse considered to be the finest works inside the Louvre. He painstakingly copied in miniature Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, and work by Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Rubens, Tintoretto, Titian, and other celebrated artists, then imaginatively ‘installed’ the works in the Louvre’s majestic Salon Carré. His arrangement of the old master miniatures within his own painting was done to demonstrate differences in styles and techniques among the artists.

Morse centers himself in the painting’s foreground as an instructor and, figuratively, as a link between European art of the past and America’s cultural future. He is seen tutoring a young art student as she works on her own copy of one of the masterpieces before her. Morse’s good friend, author James Fenimore Cooper, can be glimpsed with his wife and daughter in the left corner.

“Gallery of the Louvre” was a purely academic undertaking for Morse, befitting his role as  painting professor and founder of the National Academy in New York. His plan was  to send the painting on a national tour after its completion in 1833. When the tour did not materialize, Morse relinquished his creativity to perfecting his telegraph. The painting set a record for an American work of art at the time of its last purchase in 1982: $3.5 million. In 2015, a national tour commenced, the much-delayed culmination of Morse’s original intent.

The show’s final element, early telegraphs, affirms that Morse was an astute bridge between old and new, cleverly moving from painter to inventor. As the Reynolda House Museum of American Art exhibition will show, he used wooden canvas stretcher bars from his studio to construct his earliest versions of the telegraph.

Another highlight of the exhibition will be important works from the collection of Reynolda House Museum of American Art. More than 20 paintings and prints by the 19th century’s leading artists, including William Merritt Chase, Thomas Cole, John Singleton Copley, Edward Hicks, Charles Willson Peale and Gilbert Stuart, serve to explore themes of America’s cultural identity.

 Old master prints, among them work by Rembrandt and van Dyck, will be on loan to the exhibition from Wake Forest University’s collection. Prints like these were used in the 17th century in the same way that Morse intended his canvas to instruct and show art two centuries later.

ART AND RELIGION SECTION 



Worthington Whittredge (American, 1820–1910)
The Old Hunting Grounds, 1864
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1976.2.10

Like Thomas Cole, Worthington Whittredge used nature to evoke the divine.  The Old Hunting Grounds is a complex painting with multiple layers of meaning. The artist offers the viewer a glimpse of a woodland interior where dappled sunlight illuminates pale birch trees. A disintegrating birch bark canoe symbolizes the departure and demise of Native Americans, who were displaced by white settlers. The arched shape of the framing branches on the sides and at the top suggests the soaring interior of a Gothic cathedral. For Whittredge, the connection between forest and cathedral lay in the poetry of his friend William Cullen Bryant. In “A Forest Hymn,” Bryant wrote that “the groves were God’s first temples.” Like Samuel Morse, Whittredge served a term as president of the National Academy of Design, where he shared his views about the connection between nature and religion with his students.



James Smillie (American, 1807–1885)
after Thomas Cole (English-born American, 1801–1848)
Voyage of Life: Childhood, Youth, Manhood, and Old Age, 1853–1856
Engravings on paper
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.39.a-d

National Academy of Design co-founder Thomas Cole emigrated from England to America at the age of seventeen and found his artistic subject in the untrammeled wilderness of his adopted country, particularly the Hudson River Valley of New York. The pristine lakes and old-growth forests of the northeast Appalachians were seen as the ideal classroom for nature painters, who considered it their duty to capture God’s bountiful creation without distortion. They often emphasized elements that were symbolic of the brevity of life—sunsets, autumnal colors, and trees ravaged by storms or the axe. 

In the allegorical series Voyage of Life, the passage of time and the inevitability of decline are symbolically manifested as a river of life. Upon initially placid waters, the child is borne on a small boat with a figurehead holding aloft an hourglass; the boat is filled with flowers and guided by an angelic steersman. In the second stage, the youth has abandoned his guardian angel and steers his own course toward castles in the sky; in the third, the man approaches rapids beneath a storm-threatening sky haunted by disheartening spirits; in the final image, the world and its time have receded from the voyager, who gratefully approaches boundless eternity, received by welcoming angels.



Edward Hicks (American, 1780–1849)
Peaceable Kingdom of the Branch, 1826–1830
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1969.2.3

Edward Hicks, sign painter and Quaker minister, found a profound purpose for his art when the Society of Friends was rocked by internal divisions in the 1820s. Hicks based his Peaceable Kingdom painting on the prophet Isaiah’s vision of the hereafter, in which lion, lamb, and other naturally hostile creatures peacefully co-exist, led by a child holding a sprig of grapes—symbolic  of redemption through the blood of Christ. Hicks imaginatively placed the signing of William Penn’s treaty with the Delaware Indians beneath the Natural Bridge of Virginia, relating an act of human reconciliation to a natural marvel that connects two sides of a river gorge.


CLASSICS SECTION



William Michael Harnett (Irish-born American, 1848–1892)
Job Lot Cheap, 1878
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Original Purchase Fund from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, ARCA, and Anne Cannon Forsyth, 1966.2.10

A crate of used books—a “job lot”—is advertised for cheap sale. Stacked in a jumble, the books represent English translations of world literature, including several whose titles are legible—Arabian Nights, Homer’s Odyssey, and Dumas’s Forty-Five Guardsmen. The Cyclopaedia Americana, representing human knowledge to date, is visible in the center.

In an interview, William Michael Harnett said of his highly realistic still lifes, “I endeavor to make the composition tell a story.” His works of the 1870s often combined traditional vanitas elements suggesting the brevity of life—human skulls, peeled fruit, guttering candles, extinguished pipes—with a modern symbol of impermanence, the daily newspaper. His frequent use of books is more ambivalent. Books may quickly pass from “just published” to “job lot cheap;” on the other hand, like works of art, they may be passed down for generations, their stories told and retold.



William Rimmer (English-born American, 1816–1879)
Lion in the Arena, circa 1873–1876
Oil on pressed wood pulp board
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1970.2.2

William Rimmer found his subjects in ancient history, mythology, and biblical narratives and returned repeatedly to the contest of gladiator and lion, recalling Hercules’s first labor, killing the Nemean lion. The story enabled Rimmer to demonstrate his mastery of anatomy, which he practiced both as a physician and professor of art, which he taught at Harvard University and the National Academy of Design soon after Samuel Morse stepped down as president.

Lion in the Arena thrusts the viewer into the midst of a tense stand-off, in which both man and beast crouch, coiled with fear and bloody determination. In the middle ground, further scenes of mortal combat play out—a rearing lion bites into a man’s shoulder, another lion lies bloodied, and sprinting gladiators kick up dust, obscuring the cheering crowds of the Coliseum.


William Merritt Chase (American,1849–1916)
In the Studio, circa 1884
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Original Purchase Fund from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, ARCA, and Anne Cannon Forsyth, 1967.2.4

A fair-haired sitter in a French neoclassical gown looks up from her study of a print, surrounded by a veritable library of fine and decorative arts gathered during William Merritt Chase’s many travels. The American Impressionist’s famously lavish studio in New York’s Tenth Street Studio Building recalls a description of Gilbert Osmond’s apartment in Henry James’s Portrait of a Lady, published in 1881:

It was moreover a seat of ease, indeed of luxury, telling of arrangements subtly studied and refinements frankly proclaimed, and containing a variety of those faded hangings of damask and tapestry, those chests and cabinets of carved and time-polished oak, those angular specimens of pictorial art in frames as pedantically primitive, those perverse-looking relics of mediæval brass and pottery, of which Italy has long been the not quite exhausted storehouse.

Chase achieved fame as an artist, a teacher, and a cosmopolitan cultural figure who once exclaimed “My God, I’d rather go to Europe than to Heaven!”



Robert Ingersoll Aitken (American, 1878–1949)
A Thing of Beauty, circa 1910
Bronze
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Richard Earl Johnson, 2008.4.1

Though born a generation after the decline of Federal Era classicism, Robert Aitken remained committed to an academic conservatism throughout a career that took him from San Francisco to Paris and New York. This graceful bronze nude, whose title is borrowed from a line of Keats’s poetry (“A thing of beauty is a joy forever”), is a study in classical idealism and contrapuntal poise; legs, arms, and fingers intertwine, yet the figure appears perfectly balanced.

In 1929, Aitken was appointed vice-president of the National Academy of Design, founded over a century earlier by Samuel Morse. When a dedicated Supreme Court building was constructed in the 1930s, Aitken designed the sculptural group on the west pediment, above the main public entrance. Years earlier, Morse’s first inter-city telegram was sent from the Supreme Court chamber when it was still located within the Capitol; Morse would spend many years defending his intellectual property before the Court.


ART AND DEMOCRACY SECTION



Jeremiah Thëus (Swiss-born American, 1716–1774)
Mrs. Thomas Lynch, 1755
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1972.2.1

Jeremiah Thëus’ likeness of Elizabeth Allston Lynch is the oldest piece in Reynolda’s collection and is an excellent example of colonial portraiture. She was born into the prominent Allston family in South Carolina and married into the Lynch family, also notable citizens. Her husband, Thomas Lynch, was a delegate to the Continental Congress from 1774 to 1776, and her son, Thomas Lynch, Jr., signed the Declaration of Independence.

As a young man, Samuel Morse believed that the Revolution had ushered in a new age of peace and prosperity. The successes after the Revolution—increased wealth and leisure, more widespread knowledge, and new inventions—were evidence of America’s exceptionalism and proof that the democratic experiment would thrive. In later years, Morse became antagonistic toward the nation’s rising pluralism.



John Singleton Copley (American, 1738–1815)
John Spooner, 1763
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Bequest of Nancy Susan Reynolds, 1968.2.1

In contrast to the patriotic Lynch family, the subject of this portrait, John Spooner, remained loyal to the English crown in the years leading up to the Revolution. He shared those sentiments with his portraitist, John Singleton Copley. Copley made a living taking commissions for portraits but had strong ambitions to paint great scenes of history. Eventually, he left the colonies for England for both artistic and political reasons; Spooner had fled to England six years earlier.

More than a generation younger than Copley, Samuel Morse also traveled to England, but for artistic training only and with no intent to make it his permanent home. When Morse arrived in London in 1811, he took rooms near Copley. By then, the elder artist had achieved some success, having been elected to the Royal Academy in 1779. The story of the transatlantic pilgrimage of American artists to London demonstrates the close cultural ties between England and America during the colonial and federal periods, even when political ties were threatened or severed. Morse would soon find those ties imperiled again by the War of 1812.



