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All the Rembrandts

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Rijksmuseum marks the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt’s death in 2019 with ‘Year of Rembrandt’. The year-long celebration opens with ‘All the Rembrandts’ (15 February to 10 June), in which the Rijksmuseum will present for the first time an exhibition of all 22 paintings, 60 drawings and more than 300 best examples of Rembrandt’s prints in its collection

As well as holding the world’s largest collection of Rembrandt paintings – including

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f0/Amsterdam_-_Rijksmuseum_1885_-_The_Gallery_of_Honour_%281st_Floor%29_-_De_Nachtwacht_-_The_Night_Watch_1642_by_Rembrandt_van_Rijn.jpg

The Night Watch,

 

the portraits of Marten Soolmans and Oopjen Coppit,

and The Jewish Bride– the Rijksmuseum collection offers the world’s most comprehensive and representative overview of Rembrandt’s painting oeuvre.

Given the extreme rarity that many of these delicate drawings and prints go on display, All the Rembrandts offers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to glean an unparalleled perspective on Rembrandt the artist, the human, the storyteller, the innovator.

The Rembrandt collection in the Rijksmuseum

foto1 

Rembrandt van Rijn, Self-portrait, c. 1628

The recent acquisition of the spectacular marriage portraits of Marten Soolmans and Oopjen Coppit means the Rijksmuseum’s collection of Rembrandt paintings is now the largest in the world. With its total of 22 works, from the early _Self-Portrait as a Young Man to the later Self-Portrait as the Apostle Paul, the collection forms a coherent overview of his entire life. The highlight of the collection of Rembrandt’s paintings is his greatest masterpiece, The Night Watch.

The comprehensive collection of drawings encompasses all Rembrandt’s periods and styles, and includes numerous exceptional drawings from his early period. The Rijksmuseum will show only the most beautiful and finest of Rembrandt’s 1300 prints. The 17th-century prints are exceedingly fragile and rarely displayed in public.

The exhibition

All the Rembrandts will explore different aspects of Rembrandt’s life and work through a number of themes. The first section presents the milestones of his career as a young artist; when Rembrandt looks at himself in the mirror, the viewer looks over his shoulder. A close examination of Rembrandt’s many self-portraits reveals his growth as an artist of incomparable talent.
foto2Rembrandt van Rijn, Nude Woman Resting on a Cushion, c. 1658

The second section of the exhibition focuses on Rembrandt’s surroundings and the people in his life. As a young man Rembrandt honed his craft by painting portraits of his mother, his family and acquaintances. He even made a powerful portrait of his wife Saskia as she lay ill in bed. The artist was also fascinated by the wider world around him: the beggars, the buskers, the vagrants, the actors. He drew and painted countless portraits of the people he encountered.

Rembrandt was a gifted storyteller, and his stories are at the heart of the last section of the exhibition.

The Old Testament tales inspired

 File:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn - Portret van een paar als oudtestamentische figuren, genaamd 'Het Joodse bruidje' - Google Art Project.jpg

 Isaac and Rebecca (the alternative title for The Jewish Bride, c. 1665–1669)



foto4 

Rembrandt van Rijn, Self-Portrait as the Apostle Paul, 1661


and Self-Portrait as the Apostle Paul (1661) in which he gives masterful expression to gestures and emotions that are familiar, tangible and intimate. Early depictions of these tales tend to be delicate and refined; later in life Rembrandt used a coarser experimental technique, applying ingenious colour and light effects to further enhance the narrative and draw out its essence.




The Wardens of the Amsterdam Drapers’ Guild (known as The Syndics) (1662), Rembrandt van Rijn. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem, Rembrandt
Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem (1630), Rembrandt van Rijn. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
The Three Trees, Rembrandt
The Three Trees (1643), Rembrandt van Rijn. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Recumbent Lion, Rembrandt
Recumbent Lion (c. 1660), Rembrandt van Rijn. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Landscape with a Stone Bridge, Rembrandt
Landscape with a Stone Bridge (c. 1638), Rembrandt van Rijn. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


Curators: Erik Hinterding and Mireille Linck
Exhibtion and graphic design: Irma Boom



Titian and the Renaissance in Venice

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The Städel Museum

2/13–5/26/2019







 Titian (c. 1488/90–1576), Madonna and Child, St Catherine and a Shepherd (the “Madonna of the Rabbit”), c. 1530. Oil on canvas, 71 x 87 cm. Paris, Musée du Louvre, Département des Peintures ©bpk / RMN - Grand Palais / Michèle Bellot.