Christian Inger (German-born American, circa 1814–circa 1895)
after Emanuel Leutze (German-born American,1816–1868)
Washington Crossing the Delaware,1866
Hand-colored lithograph
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.40

On a densely snowy Christmas night, outnumbered patriot forces embarked upon a surprise attack against Hessian troops (German soldiers employed by the British) in Trenton, New Jersey. The German-born American artist Emanuel Leutze immortalized the battle with some invention. Winding through an icy river lit by a rising winter sun, General Washington’s tiny craft in this image is packed with famous patriots: future president James Monroe, who was not present for the battle, holds a flag that Betsy Ross had yet to design; second-in-command Nathanael Greene leans out of the vessel; and General Edward Hand holds tight to his tricorn hat. At Washington’s knee sit a Scottish immigrant, identifiable by his bonnet, and a patriot of African descent named Prince Whipple. Other soldiers embody types that soon would become Americans: farmers, frontiersmen, and, in the stern, a Native American.

Leutze painted several monumental versions of the crossing. One was destroyed in Germany by Allied bombers in World War II;




another painted in 1851 today fills a twelve-by-twenty-one foot wall in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. This engraving was made in 1866 and further established the fame of this image of a cold and beleaguered revolutionary crew on a crossing to unexpected victory.


Edward Savage (American, 1761–1817)
after Robert Edge Pine (English,1742–1788)
Congress Voting Independence, restrike 1906, from 1801–1817 plate
Stipple and line engraving from unfinished plate
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.35

In Robert Edge Pine’s interpretation of Congress Voting Independence, Thomas Jefferson stands at the literal and symbolic epicenter of a political earthquake—the delivery of the Declaration of Independence in the State House (Independence Hall, Philadelphia) in 1776. A seated John Hancock receives the document while a pensive Benjamin Franklin, in the foreground, rests with chin in hand. Franklin was a major figure in the American Enlightenment, a movement whose followers found scientific advances and political liberty to be mutually dependent. Franklin’s discoveries in the field of electricity were foundational for many practical inventions of the next century, including Morse’s telegraph. Franklin believed that “Men who invent new Trades, Arts or Manufactures…may be properly called Fathers of their Nation.”

Robert Edge Pine was an Englishman sympathetic to the American revolutionaries, and made portraits of Washington and others in a room within the State House, leading historians to consider 



this image the most accurate visual account of the vote for independence. The American painter and printmaker Edward Savage created an engraving of the painting, and prints were made from the engraving as late as 1906.



John Sartain (English-born American,1808–1897)
after George Caleb Bingham (American, 1811–1879)
The County Election, 1854
Hand-colored engraving with glazes
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.37

Beneath a banner proclaiming “The Will of the People the Supreme Law,” the messy drama of democracy rollicks a small American town. Candidates tip their top hats, while men argue the merits of their platforms; a drunk voter is carried to cast his vote, having been served by an African American who is ineligible to vote; children play mumble-the-peg, a game in which, like politics, advantage is quickly gained or lost; thoughtful citizens read national newspapers near a downcast man who was literally bruised by political controversy.

Artist and state legislator George Caleb Bingham had two favorite subjects: frontier life on the Missouri River and the democratic process. 




Painted in 1851–1852 and engraved in 1854, at the height of national contention over slavery, The County Election contains a hint about the artist’s sympathies: a sign for the “Union Hotel” stands like a beacon of permanence for a nation at a time of explosive division. Bingham tipped his own hat: “I design [the work] to be as national as possible—applicable alike to every Section of the Union.”



PORTRAITURE SECTION


Gilbert Stuart (American, 1755–1828)
Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis (Sally Foster), 1809
Oil on mahogany panel
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Original Purchase Fund from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, ARCA, and Anne Cannon Forsyth, 1967.2.3

Sally Foster Otis, married to the president of the Massachusetts state senate, was already a mother of ten when, dressed in a highly-fashionable neo-Grecian gown, she sat for Gilbert Stuart in Boston. In her large home on Beacon Hill, she commanded a social circle that supported her husband’s ambitions as congressman, senator, mayor, and, eventually, leader of the Federalist Party. One encounter was reported by former president John Adams: “I never before knew Mrs. Otis. She has good Understanding. I have seldom if ever passed a more sociable day.”

Gilbert Stuart once advised the young Samuel Morse to “Be rather pointed than fuzzy…you cannot be too particular in what you do to see what sort of an animal you are putting down.” Morse revered Stuart, and considered himself fortunate to earn forty dollars less per painting than the elder artist. It is difficult to overstate Stuart’s accomplishments; he portrayed the nation’s first five presidents and nearly every major figure in the political and social life of the early republic. Nonetheless his life was highly peripatetic, fleeing creditors, quarrels, and bankruptcies from one metropolis to another.



Charles Willson Peale (American, 1741–1827)
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Robinson,1795
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1973.2.2

The Robinsons were newly married and expecting their first child when the bride’s famous father, Charles Willson Peale, painted this double portrait. The happy occasion was marred by what Peale called Alexander’s “bad grace” during the sitting. Robinson, a wealthy immigrant from Ireland, was described as haughty, proud, and disdainful of the painting profession; he reportedly dismissed Peale as a “showman.” Whatever discord was felt, the resulting portrait is a tribute to companionable marriage—two people on the same plane, holding hands—and, unlike most double portraits, it is the wife who meets our gaze, intimately and with sparkling intelligence.

Like Samuel Morse, Charles Willson Peale studied painting with Benjamin West in London and pursued dual paths of art and science. Peale founded the nation’s first natural history museum in his own home, where he displayed the skeleton of a mastodon he had excavated. Later the museum moved to the State House (Independence Hall) in Philadelphia.



Thomas Sully (English-born American, 1783–1872)
Jared Sparks, 1831
Oil on canvas mounted on panel
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1984.2.11

A dashing young man of literary bent is depicted with a finger marking his place in a text—a common trope employed by artists in the Italian and Northern Renaissance. Historian Jared Sparks richly deserved this scholarly immortalization; in 1830, he had completed compiling and editing a twelve-volume series entitled The Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution. Sparks would become the seventeenth president of Harvard University.

Like Samuel Morse, Thomas Sully studied with Benjamin West at the Royal Academy in London, and developed a network of mutually supportive artists, arranging for exhibitions and commissions to copy one another’s work. They competed for the prestigious commission for the City Hall in New York to paint the Marquis de Lafayette, which Morse won in 1825. But following the deaths of Charles Willson Peale and Gilbert Stuart in 1827 and 1828, respectively, Sully became the preeminent figure in American portraiture.


Emmanuel Gottlieb Leutze (German-born American, 1816–1868)
Worthington Whittredge in His Tenth Street Studio, 1865
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1984.2.12

The Tenth Street Studio Building, on West 10th Street between 5thand 6th Avenues in Manhattan, was home to many of the great names of American art, including Winslow Homer, Frederic Edwin Church, Albert Bierstadt, Martin Johnson Heade, William Merritt Chase, Emanuel Leutze, and Worthington Whittredge. Designed by Richard Morris Hunt, the building’s proximity to New York University and Washington Square Park, where Samuel Morse kept his studio, helped to establish Greenwich Village as the center of the New York art world.

The studios themselves provided a wealth of subjects for artists, as seen in Chase’s painting In the Studio and Leutze’s Worthington Whittredge in His Tenth Street Studio. Whittredge’s erect posture and noble profile made him a convenient model for Leutze’s masterwork, Washington Crossing the Delaware.


MAPPING THE AMERICAS SECTION


Edward Savage (American, 1761–1817)
The Washington Family, 1798
Stipple engraving
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.34

Edward Savage specialized in portraits of influential Americans of the Revolutionary generation, including Jedidiah and Sarah Morse, parents of Samuel. On commission from Harvard University, Savage painted the newly elected President Washington in 1789, along with portraits of Martha Washington and her grandchildren, Eleanor Parke Custis and George Washington Parke Custis. Savage combined his individual portraits into this family grouping as both a painting and a print. Attended by an enslaved house servant, possibly William Lee or Christopher Shields, the family is surrounded by symbols of national ambitions: young George rests calipers on a geographical globe, representing the young nation’s global ambitions, as the others unroll plans for the newly designed federal city of Washington, D.C. The plans are held in place by the president’s resting sword.

Presenting the print to Washington in 1798, Savage wrote, “The likenesses of the young people are not much like what they are at present. The Copper-plate was begun and half finished from the likenesses which I painted in New York in the year 1789…The portraits of yourself and Mrs. Washington are generally thought to be likenesses.”



Henry S. Tanner (American, 1786–1858)
A Map of North America, Constructed According to the Latest Information (in four parts), 1822
Hand-colored engraving on woven paper
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Courtesy of Barbara B. Millhouse, IL2003.1.34d

Henry S. Tanner’s New American Atlas of 1822 included a large map of the continent, which reflected many discoveries made after Jedidiah Morse’s influential maps of the previous century, including the findings of the 1804–1806 Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific Ocean following the Louisiana Purchase. The map’s southwest quadrant includes a graphic cartouche that provided views of Niagara Falls and the Natural Bridge that were borrowed by the Quaker artist Edward Hicks (see his 




Falls of Niagara in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York 

and his Peaceable Kingdom of the Branch in this exhibition). 



David Johnson (American, 1827–1908)
Natural Bridge, Virginia,1860
Oil on canvas
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of R. Philip Hanes in honor of Charles H. Babcock, Sr., 1968.2.2

New York artist David Johnson was a member of the second generation of Hudson River School painters. His rigorously realistic landscapes were imbued with a romantic sensibility, often evident in the locations he selected. Nineteenth-century landscape painters made pilgrimages to spectacular natural wonders such as Niagara Falls and the Natural Bridge in Virginia, which Johnson visited in 1860 to create this view.

The exactness of Johnson’s pictorial description echoes a description by Thomas Jefferson, who bought the Natural Bridge from King George III in 1774. Jefferson’s geological analysis concludes with several exclamations: “It is impossible for the emotions arising from the sublime to be felt beyond what they are here; so beautiful an arch, so elevated, so light, and springing as it were up to heaven! The rapture of the spectator is really indescribable!”


Martin Johnson Heade (American, 1819–1904)
Orchid with Two Hummingbirds, 1871
Oil on prepared panel
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Museum Purchase, 1976.2.8

In the upper branches of the Brazilian rainforest, a gemlike Phaon Comet hummingbird and a Brazilian Fairy hummingbird seem to greet one another beside a gleaming Cattleya orchid. Martin Johnson Heade excelled in precise yet romantic nature studies that captured the changing effects of light, atmosphere, and storms. His trips to Brazil were inspired by the geographical writings of the German naturalist-explorer Alexander von Humboldt, whose descriptions of tropical light challenged painters like Heade and Frederic Edwin Church. “The sun does not merely enlighten,” Humboldt wrote. “It colors the objects, and wraps them in a thin vapor, which, without changing the transparency of the air, renders its tints more harmonious, softens the effects of the light, and diffuses over nature a placid calm, which is reflected in our souls.”

Humboldt’s Cosmos, a magnum opus subtitled “A Sketch of a Physical Description of the Universe,” inspired a generation of painters and scientists. But Humboldt was inspired in turn by witnessing Samuel Morse at work on his condensed cosmos of European painting, Gallery of the Louvre. Humboldt spent days observing Morse at work, and the two strolled the Louvre discussing its marvels. The acquaintance would be renewed when Humboldt supported the adoption of Morse’s system of telegraphy in Europe.



Alfred Jones (English-born American,1819–1900)
after Richard Caton Woodville, Sr. (American, 1825–1855)
Mexican News, 1851
Hand-colored engraving
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
Gift of Barbara B. Millhouse, 1983.2.36



In his brief, restless life, Richard Caton Woodville achieved wide recognition through prints made after his paintings, which typically focused on closely observed scenes of everyday life. In this work, citizens of an unidentified small town respond to the latest news from the Mexican-American War (1846–1848), in which the United States stood to gain vast territories, including the future states of California, Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, and part of Colorado. Also at stake in the war was the legality of slavery in the new territories. Outside the protective porch of the American Hotel, an African American father and daughter listen attentively to the news; neither they nor the woman listening from an adjacent window have a political voice as voters, yet the image suggests that they feel political winds just as keenly.

Within just a few years of the 1844 demonstration of the telegraph, two giant enterprises developed that would shape American life for many decades. The Western Union Telegraph Company was formed as the nation’s first industrial monopoly, combining communications interests from New England to the Mississippi Valley. And in 1846 five daily newspapers in New York agreed to share costs of transmitting news of the Mexican-American War by telegraph, thus forming the Associated Press.





WORTHY OF THE AGES: Important Hudson River School Paintings

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Questroyal Fine Art
March 10 - April 8, 2017

This spring, Questroyal Fine Art offers American art lovers the rare opportunity to view an exceptional, comprehensive exhibition of Hudson River School paintings. Over 125 works by leaders of the movement will be on view at 903 Park Avenue from March 10 through April 8 in Worthy of the Ages: Important Hudson River School Paintings. Although less prominent in today’s headlines than some later movements, the Hudson River School has endured as the foundation of American landscape painting and is at the core of some of the most important collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the White House.

Painters who strove to define American art in the nineteenth century and found inspiration in the unique landscapes of their developing nation will be displayed in Questroyal’s expansive galleries. Included are multiple examples by masters such as Albert Bierstadt, Jasper Francis Cropsey, Asher B. Durand, Sanford Robinson Gifford, George Inness, John Frederick Kensett, Thomas Moran, and William Trost Richards.

The exhibition will feature a highlight on the Tenth Street Studio Building. Built at 15 Tenth Street in 1857, it was the first project of its kind in the United States and united many of the Hudson River School painters under one roof. A premier location to both work and exhibit, the Tenth Street Studio Building was the unofficial headquarters of the Hudson River School and a number of artists in Questroyal’s exhibition were key residents, including Bierstadt, Gifford, Jervis McEntee, and Worthington Whittredge.


Albert Bierstadt



Albert Bierstadt’s career followed an epic course.

As one of the first artists to explore the Western frontier, he achieved a level of fame and prosperity previously unknown in the world of American art. Born in Prussia, raised in Massachusetts, and trained in Düsseldorf, Bierstadt created landscapes that combined German precision with American Romanticism. His fantastic visions of soaring mountain peaks reflected the height of his ambitions, astounding viewers with the country’s yet unspoiled grandeur. Recognized outside the United States,
he was awarded the French Legion of Honor by Napoleon III, the Imperial Order of St. Stanislaus by Alexander II of Russia, and the Imperial Order of Medjid by the Sultan of Turkey. 


selected exhibitions 

National Academy of Design, 1858–88 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1859–67 Brooklyn Art Association, 1861–81
Metropolitan Sanitary Fair, New York, 1864
Paris Salon, 1869, 1875, 1879, 1880, 1882, 1889 


selected collections 

Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia
 

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC The White House, Washington, DC

auction record
$7,321,000 

tenth street studio building resident
1860–79





Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902)
Purple Mountain/Mountain Landscape  

Oil on paper laid down on canvas
8
1/16 x 121/8 inches
Monogrammed lower right:
ABierstadt




 Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902) Niagara Falls
Oil on paper laid down on canvas 1315/16 x 1815/16 inches

Monogrammed lower right: ABierstadt





Albert Bierstadt (18301902)
North Coast Indians
Oil on board
10
3⁄8 x 181⁄8 inches
Monogrammed lower right: ABierstadt.
Available at Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, New York

RABLAKELOCK. 1867
Bierstadt, Albert 


A Trail through the Trees 




Colorado Waterfalls



Figures along the Coast of Italy 




Indian Encampment 



Mount Pilatus above Lake Lucerne 



Jasper Francis Cropsey 

Jasper Francis Cropsey, one of the leading artists of the Hudson River School, brought out the color and breadth of the American landscape in his work. Cropsey first learned the art of landscape painting as an architectural apprentice, acquiring the draftsmanship demonstrated in his best works. He was soon hailed as “America’s painter of autumn.” Cropsey was one of the youngest members ever elected to the National Academy of Design and a founding member of the American Water Color Society. He won a medal from the London International Exposition of 1862, and was presented to Queen Victoria at St. James’s Palace in 1861. 

selected exhibitions
Brooklyn Art Association, 1861–86, 1891 London International Exposition, 1862 Centennial Exposition, Philadelphia, 1876 Boston Art Club, 1881–86
The Art Institute of Chicago, 1897, 1900 

selected collections
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
Newington-Cropsey Foundation, Hastings-on- Hudson, New York
Smithsonian American Art Museum,Washington, DC The White House,Washington, DC 

auction record
$1,003,500
 






Jasper Francis Cropsey (18231900)
Greenwood Lake, New Jersey, 1874
Oil on canvas
12 3/16 x 20 3/16 inches
Signed and dated lower right:
J.F. Cropsey / 1874
Available at Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, New York 




Jasper Francis Cropsey (1823–1900) Winter, 1860
Oil on canvas
15
1/16 x 241/8 inches
Signed and dated lower right:
J. F. Cropsey 1860



Cropsey, Jasper Francis Doune Castle, 1848




 


Landscape with Cows near Warwick, New York, 1885 



Asher B. Durand 

Although born to a humble family, Asher B. Durand became one of the most influential painters of
the nineteenth century. He began his career as a successful engraver, but his dedication to landscape painting and friendship with Thomas Cole established Durand as a leader of the Hudson River School. Durand espoused a commitment to naturalism and his
Letters on Landscape Painting in the 1850s art journal The Crayon were widely read. In the early 2000s, private sales of Durand’s paintings shattered records when Kindred Spirits sold for a reported $35 million and Progress

(The Advance of Civilization) sold for an estimated $40 million. 

selected exhibitions
National Academy of Design, 1861–74 Brooklyn Art Association, 1862–75
Paris Salon, 1866
Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1867 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1890


selected collections
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts National Academy Museum, New York, New York New-York Historical Society, New York
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
auction record
$386,500
private sales
$40,000,000 (estimated) $35,000,000 (estimated)



Durand, Asher B.
Dutchess County, New York Shade of an Old Oak Tree 




Asher B. Durand (1796–1886) Pastoral Scene at Lake’s Edge  
Oil on canvas
17
1/8 x 211/8 inches 






 Sanford Robinson Gifford

Sanford Robinson Gifford was a second-generation painter of the Hudson River School, known for his skillful ability to render light and atmospheric effects. He possessed an acute understanding of the spiritual and emotional inspiration to be drawn from a landscape, depicting brilliant vistas marked by an aerial luminism that transformed quotidian scenes into poetic masterpieces. Over the course of his career he traveled extensively throughout the Catskills, Adirondacks, and White Mountains, though arguably his favorite subject was the Hudson River Valley, where he was born. Upon his death in 1880, the Metropolitan Museum of Art held a special commemorative retrospective to celebrate Gifford’s life and work. 

selected exhibitions
National Academy of Design, 1847–68, 1870, 1872–74, 1876–80
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1856 Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1867
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1874, 1880 Centennial Loan Exhibition, Hartford, 1875


selected collections
Brooklyn Museum, New York
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
New-York Historical Society, New York
Smithsonian American Art Museum,Washington, DC


auction record
$2,144,000 

tenth street studio building resident
1858–80



 Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880) A Sketch of Schloss Rheinstein
Oil on canvas
10
7/8 x 91/2 inches Initialed lower left: SRG





Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880) Carriage on a Country Road, 1863
Oil on canvas
6
15/16 x 12 inches

Signed and dated lower right: S.R.Gifford 63 



* Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880) View of Constantinople (The Golden Horn)
Oil on canvas 75/8 x 127/8 inches
Signed lower right: SR Gifford; on verso: The Golden Horn / by SR Gifford 







Sanford Robinson Gifford (18231880)
Sunset in the Wilderness with Approaching Rain
Oil on canvas
7 5/16 x 113⁄8 inches
Available at Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, New York 

 
John Frederick Kensett  
One of the most important artists of the Hudson River School, John Frederick Kensett painted intimate landscapes that celebrated the American wilderness. Kensett studied in Europe alongside John William Casilear and Asher B. Durand. Initially known for his woodland interiors and panoramas, Kensett later turned his focus
to seascapes, which particularly embody the beautiful luminous qualities with which Kensett is frequently associated. His delicately rendered, elegant compositions are praised for their harmonious appearance. 

selected exhibitions
National Academy of Design, 1830–60, 1861–73 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1852–69 Brooklyn Art Association, 1861–84
selected collections
Brooklyn Museum, New York
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

auction record
$1,248,000 



 
John Frederick Kensett (1816–1872) Woodland Interior with Stream 
Oil on canvas 101/8 x 14 inches 



John Frederick Kensett (1816–1872) Wooded Landscape with Boulders
Oil on canvas
14 x 20
1/16 inches Monogrammed lower left: JFK 




Kensett, John Frederick  



Autumnal Landscape, 1858  



Beverly, Massachusetts, 1871



Eagle Rock, Manchester, Massachusetts, 1859  



New England Coastal Scene with Figures, 1864  



New England Sunrise

 
Thomas Moran 
Thomas Moran was one of the best-known and most influential painters of the Hudson River School working in the United States in the second half of the nineteenth century. Known for his exquisitely rendered landscapes, Moran’s iconic depictions of the American West no only brought him fame as one of the country’s preeminent landscape artists but contributed to the establishment of the United States’ first national park at Yellowstone in 1872. 

selected exhibitions 

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1856 National Academy of Design, 1857–1922 Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1867 Centennial Exposition, Philadelphia, 1876 Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901
selected collections
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York, New York
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania The White House, Washington, DC
auction record
$17,737,000 



Thomas Moran (1837–1926)
Feudal Castle, 1905
Oil on canvas
30
1/16 x 451/16 inches
Monogrammed and dated lower right:
TMORAN / 1905 




Thomas Moran (1837–1926) Sunset, 1922
Oil on canvas
14
1/4 x 201/8 inches
Signed, dated, and monogrammed lower left:
T.MORAN. / 1922 / TMORAN; on verso: To my good friend C.F. Lummis / Moran / 1922 



Thomas Moran (1837–1926)
Sunset, Amagansett, 1905
Oil on canvas
30
1/2 x 401/2 inches
Monogrammed and dated lower right:
TMoran 1905
Sunset, Amagansett is one of the largest and most important of Moran’s New York paintings. 



William Trost Richards 
William Trost Richards embraced and mastered each phase of nineteenth-century painting. His extraordinary career began in Philadelphia, where he developed his technique under the German artist Paul Weber. His hyperclear landscapes drew the admiration of the American Pre-Raphaelites, but Richards is best known for his panoramic coastal scenes and luminous seascapes. By 1873, he was regarded as one of the “the best-known watercolor painters of America.” 

selected exhibitions
Paris Salon, 1873
Centennial Exposition, Philadelphia, 1876 Boston Art Club, 1878, 1882–86, 1898 Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1889
Centennial of the Pennsylvania Academy, 1905

selected collections
The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC
auction record
$1,650,500 



William Trost Richards (1833–1905) Sunlit Valley
Oil on paper laid down on canvas 611/16 x 105/8 inches

Signed lower left: W m. T. Richards 


William Trost Richards (1833–1905) Off Conanicut, Newport, 1904
Oil on canvas
34 x 60 inches

Signed and dated lower right: W M. T. Richards. 04.


Francis Augustus Silva

Francis Augustus Silva was a luminist painter best known for his marine subjects. The son of an immigrant barber, he never received formal artistic training, but found success as a painter after he was discharged from the military, where he served in the Civil War. Silva kept a studio in New York, but took frequent trips along the East Coast. He developed a style of dramatically lit, atmospheric painting, frequently depicting areas such as Boston Harbor, Cape Ann, Narragansett Bay, and Long Island. Towards the end of his life, he moved to Long Branch, New Jersey, but maintained a space in the Tenth Street Studio Building in Manhattan. He is celebrated for his delicately rendered, atmospheric seascapes. 

selected exhibitions
American Institute, 1848–50
National Academy of Design, 1868–86 Brooklyn Art Association, 1869–85 Boston Arts Club, 1883


selected collections
Brooklyn Museum, New York
The Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts
Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago, Illinois 


auction record
$2,658,500 

tenth street studio building resident
1882–86 



Francis Augustus Silva (18351886)
Sailing at Twilight, 1877
Oil on canvas
20 x 36 inches
Signed and dated lower left:
F.A. SILVA. 77
Available at Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, New York


Worthington Whittredge 
Born in a log cabin on the American frontier, Worthington Whittredge’s talent and versatility brought him to the forefront of nineteenth-century American landscape painting. Educated in Europe, Whittredge combined the style of the Hudson River School with elements of the French Barbizon school. Skilled at capturing the unspoiled beauty of the American landscape, Whittredge fully participated in the spirited ethos of Manifest Destiny. He is revered for his panoramic depictions of the American West. 

selected collections 

Brooklyn Museum, New York
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York Newark Museum, New Jersey
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC The White House, Washington, DC


auction record
$1,870,000 

tenth street studio building resident
1859–1900 



* Worthington Whittredge (1820 –1910) Kaatskill Creek
Oil on canvas
28
1/16 x 201/8 inches
Signed lower left: W. Whittredge
  

* Worthington Whittredge (1820 –1910) Twilight at Shawangunk Mountains
Oil on board
9
7/8 x 143/4 inches
Signed lower right:
W. Whittredge


 
*Whittredge, Worthington
Brook in the Woods Hunter’s Rest

Degas, Impressionism, and the Paris Millinery Trade

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Saint Louis Art Museum 
Feb. 12 through May 7, 2017


The first exhibition to explore Edgar Degas’ fascination with high-fashion hats and the women who made opened at the Saint Louis Art Museum on Feb. 12 and runs through May 7.

The exhibition—organized by the Saint Louis Art Museum and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco—is the first to examine the height of the millinery trade in Paris, from around 1875 to 1914, as reflected in the work of the Impressionists. In addition to works by Degas, the exhibition explores millinery’s place in Impressionist iconography by including works by his peers, as well as 40 exquisite examples of period hats.




Edgar Degas, French, 1834-1917; “The Millinery Shop”, 1879-1886; oil on canvas; 39 3/8 x 49 9/16 inches; The Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Memorial Collection



Edgar Degas, French, 1834-1917; “At the Milliner (Chez la Modiste)”, ca. 1882-85; oil on canvas; 24 1/4 x 29 inches; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond; Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon; Photo: Travis Fullerton © Virginia Museum of Fine Arts



Edgar Degas, French, 1834-1917; “Self-Portrait in the Soft Hat”, 1857; oil on paper mounted on canvas; 10 ¼ x 7 ½ inches; Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts, USA



It is accompanied by a scholarly, full-color catalogue.


The catalogue is edited by the exhibition’s co-curators, Simon Kelly, curator of modern and contemporary art at the Saint Louis Art Museum, and Esther Bell, curator in charge of European paintings at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Featuring sumptuous paintings, pastels and preparatory drawings by Degas, Cassatt, Manet, Renoir and Toulouse-Lautrec, among others, this generously illustrated book surveys the millinery industry of 19th-century Paris.

Featuring sumptuous paintings, pastels and preparatory drawings by Degas, Cassatt, Manet, Renoir and Toulouse-Lautrec, among others, this generously illustrated book surveys the millinery industry of 19th-century Paris.

Peppered throughout with photographs, posters and prints of French hats, the book includes essays that explore Degas’ particular interest in the millinery trade; the tension between modern fashion and reverence for history and the grand art-historical tradition; a chronicle of Parisian milliners from Caroline Reboux to Coco Chanel; and examples of how the millinery trade is depicted in literature. Brilliantly linking together the worlds of industry, art and fashion, this book examines the fundamental role of hats and hat makers in 19th-century culture.


The catalogue includes contributions by the exhibition curators, as well as Susan Hiner, Françoise Tétart-Vittu, Melissa Buron, Laura Camerlengo, Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell and Abigail Yoder.






Christie’s May 17 Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale

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Cy Twombly, Leda and the Swan, 1962, oil, lead pencil and wax crayon on canvas
 Christie’s will offer Cy Twombly’s Leda and the Swan, 1962 as a highlight of its May 17 Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale. This unequivocal tour de force has resided within a private collection for over 25 years and has not been seen publicly in all that time. One of two large format masterpieces to emerge from this unbridled subject, Leda and the Swan’s



heroic sister painting of the same title is among the most popular works on view within the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Never before at auction, the painting has only had two private owners and is completely fresh to the market (estimate $35-55million).

Koji Inoue, International Director, Post-War and Contemporary Art, remarked: 


“Hidden from public view for over 25 years, we are thrilled to present one of Cy Twombly’s absolute masterpieces in Leda and the Swan, 1962. This is a remarkable painting that has been pursued by collectors for decades.Impregnated with paint passionately and poetically applied with the hand, brush and stick, Leda and the Swan, is one of the most vital canvases created during this transformative period in the artist’s career.Given its tremendous importance within the context of both Twombly’s oeuvre, and the canon of Post-War art, we are honored to have the opportunity to offer this work to the market after nearly thirty clandestine years. This is also a particularly exciting time for the Twombly market, given its overlap with the Centre Pompidou’s groundbreaking retrospective of the artist’s expansive career.”

With its vigorous application of paint and affectionate use of the hand, Leda and the Swan is an apex example of the artist’s fusing of myth, eroticism and history. Revisiting the story of Leda’s seduction by the Greek god Zeus, or his Roman counterpart, Jupiter, in the form of a swan*, Twombly’s adaptation of this classical story inspired an increasingly baroque tendency that emerged in his work during the early 1960s, dramatically enriching the strongly tactile and sensual nature of his art. Throughout these paintings from the early 1960s, the artist not only arrives at, but fully executes some of the most empowering themes found throughout his oeuvre.

Leda and the Swan is part of a cycle of works that resulted from the explosive and highly physical release of passion, seduction and visceral energy that had defined Twombly’s Ferragosto paintings, which were executed throughout the hot summer months of 1961. Demonstrating this new, distinctly Baroque mix of eroticism and violence, Leda and the Swan exemplifies the “blood and foam” style that dominated the artist’s work until 1966.

The myth of “Leda and the Swan” is among dramatic and tumultuous themes in Twombly’s work of the early 1960s. A magnum opus of the artist’s oeuvre, Leda and the Swan fully articulates Twombly’s desire to defeat tradition even as he engaged with it. Immersing himself in ancient Greek and Roman literature, Twombly demonstrates the breadth of the artist’s cultural immersion in his Mediterranean surroundings.




The auction record for Cy Twombly was set by Untitled (New York City), oil based house paint and wax crayon on canvas, 1968, which realized $70,530,000 in November 2015.



More Highlights from the Post-War And Contemporary Evening Sale
Roy Lichtenstein, Red and White Brushstroke, oil and magna on canvas, painted in 1965
Estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000
Roy Lichtenstein’s Red and White Brushstrokes, from 1965, will highlight the May 17 Post-War and Contemporary Auction in New York (estimate: $25,000,000-35,000,000). Across this monumentally-scaled canvas, Lichtenstein took the essence of Abstract Expressionism and reframed it as Pop. With its bold representation of two brushstrokes loaded with red and white paint set against a backdrop of blue Ben-Day dots, Lichtenstein calls into question the revered status of the painterly mark. Never before offered at auction, the present work is one of only a handful of canvases from Lichtenstein’s pivotal Brushstroke series to remain in private hands.

The distinctive subject of Red and White Brushstrokes puts it at the very heart of Roy Lichtenstein’s legacy. Its iconic style is double edged, apparently naive but actually highly sophisticated. By taking something as fundamental as a the mark made by the stroke of a brush and rendering it in the style of a mass produced comic, Lichtenstein set out to derail over a thousand years of art history. His choice of images as well as his simplified reductive style, highlighted his objectives intentions in a way that made the paintings both accessible to the general public and irritating to traditional academic art scholars who viewed him as unsophisticated. Yet, with works such as this, Lichtenstein emerged as one of the most intelligent and innovative artists of the Pop Art movement.

Andy Massad, Deputy Chairman, Post-War and Contemporary Art, remarked:

“Red and White Brushstrokes is a Pop masterpiece, but one that effectively draws on centuries of artistic tradition. Lichtenstein was an enthusiastic student of art history, as with Warhol, distilled through the crucible of Marcel Duchamp. The Brushstroke paintings were some of the first canvases in which he delved into the art historical canon as source material for his work. Using Abstract Expressionism, Renaissance painting and comic books as inspiration, Lichtenstein simultaneously canonized the work of his predecessors and eviscerated the parameters surrounding fine art. With this canvas he embraced the appearance of mechanical reproduction with a palette of red, white, and blue to form brushstrokes that wave like a flag of purely American painting, commenting on, but revolutionarily apart from European tradition. This work epitomizes the artist’s ability to harness so much implication into deceptively simple imagery.” 

The present work belongs to Lichtenstein’s Brushstrokes series, one of the most significant bodies of work of the artist’s long and prolific career. The group of 14 canvases was produced during a span of only a few months and many are now regarded as pivotal works from the Pop Art movement. Most examples now exist in major international museum collections. These include Brushstrokes (on long-term loan to the Moderna Museet, Stockholm), Big Painting, (Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf), Little Big Painting (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York), Yellow Brushstroke I (Kunsthaus, Zürich), and Brushstroke with Splatter (Art Institute of Chicago).

Lichtenstein’s Brushstroke series is often interpreted as a sly comment on the artistic dominance of Abstract Expressionism at the time of its conception. And particularly the authoritarian gestures of artists Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Franz Kline. During the movement’s heyday these autographical marks were often regarded as the ultimate demonstration of the artist’s prowess.

With Red and White Brushstrokes Lichtenstein began to challenge this hegemony, and by interpreting these spontaneous marks in a commercial, mass-produced style, he questioned the authority of these purportedly inimitable gestures. Although the Brushstroke paintings were informed by Abstract Expressionism, their sources are more varied.

Like Lichtenstein's more familiar works, the starting point was a comic strip. One of the artist's first Brushstroke paintings was a direct reprisal of a panel from the comic strip "The Painting" a horror story from Charlton Comics' Strange Suspense Stories, no. 72 (October 1964). Here, the cartoonist indicates paint in two overlapping strokes of paint; it is from this comic strip image that Lichtenstein developed the visual vocabulary for his Brushstroke series and roots them in the iconography of his earlier paintings.






 Sigmar Polke’s Frau mit Butterbrot,1964. 

An early iconic masterpiece, the present canvas dates from the year of Polke’s first Rasterbilder, the ubiquitous raster-dot paintings that mimicked the halftone printing process of newspapers and magazines.
 

Frau mit Butterbrot is a rare, formative work that demonstrates the scathing critique of mass media culture that Polke and his fellow“Capitalist Realist” painters, Gerhard Richter, Manfred Kuttnerand Konrad Lueg proposed in their radical exhibits of the early 60s. Its biting critique of bourgeois norms and the meticulous, time-consuming nature of its large-scale execution make Frau mit Butterbrot one of the most significant paintings of Polke’s early career. Both charming vixen and proper hausfrau, Polke’s cunning, perfectly-coiffed subject is the wholesome German counterpart to Lichtenstein’s comic-book heroines and Warhol’s starlets. Created at a critical, early juncture, Frau mit Butterbrot slyly demonstrates the significant themes that would sustain the artist for the
duration of his prolific career. 




Francis Picabia’s Adam et Ève, 1941,  was recently featured in the Museum of Modern Art’s 2016-2017 retrospective of the artist’s expansive career. This striking canvas belongs to a series of paintings that the artist began in the early 1930s. The appropriation of mass media had been a central part of the artist’s oeuvre since World War I. Long before Rauschenberg, Warhol, Lichtenstein and Koons embraced appropriation, Francis Picabia wryly played with the concepts of artistic authorship and individual skill that were to become among the central doctrines of modern painting. His defiantly anti-modernist style demonstrates his lifelong and unremitting predilection for overturning conventions of the avant-garde and pursuing new and radical approaches to art and art making, which paved the way for future generations of artists. 

Additional Highlights from the Post-War And Contemporary Evening Sale Include: 



Andy Warhol, Last Supper (Pink) synthetic polymer and silkscreen ink on canvas Executed in 1986 



Cindy Sherman, Untitled, Film Still #21 gelatin silver print, Executed in 1978 



Jeff Koons, New Shelton Wet/Drys 5-Gallon, 10-Gallon, Doubledecker
plexiglas, fluorescent lights and four Shelton Wet/Dry vacuums, 1981-1986 



Gerhard Richter, Schober oil on canvas, Painted in 1984

Picasso’s Path to Guernica

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Museo Reina Sofía
April 4, 2017 – September 4, 2017 

2017 will mark the  80th anniversary  of the first public showing of one of the most  iconic paintings in art history,


 Pablo Picasso. Guernica, 1937. Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía Collection © Sucesión Pablo Picasso, VEGAP, Madrid, 2017 

Pablo Picasso ’s Guernica , initially exhibited in the  Spanish Pavilion at the 1937 World’s Fair in Paris. The Museo Reina Sofía therefore organizePity and Terror.  

Picasso’s Path to Guernica , a major exhibition that will bring together some 150 masterpieces by the artist from the Reina Sofía’s own Collection and more than 30 institutions around the world , including the Musée Picasso and Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the  Tate Modern in London, the MoMA and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Beyeler Foundation in Basel, as well as  private collections  like those of  Nahmad and Menil.

This is the  25th anniversary  of the arrival at the Museo Reina  Sofía of this painting, which was commissioned by the Republican government for the Spanish Pavilion at the World’s Fair in Paris with the aim of presenting an artistic  denunciation of events in the Spanish Civil War.

Unlike other retrospectives on the art of the Málaga-born genius, this show places the emphasis on the  evolution of Picasso’s pictorial universe , with  Guernica at its  epicenter, from the late 1920s until the mid-1940s, a period when the artist brought  about a  radical change  in his oeuvre. Through key works from that period, it will be  possible to analyze the transformation undergone in Picasso’s art from the initial  optimism of Cubism to his search in the 1930s, a period of great political tumult, for a new image of the world lying between beauty and monstrosity.

Guernica is thus treated not as an isolated piece but as a fundamental work forming part of the evolution of  Picasso’s art. A study of the structure of his works in those years reveals the new path undertaken by the artist through the gradual introduction of different spaces and figures, scenes of  both frenzied and static action, and situations of violence, fear or pain, often expressed by means of destructured bodies, all finally issu ing into a political art that culminates in the most famous of his works.

Fantastic, not to be missed article.

Caravaggio's Last Two Paintings at the Metropolitan Museum

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The Met Fifth Avenue
APRIL 11–JULY 9, 2017


The Martyrdom of Saint Ursula, the last documented painting by the great Caravaggio (1571–1610), will be on exceptional loan from the Banca Intesa Sanpaolo in Naples and presented with another of the artist's final works, The Met's



Caravaggio (Michelangelo Merisi) (Italian, Milan or Caravaggio 1571-1610 Porto Ercole). The Denial of Saint Peter, 1610. Oil on canvas. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Herman and Lila Shickman, and Purchase, Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 1997

The Denial of Saint Peter, created in the last months of his life. These two extraordinary paintings have not been shown together since 2004, in an exhibition in London and Naples devoted to the artist's late work. Caravaggio's Last Two Paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art will offer a rare opportunity to see these pictures side by side and to examine the novelty of Caravaggio's late style, in which the emphasis is less on the naturalistic depiction of the figures and more on their psychological presence.

Commissioned by the Genoese patrician Marcantonio Doria two months before Caravaggio's death in July 1610,  


 Caravaggio (Michelangelo Merisi) (Italian, Milan or Caravaggio 1571-1610 Porto Ercole). The Martyrdom of Saint Ursula, 1610. Oil on canvas. Intesa Sanpaolo Collection, Palazzo Zevallos Stigliano, Naples

The Martyrdom of Saint Ursula is painted in an unprecedented minimalist style. Its interpretation of the tragic event that is its subject, combined with the abbreviated manner of painting, has only one parallel: The Denial of Saint Peter in The Met collection. In these two works, Caravaggio poignantly probes a dark world burdened by guilt and doom, suggesting to some scholars a connection with his biography and sense of the tragedy of life.

The exhibition is organized by Keith Christiansen, John Pope-Hennessy Chairman of the Department of European Paintings at The Met.

Michelangelo & Sebastiano

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National Gallery
15 March – 25 June 2017



This spring the National Gallery presents the first ever exhibition devoted to the creative partnership between Michelangelo (1475–1564) and Sebastiano del Piombo (1485–1547), featuring exceptional loans, some of which have not left their collections for centuries.



Sebastiano del Piombo, Pietà, c. 1512-16. Museo Civico Viterbo © Comune di Viterbo


Michelangelo & Sebastiano explores the complementary talents, yet divergent personalities, of the two artists. It encompasses approximately seventy works – paintings, drawings, sculptures and letters – produced by Michelangelo and Sebastiano before, during and after their association. Examples of their extensive, intimate correspondence offer us a unique insight into their personal and professional lives; their concerns, frustrations and moments of glory.

In 1511, Sebastiano, a young, exceptionally talented Venetian painter, arrived in Rome. He was quickly embroiled in the city’s fiercely competitive art scene. He met Michelangelo, who was working on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, and the two quickly became friends and allies against the prodigious Raphael; another recent arrival whose star was rising with the most influential patrons in Rome. As the only oil painter in the city to rival Raphael, Sebastiano was an ideal collaborator for Michelangelo, who did not care for the medium but wanted to marginalise his younger competitor. For his part, Sebastiano profited immensely from Michelangelo’s drawings and conceptual ideas. Together they created several works of great originality and rare beauty.

Their friendship lasted over twenty-five years, far beyond Michelangelo’s long-term relocation to his native Florence (1516) and Raphael’s death (1520). It ended acrimoniously after Michelangelo’s permanent return to Rome to paint the 'Last Judgement' in the Sistine Chapel, apparently with an argument over painting technique. Their partnership unfolded during a remarkably dramatic time for Italy – one of revolution, war and theological schism, but also of great intellectual energy and artistic innovation.



A key loan to the exhibition is the 'Lamentation over the Dead Christ', also known as the Viterbo 'Pietà' (about 1512–16) after the central Italian town where it resides. This painting is Michelangelo and Sebastiano’s first collaboration and eloquently represents their combined vision. Rarely seen outside of Italy, it is also the first large-scale nocturnal landscape in history, iconographically original for its separation of Christ from his mother’s lap.

In its time, the Viterbo 'Pietà' was received with widespread praise, and on its merits Sebastiano garnered his next two major commissions, both of which were completed with Michelangelo’s input – the decoration of the Borgherini Chapel in S. Pietro in Montorio, Rome (1516–24) and


The Raising of Lazarus, Sebastiano del Piombo, incorporating designs by Michelangelo
© The National Gallery, London    NG1    Oil on synthetic panel, transferred from wood 381 x 289.6 cm With new reproduction frame, the predella based on surviving parts of the original frame and incorporating an antique entablature.   
1517-19    The National Gallery, London

The Raising of Lazarus (1517–19). The latter was painted in competition with Raphael’s great 'Transfiguration' (now Vatican Museums) for the Cathedral of Narbonne, France, from which it was removed in the 18th century. 'The Raising of Lazarus' eventually became part of the foundational group of paintings forming the National Gallery Collection in 1824, where it was given the very first inventory number, NG1.

Recent scientific research conducted at the National Gallery has provided new insights into the two artists’ respective work on 'The Raising of Lazarus'. Infrared reflectography has revealed Sebastiano’s contribution to be more substantial and independent of Michelangelo’s influence than previously assumed. It is now understood that Michelangelo only intervened at a relatively advanced stage in the painting’s development, revising in drawings the figure of the revived Lazarus, which Sebastiano had already painted.

Among other exhibition highlights is 'The Risen Christ' by Michelangelo, a larger-than-life-size marble statue carved by Michelangelo in 1514–15, generously lent by the Church of S. Vincenzo Martire, Bassano Romano (Italy). 'The Risen Christ' will be shown with a 19th-century plaster cast after Michelangelo’s second version of the same subject (1519–21), which resides in – and never leaves – the S. Maria sopra Minerva, Rome. Never attempted before, this juxtaposition presents visitors with the first ever opportunity to see these statues side by side.

Sebastiano’s 'Visitation' from the Louvre, Paris, and the 'Lamentation over the Dead Christ' from the State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, will also leave their collections for the first time to travel to Trafalgar Square. The latter will be united with Sebastiano’s 'Christ’s Descent into Limbo' (1516) from the Museo del Prado, Madrid, and Francisco Ribalta’s 17th-century copy of Sebastiano’s lost 'Christ Appearing to the Apostles'. The three paintings will be presented in their original triptych format for the first time since they were separated in 1646.

To evoke the experience of seeing the works in situ, groundbreaking technology will be used to present a spectacular three-dimensional reproduction of the Borgherini Chapel in S. Pietro in Montorio, Rome. Using the most advanced digital imaging and reconstruction techniques, the National Gallery will bring the chapel to London for an immersive experience of the structure much as it was created.

“This is the first exhibition of its kind anywhere, and the first to showcase the work of Sebastiano in the UK. Although highly esteemed among collectors in the 19th century, Sebastiano has since slipped from our awareness in large part due to his close association with Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian. I hope this will encourage a new look at this tremendously original artist, while highlighting an overlooked aspect of Michelangelo’s activity,”

said Matthias Wivel, curator of 'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Michelangelo & Sebastiano'.

Director of the National Gallery, Dr Gabriele Finaldi, says:

“The exhibition introduces us into the very heart of High Renaissance Rome, where a new and heroic art was being forged. Against a background of war and religious conflict Michelangelo and Sebastiano produced works about life, death and resurrection which are among the most powerful and moving ever made. This is a unique opportunity to see an exceptional gathering of masterpieces.”

Excellent review



Left: Michelangelo, finished by an unknown 17th century artist, ‘The Risen Christ ('The Giustiniani Christ’)’, 1514–15, finished in the early 17th century. Church of San Vincenzo Martire, Monastero dei Silvestrini, Bassano Romano (Viterbo) © Photo Alessandro Vasari. Right: After Michelangelo, ‘The Risen Christ’, about 1897-8 (copy after the Risen Christ, 1519–21, Santa Maria sopra Minerva, Rome). Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen (KAS422) © SMK Photo / Jakob Skou-Hansen


Portrait of a Man (Pierfrancesco Borgherini ?), Sebastiano del Piombo
© San Diego Museum of Art / Bridgeman Images    X9070    Oil on wood, transferred from wood 71.1 × 54.6 cm
about 1516-17    San Diego Museum of Art Gift of Anne R. and Amy Putnam



Study of a male nude looking to the right, beckoning (recto), Michelangelo
© The Trustees of The British Museum    X9011r    Pen and brown ink over traces of black chalk on paper 37.4 × 22.8 cm 
about 1503-5    The British Museum, London



Studies of children (verso), Michelangelo
© The Trustees of The British Museum    X9011v    Pen and brown ink over traces of black chalk on paper 37.4 x 22.8 cm
about 1503-5    The British Museum, London




Portrait of Michelangelo, Probably by Sebastiano del Piombo
© photo Archivio Opificio delle Pietre Dure, Florence    X8980    Oil on wood 88.5 × 74 cm (pre-restoration)   
about 1518-20    Galerie Hans, Hamburg




 Christ carrying the Cross, Sebastiano del Piombo


Michelangelo
about 1504-1505    Royal Academy of Arts, London
The Virgin and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist ('The Taddei Tondo'), Michelangelo
© Royal Academy of Arts, London; Photographer: Prudence Cuming Associates Limited    X9025b    Marble 106.8 cm diameter    The Virgin and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist ('The Taddei Tondo')









The Meeting of the Virgin and Elizabeth (The Visitation), Sebastiano del Piombo
© Duke of Northumberland, Alnwick Castle    X8977    Oil on plaster, transferred to canvas 141.5 × 192 x 4.6 cm



Three female figures (The Visitation), Sebastiano del Piombo
© Duke of Northumberland, Alnwick Castle    X8978    Oil on plaster, transferred to canvas 144 × 121 x 4.4 cm   
about 1533-6   





Sebastiano del Piombo, The Judgement of Solomon, 1506-9, Kingston Lacy, The Bankes Collection (National Trust) (1257074, KLA/P/33) © National Trust Images / Derrick E. Witty


Sebastiano del Piombo, Portrait of Clement VII, 1525-6, Museo di Capodimonte, Naples (Q147) © Soprintendenza Speciale per il Polo Museale di Napoli


Sebastiano del Piombo, The Virgin and Child with Saint Joseph, Saint John the Baptist and a Donor, 1517 © The National Gallery, London (NG1450)

Constable and Brighton

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8 April – 8 October 2017
Brighton Museum & Art Gallery


A new exhibition at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery will explore John Constable’s time in the fashionable seaside resort, where he stayed with his family between 1824 and 1828.
Constable’s wife Maria suffered from Tuberculosis, and on medical advice the couple and their children took lodgings in Brighton for extended periods.  Despite this, after four years, Maria sadly died at the age of 41.

Working between Brighton and London, Constable produced around 150 works in the town.  Some were commissions, created in his ‘painting room’ and usually destined for the French market, but his long, systematic walks in and around Brighton also prompted many other works.

Constable in Brighton will bring together over 60 of the artist’s sketches, drawings and paintings from his time in Brighton for the first time, in the place where they were created.  Focusing on his family life and walks, it will explore the impact and influence of the work he made here; as well as the working practices he developed and the locations and people who inspired him.

Uniquely, the display will follow Constable’s own walking and painting sequences, illustrating the series of paintings he produced as he explored the Brighton landscape.  Highlights will include:


  • Chain Pier, Brighton (1826–7, Tate), a fine oil painting featuring the early Brighton landmark which was swept away in 1896, in its first exhibition in the city for 20 years.
 

  • Rainstorm over the Sea (c. 1824-28, Royal Academy of Arts), a passionate, early impressionistic oil sketch seemingly influenced by Maria’s illness.

  • A Windmill near Brighton (1824, Tate), a jewel-like pastoral scene of a sun-drenched windmill typical of the Sussex countryside in Constable’s time.
  • The artist’s painting box, and his children’s toy stagecoach.
  • The gold medal Constable won for his celebrated painting The Hay Wain, when it was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1824 (having been shown at the Royal Academy in 1821).
Constable in Brighton will be curated by Brighton artist Peter Harrap, in consultation with renowned Constable expert Anne Lyles (formerly of Tate) and with support from researcher Shan Lancaster.  Harrap’s interest in Constable burgeoned when he moved to Brighton, and discovered he was living in the property where Constable lodged.

He said: “I’ve long been interested in Constable, but discovering that he was based in the house where I now live has led me to specialise in researching his life and work.  He wasn’t a huge fan of busy Brighton, referring to it as ‘Piccadilly by the sea’, but he enjoyed local walks and his time here was very productive.  His images of the coast, the South Downs and the area’s working life pioneered the practice of painting from life in the open air, later adopted by the Impressionists.”

Central to the exhibition will be the artist’s view expressed in a letter written from Brighton in 1824, that: “It is the business of a painter not to contend with nature and put this scene (…) on a canvas of a few inches, but to make something out of nothing, in attempting which he must almost of necessity become poetical.”

Constable in Brighton will form part of Royal Pavilion & Museums’ Regency Summer season in 2017, which will also include Jane Austen by the Sea at the Royal Pavilion and Visions of the Royal Pavilion Estate at Brighton Museum.



The exhibition is accompanied by a book of essays, Constable and Brighton, edited by Shan Lancaster – featuring Peter Harrap, Anne Lyles, Ian Warrell and Sue Berry.  Published by Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers Ltd, it is now available.

The Art of the Wyeth Family

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Feb 1 – May 31, 2017
The Art of the Wyeth Family features artwork by the many family members and descendants of N.C. Wyeth, spanning three generations. The Wyeth family has strong roots along the East Coast – particularly in coastal Maine, and rural Pennsylvania – that is reflected in their naturalistic representations of the landscape, wildlife, and area inhabitants. 

The first group exhibition of art by the Wyeth family took place in Philadelphia in 1935. Comprised of paintings by all of the artists in the Wyeth family at the time, the exhibition included N.C. Wyeth’s work alongside those of his children Henriette, Carolyn, and Andrew. 

N.C. Wyeth insisted that his children learn the traditional aspects of creating art such as perspective drawing and working with human models and plaster casts, while also emphasizing the importance of astutely observing the natural world and their place within it. He would later reflect “that a man can only paint that which he knows even more than intimately, he has got to know it spiritually. And to do that he has got to live around it, in it and be part of it.” 

Though the paintings in this exhibition differ significantly in terms of style and technique, all of the works are united by an unwavering dedication to capturing the transcendent beauty of their subject matter. More than a century has passed since the earliest painting in this exhibition was completed, yet the legacy of one of America’s finest artistic dynasties continues to prosper. 



ANDREW WYETH
Binoculars
1981
watercolor and dry brush on paper 21 x 29 in. 


blizzard by andrew wyeth

ANDREW WYETH
Blizzard
1966
watercolor and gouache on paper 20 x 29 in. 


]
ANDREW WYETH
Concord River
1934 watercolor on paper 21 x 28 1/2 in. 


ANDREW WYETH
Dogwood 1983 HS
1983 collotype on paper 21 x 28 3/8 in. 



ANDREW WYETH
End of Storm
1967 watercolor on paper 21 x 27 1/2 in.

JAMIE WYETH
Herring Gulls
color lithograph on paper 24 3/4 x 27 1/2 in.



ANDREW WYETH
In the Orchard
1973 pencil on paper 23 1/4 x 17 in.


N.C. WYETH
Once the Girl Started Through the Yard as Though She Would Rush After Them and Stopped
at the Gate
1930-1931
oil on canvas 34 1/8 x 25 1/4 in. 




ANDREW WYETH
Portrait of a Man (Forest Wall)
1950 pencil on paper 11 1/2 x 14 in.



ANDREW WYETH
Quart and a Half
1961 watercolor on paper 21 1/2 x 29 3/4 in.




JAMIE WYETH
Red Tail Hawk
2013
paint and pencil on paper 15 7/8 x 15 7/8 in. 



JAMIE WYETH
Snapper
1982 watercolor on paper 29 x 39 in. 



ANDREW WYETH
Study for Hand Split
1979
pencil on paper 13 1/2 x 10 1/4 in. 



ANDREW WYETH
Sunset
watercolor on paper 21 1/2 x 29 1/4 in. 


ANDREW WYETH
Undersnow
1977
watercolor and dry brush on paper 23 1/4 x 18 1/2 in.



JAMIE WYETH
Unpainted Buoys
c. 1965 watercolor on paper 17 x 21 in.


ANDREW WYETH
Betsy's Hat (Study for Distant Thunder)
1961 pencil on paper 10 1/2 x 9 3/4 in.

BONHAMS 19th Century European Paintings 3 May 2017 New York

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A Beautiful Gift, a work by the French Academic painter Émile-Auguste Hublin (1830-1891), is among the leading works in Bonhams' next 19th Century European Paintings sale in New York on Wednesday 3 May. It is estimated at US$50,000-70,000.

Hublin's artistic influence can be traced back to the French 18th-century master, Jacques-Louis David whose emphasis on excellent draftsmanship, brilliant coloring and an eye for beauty is clearly evident in A Beautiful Gift. Hublin studied under François Édouard Picot, a pupil of David who established a studio at the prestigious Académie des Beaux Arts to preserve and extend his legacy.

Bonhams Senior Specialist in European Paintings in the US, Madalina Lazen, said: "Hublin's paintings are a vivid document of Bretton costumes of the 19th Century, as encountered by the artist during his trips through Brittany. His sitters are typically young girls engaged in house work or with animals, and their modeling against the dark background is flawless, bringing out the luminous features and costume highlights."

The sale also features works from the Collection of Alex and Barbara Kasten. A strong selection of paintings includes:



Footsteps by the British artist Isaac Snowman (1874-1947), estimated at US$60,000-80,000. Exhibited at the Royal Academy in London in 1901, it was one of a series of Snowman's works depicting young mothers and their children dressed in the most fashionable outfits. Well known as a society painter, Snowman was also a strong supporter of the Zionist movement and campaigned actively on its behalf.


Die goldene Meile bei Remagen estimated at US$40,000-60,000 by the Austrian painter Franz Unterberger (1838-1902). The work depicts a section of the Golden Mile – a stretch of the river Rhine famous for its picturesque beauty and economic significance as the centerpiece of the growing international tourism industry.



La Maison d'Henri Martin á Saint-Cirq-Lapopie by Jacques Martin-Ferrières (1893-1972). The painting, estimated at US$20,000-30,000, shows the house in the medieval stronghold of Saint-Cirq-Lapopie, near Cahors, bought by Martin-Ferrières's father, the painter Henri Martin, at the turn of the 20th century. This work by the 25 year-old Jacques shows his father's influence. The pointillist technique is employed with great skill and layers of thick paint are superimposed in perfect chromatic harmony.

Works by two 19th-century Romanian artists make a rare appearance at auction.



 Danube Guard (Santinela) by Nicolae Grigorescu (1838-1907) was a product of the Russian-Turkish war 1877-78. Romania broke away from the Ottoman Empire, under which it had been ruled for 400 years, to fight alongside the Russians. Grigorescu accompanied the troops as an artist-reporter, making hundreds of sketches along the way that he later used as the basis of a series of oil paintings, including Danube Guard. It carries an estimate of US$20,000-30,000)



A portrait of a Young Girl (Cap de Copil) by Nicolae Tonitza (1886-1940) is also estimated at US$20,000-30,000. Tonitza was greatly inspired by Post-Impressionism and Expressionist art, and was responsible for infusing new life into the Romanian art scene at the beginning of the 20th century. He greatly enjoyed painting children – his own as well as those of his friends and relatives - and following them from a very young age through different stages of maturity.

Both paintings were once in the collection of Roy Melbourne who was political attaché to the American Embassy in Bucharest, 1946-48.

Visionaries: Creating a Modern Guggenheim Part I

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Opening on February 10, 2017, on the occasion of the eightieth anniversary of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Visionaries: Creating a Modern Guggenheim features more than 170 modern objects from the permanent collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice. 

Assembling many of the foundation’s most iconic works along with treasures by artists less familiar, this celebratory exhibition explores avant-garde innovations of the late nineteenth through mid-twentieth centuries, as well as the groundbreaking activities of six pioneering arts patrons who brought to light some of the most significant artists of their day and established the Guggenheim Foundation’s identity as a forward- looking institution. Visionaries includes important works by artists such as Alexander Calder, Paul Cézanne, Marc Chagall, Vasily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Fernand Léger, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and Vincent van Gogh. 

Visionaries: Creating a Modern Guggenheim is organized by Megan Fontanella, Curator, Collections and Provenance, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, with support from Ylinka Barotto, Curatorial Assistant, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. 
Installed in the Frank Lloyd Wright–designed rotunda and the Thannhauser Gallery on Tower Level 2, this exhibition showcases the museum’s exceptional modern holdings as organized through the perspectives of six proponents of the avant-garde who intersected with the Guggenheim Foundation in the early decades of its history and gave their personal collections, in whole or in part, to the institution. 
Of these visionaries, foremost is the museum’s founder, Solomon R. Guggenheim, who, with support from his trusted advisor, the German-born artist Hilla Rebay, set aside a more traditional collecting focus to become a great champion of nonobjective art—a strand of abstraction with spiritual aims, epitomized by the work of Vasily Kandinsky. Amassed against the backdrop of economic crisis and war in the 1930s and 1940s, Guggenheim’s unparalleled modern holdings formed the basis of his foundation, established eighty years ago in 1937 with the goal of encouraging art, art education, and enlightenment for the public. 
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation’s formative collection was subsequently shaped through major acquisitions from contemporaries who shared Guggenheim’s pioneering spirit. These acquisitions include a group of prized Impressionist and early School of Paris masterworks from Justin K. Thannhauser; the eclectic Expressionist inventory of émigré art dealer Karl Nierendorf; the rich holdings of abstract and Surrealist painting and sculpture from self-proclaimed “art addict” Peggy Guggenheim, Solomon’s niece; and key examples from the estates of artists Katherine S. Dreier and Hilla Rebay, both pivotal in promoting modern art in America. Highlights from each of these collections feature prominently in Visionaries and convey a narrative on avant-garde innovation in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. 
 
Visionaries offers a rare opportunity to explore in-depth key artists represented among the museum’s holdings, such as Kandinsky and Klee, through multiple examples that reflect the shared interest in their work among the six featured patrons. The exhibition includes nearly twenty-five works from the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, seldom displayed outside of the Venice palazzo, including canvases by Max Ernst, René Magritte, and Yves Tanguy, and sculptures by Joseph Cornell and Alberto Giacometti. 



Among this group, Jackson Pollock’s Alchemy (1947), considered among his finest paintings and a celebrated icon of postwar abstraction, will be shown in the United States for the first time in almost fifty years.  

More than a dozen works on paper by Picasso and Van Gogh, rarely on view to the public, will be installed in the Thannhauser Gallery, where the earliest works represented in the Guggenheim collection are typically on display. Additionally, sculptures by Edgar Degas and paintings by Pierre- Auguste Renoir, Paul Gauguin, and Édouard Manet will be placed on the ramps for the occasion of the exhibition. In May, a fresh selection of works on paper by artists including Klee, Picasso, and Van Gogh will replace the first grouping. 
Several conservation projects have been initiated as part of the planning of this anniversary exhibition. Red Lily Pads (1956), a painted steel sculpture by Alexander Calder spanning nearly 17 feet that will be suspended over the rotunda’s fountain, underwent extensive historical research and analysis, resulting in a beautifully integrated surface and restoration of the mobile’s proper balance. 



Manet’s Woman in Evening Dress (1877–80) was studied by a group of curators, conservators, and scientists who traced the history of the work and examined discolored resin varnish and overpaint on the surface. A complex treatment removed this coating to reveal a cool palette, vigorous brushwork, and the fine details of Manet’s sketchy composition. 

Luciano Pensabene Buemi, Conservator of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, cleaned The Studio (L'Atelier), 1928, an oil and crayon on canvas by Picasso, before the work traveled to New York. Additionally, works by Josef Albers, Kandinsky, and Mondrian, among others, were treated in preparation for the exhibition.






Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Black Lines, December 1913 Schwarze Linien, December 1913
Oil on canvas
51 x 51 5/8 inches (129.4 x 131.1 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
37.241 



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Landscape with Red Spots, No. 2, 1913 Landschaft mit roten Flecken, Nr. 2, 1913
Oil on canvas
46 1/4 x 55 1/8 inches (117.5 x 140 cm)
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, 1976
76.2553.33 



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
White Center, 1921 Weisses Zentrum, 1921
Oil on canvas
46 3/4 x 53 3/4 inches (118.7 x 136.5 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, The Hilla Rebay Collection 71.1936.R98 



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Circles on Black, 1921 Krugi na Chyornom, 1921
Oil on canvas
53 3/4 x 47 1/8 inches (136.5 x 120 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection
46.1050 




Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Dominant Curve, April 1936 Courbe dominante, April 1936
Oil on canvas
50 7/8 x 76 1/2 inches (129.2 x 194.3 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection
45.989



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Several Circles, January–February 1926 Einige Kreise, January–February 1926
Oil on canvas
55 1/4 x 55 3/8 inches (140.3 x 140.7 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
41.283 



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Painting with White Border, May 1913 Bild mit weißem Rand, May 1913
Oil on canvas
55 1/4 x 78 7/8 inches (140.3 x 200.3 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
37.245 



Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Blue Mountain, 1908–09 Der blaue Berg, 1908–09
Oil on canvas
41 3/4 x 38 inches (106 x 96.6 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
41.505 




Vasily Kandinsky(1866-1944)
Improvisation 28 (Second Version), 1912 Improvisation 28 [zweite Fassung], 1912
Oil on canvas
43 7/8 x 63 7/8 inches (111.4 x 162.1 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
37.239



Camille Pissarro(1830-1903)
The Hermitage at Pontoise, ca. 1867
Les côteaux de l’Hermitage, Pontoise, ca. 1867
Oil on canvas
59 5/8 x 79 inches (151.4 x 200.6 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978
78.2514.67 



Pierre-Auguste Renoir(1841-1919)
Woman with Parakeet, 1871 La femme à la perruche, 1871
Oil on canvas
36 1/4 x 25 5/8 inches (92.1 x 65.1 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978
78.2514.68 



Édouard Manet(1832-1883)
Before the Mirror, 1876 Devant la glace, 1876
Oil on canvas
36 1/4 x 28 1/8 inches (92.1 x 71.4 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978
78.2514.27 




Paul Gauguin(1848-1903)
Haere Mai, 1891
Oil on burlap
28 1/2 x 36 inches (72.4 x 91.4 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978
78.2514.16 





Vincent van Gogh(1853-1890)
Mountains at Saint-Rémy, July 1889 Montagnes à Saint-Rémy, July 1889
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978


Edgar Degas(1834-1917)
Dancers in Green and Yellow, ca. 1903 Danseuses vertes et jaunes, ca. 1903
Pastel and charcoal on several pieces of tracing paper, mounted on paperboard
38 7/8 x 28 1/8 inches (98.8 x 71.5 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978 
78.2514.12




Henri Rousseau(1844-1910)
The Football Players, 1908 Les joueurs de football, 1908
Oil on canvas
39 1/2 x 31 5/8 inches (100.3 x 80.3 cm) Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 60.1583
Remarks: Formerly collection Justin K. Thannhauser



Henri Rousseau(1844-1910)
Artillerymen, ca. 1893–95 Les artilleurs, ca. 1893–95
Oil on canvas
31 1/8 x 39 inches (79.1 x 98.9 cm)
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Founding Collection, By gift
38.711
Remarks: Exhibited at Galerie Thannhauser, Berlin, 1927

Botticelli and the Search for the Divine

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Sandro Botticelli and workshop, Venus (detail), about 1484–90.  Oil on canvas, transferred from panel.  Galleria Sabauda, Turin.  lnv.  172.
Sandro Botticelli and workshop, Venus (detail), about 1484–90. Oil on canvas, transferred from panel. Galleria Sabauda, Turin. lnv. 172.
The exhibition explores dramatic changes in the artist’s style and subject matter that reflect the shifting political and religious climate of Florence during his lifetime—from poetic depictions of classical gods and goddesses to austere sacred themes that dominate his later production under the influence of the stern Dominican friar Girolamo Savonarola (originator of the infamous “Bonfires of the Vanities”).

Traveling to the MFA as part of a partnership with the Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William & Mary, Botticelli and the Search for the Divine (on view April 15 to July 9, 2017 in the Lois B. and Michael K. Torf Gallery) also features a number of paintings by Botticelli’s key contemporaries.  

“Great art stands as a historical reflection of the time of its creation, and in the moment can encourage all of us to think and act more creatively,” said Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the MFA. “Despite deep admiration for Botticelli’s work across the globe, there has never been a major Botticelli exhibition in North America. We are especially pleased to offer the public the opportunity to engage deeply with this period of artistic achievement, Florence in the 15th and early 16th centuries, when Sandro Botticelli was the most famous painter in the city. Although he lived more than 500 years ago, his art still speaks to us directly.”

The selection of paintings in Botticelli and the Search for the Divine encompasses major works from the entire span of the artist’s long and prolific career. The exhibition is organized chronologically, divided into four sections: Botticelli’s artistic formation under his master and principal influence Fra Filippo Lippi; Botticelli’s earliest work and exploration of new genres; his mature years, during which his success reflected remarkable proficiency in depicting erudite literary themes; and his later years, during which he produced profoundly religious paintings, not well known today, under the sway of Savonarola.

“Our exhibition traces a fascinating story of an artist shaped by tumultuous times. We hope to bring our visitors into Botticelli’s Florence, a city full of brilliant painters and opinionated patrons, with our artist often caught in the middle,” said Frederick Ilchman, Chair, Art of Europe and Mrs. Russell W. Baker Curator of Paintings at the MFA. “Since Botticelli was one of the most versatile artists of the Italian Renaissance, we’re also excited that our exhibition will include a wide variety of subject matter and a surprising range of media. American audiences will be able to experience the full scope of the artist’s achievement firsthand, thanks to unprecedented loans from Italy, as well as generous loans from Boston institutions.”

The son of a tanner, Botticelli received early training as a goldsmith before joining the studio of painter Fra Filippo Lippi (about 1406–69) for an apprenticeship that lasted from approximately 1460 to 1467. Several of Lippi’s depictions of the Madonna and Child—one of his specialties—are displayed, including the majestic






Madonna and Child (about 1466–69, Palazzo Medici Riccardi, Florence), which shows the figures in a touching embrace, before a grand architectural backdrop. Lippi’s graceful, ornamental style made a strong impression on Botticelli, who emulated his teacher’s gift of expressing deeply felt tenderness.


While Botticelli’s earliest paintings included copies of his master’s compositions, the Virgin and Child (Madonna of the Loggia) (about 1467, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence) is generally regarded as one of the younger artist’s earliest independent renditions of a sacred theme that would become one of his own specialties.

Botticelli established his own workshop in about 1470. His assistants included his master’s son, Filippino Lippi (about 1457–1504), who distinguished himself as Botticelli’s best pupil after initial training with his father. Similar compositions can be seen in



the younger Lippi’s Adoration of the Child with Saint John (about 1485, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence)



and Botticelli’s tondo, or round painting, The Nativity (about 1482–85, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum).



A rare loan from the Church of San Salvatore in Ognissanti, Florence, Saint Augustine in His Study (about 1480), was Botticelli’s first major fresco and the most important work on public view by the artist during his lifetime. The success of the image, which portrays the patron saint of humanism as a powerful older man with large, sculptural hands and a mood of solemn grandeur, likely explains why Botticelli received soon after commissions for more frescoes than any other painter on the walls of the Sistine Chapel in Rome.

After a year in Rome, Botticelli returned to Florence. The decade that followed marked the peak of his career, closely intertwined with patronage from Lorenzo the Magnificent, ruling member of the Medici dynasty. Lorenzo’s emblem of linked diamond rings can be seen on the dress of the heroine subduing a mythical creature in





Botticelli’s Minerva and the Centaur (about 1482, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence). The painting was possibly commissioned by Lorenzo as a wedding gift for his cousin Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco, who in turn commissioned Botticelli’s most iconic work—the Birth of Venus, (above) painted around 1484. Responding to the immediate enthusiasm for his masterpiece, Botticelli replicated his portrayal of the nude goddess of love— itself based on a famous lost marble statue from antiquity—a number of times. The Venus on view in the exhibition is one of only two surviving versions, perhaps executed by the master with the help of an assistant. Its superb quality indicates the high standards of the workshop. Standing on a narrow stone parapet, Venus is silhouetted against a black background strongly lit from the right, as if to evoke a sculpture. A transparent sleeved garment with a square neckline opens just below her chest, and her shoulders descend to her arms in the same stream of movement as her floating hair.

The golden age of the Medici court ended abruptly when Lorenzo the Magnificent died in 1492. As had become the custom in Tuscany for great men, a funerary mask (1492, Gallerie degli Uffizi, Tesoro dei Granduchi) was modeled from his face in order to preserve the effigy of Florence’s foremost citizen. Lorenzo was succeeded by his son, Piero the Unfortunate, who was soon exiled along with the entire Medici family after a series of disastrous decisions that left Florence defenseless against an invasion led by the French king, Charles VIII.

In this vacuum, an adversary of the Medici, Fra Girolamo Savonarola (1452–98), persuaded the French king to grant the city more lenient terms of surrender. The citizens of Florence ceded their government to Savonarola, who used forceful and apocalyptic sermons to insist on harsh moral reforms. In 1497 and 1498, he organized two “Bonfires of the Vanities,” during which thousands of books, paintings and other possessions associated with temptation and sin were set on fire. Botticelli is the most prominent among the artists whose depictions of nudes and pagan subjects were likely burned—and some authorities believe that Botticelli himself was a willing participant, throwing his own paintings itno the flames.

While there are no records that Botticelli ever personally met Savonarola, he must have heard him preach often. Many scholars believe that changes in the artist’s style are partially in response to the cultural and societal changes caused by the friar’s reign. In this last chapter of his career, Botticelli progressively simplified his style by reducing his color palette, flattening the figures and rounding their contours, as well as filling the background and suppressing the sense of spatial depth.






Intended for private devotion, the MFA’s Virgin and Child with Saint John the Baptist (late 1490s) possesses the characteristics of Botticelli’s later manner.



In comparison with his earlier depictions of the subject, a certain stiffness can be observed in the profiles of the figures and in the drapery folds. Virgin and the Child with Young Saint John the Baptist (about 1505, Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence) offers an even more austere and solemn portrayal. Holding the Christ child, the Virgin Mary bends forward and lowers her son to the young St. John the Baptist, alluding to Christ’s later descent from the cross. The painting has long been considered one of Botticelli’s most enigmatic works, probably completed between the execution of Savonarola in 1498 and the painter’s death in 1510.

Despite enormous popularity, Savonarola’s success did not go unchallenged—he was banned from preaching and excommunicated by Pope Alexander VI in 1497. The friar boldly agreed to a trial by fire in 1498, closely followed by his arrest and conviction of heresy. In May, Savonarola was hanged and burned by secular authorities.





Botticelli’s Mystic Crucifixion (about 1500, Harvard Art Museums) is believed to be a response to the execution, which occurred only a few months after the second Bonfire of the Vanities. The painting incorporates themes from Savonarola’s catastrophic sermons, with firebrands and weapons raining from the sky and an angel of justice raising a sword to slay a small lion that symbolizes Florence. The city itself appears in the background, cast in a heavenly light.

In addition to paintings, the exhibition in Boston includes rare books, engravings and woodcuts that help bring to life the rich cultural context of Florence in the era of the Medici and Savonarola.



A rare 1481 edition of Dante’s Divine Comedy (Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum), for which Botticelli designed engraved illustrations, exemplifies the esteem for erudition in Lorenzo the Magnificent’s court and his promotion of Florence as the center for intellectual pursuits. Savonarola’s own writings will be present through two books of theology from the MFA’s collection.

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