The Städel Museum is devoting a major special exhibition to one of the most momentous chapters in the history of European art: Venetian painting of the Renaissance. Entitled “Titian and the Renaissance in Venice”, the show unites more than a hundred masterpieces – In the early sixteenth century, artists of the “City of Water” developed an independent strain of the Renaissance relying on purely painterly means and the impact of light and colour. One of their most important exponents was Titian (ca. 1488/90–1576), who would hold the key position in the Venetian art scene all his life. 

The Frankfurt show assembles more than twenty examples by Titian alone – and thus the most extensive selection of his works ever before on display in Germany. It also presents paintings and drawings by Giovanni Bellini (ca. 1435–1516), Jacopo Palma il Vecchio (1479/80–1528), Sebastiano del Piombo (ca. 1485–1547), Lorenzo Lotto (ca. 1480– 1556/57), Jacopo Tintoretto (ca. 1518/19–1594), Jacopo Bassano (ca. 1510–1592), Paolo Veronese (1528–1588) and others.

These works offer comprehensive insights into the artistic and thematic breadth of the Renaissance in Venice and elucidate why artists of later centuries looked back to the art of this time and place again and again for orientation. The exhibition introduces selected aspects of Venetian cinquecento painting in eight sections: for example its atmospherically charged landscape depictions, its ideal likenesses of beautiful women (the so-called “belle donne”), or the importance of colour. 


The thematically oriented chapters together form a systematic panorama of the extensive material. Apart from the Venetian holdings in the Städel collection – 






Titian (c. 1488/90–1576), Portrait of a Young Man, ca. 1510. Oil on poplar, 20 x 17 cm. Frankfurt am Main, Städel Museum © Städel Museum – ARTOTHEK.
 


including Titian’s Portrait of a Young Man (ca. 1510) – the show brings together superb loans from more than sixty national and international museums.  


“This powerful theme – an art-historical classic – has recently come more strongly into focus in German museums. It gives us great pleasure to be able to present such a comprehensive, thematically structured panorama of Venetian painting of the Renaissance for the first time ever in Germany here in Frankfurt”, comments Städel director Philipp Demandt.

Titian’s contemporaries, for example Sebastiano del Piombo or Lorenzo Lotto, were soon spreading the innovations beyond the watery confines of Venice as well. The 1540s saw the emergence of a new generation of highly gifted artists, among them Jacopo Tintoretto, Paolo Veronese and Jacopo Bassano, who now likewise competed for commissions. It was Titian, however, who set the standards for his rivals and admirers alike. “Hardly any epoch of art history has known such continual reception. And within that context, Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese have been accorded the admiration otherwise reserved solely for Michelangelo and Raphael”, exhibition curator Bastian Eclercy emphasizes.

A Tour of the Exhibition
 
The exhibition begins by taking visitors on a representative tour of sixteenth-century Venice. In the giant woodcut

 

View of Venice (1498–1500; Nuremberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum) based on a design by Jacopo de’ Barbari and published by Anton Kolb, the unusual bird’s-eye perspective provides an astoundingly precise impression of the “Serenissima’s” unique topography.



The prominently placed, large-scale Rest on the Flight into Egypt (ca. 1572; Sarasota, FL, The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art) by Paolo Veronese ushers visitors directly into the first section of the show, introducing a typically Venetian variation on the depiction of the Madonna, a dominant theme in Italy. In its painterly execution, this exotic altarpiece is considered a magnum opus of the Venetian Renaissance; it also marks both the end and the culmination of the development of a pictorial genre known as the “Sacra Conversazione” (“sacred conversation”). Over the course of the sixteenth century, the motif had been invested with ever greater vividness and interaction between the figures. And particularly in Venice, the traditional subject of the Virgin and Child was often expanded to include further protagonists.

From depictions of the Virgin Mary set in luxurious landscapes, the focus shifts to the genre of landscape painting proper – one of the great achievements of the Venetian Renaissance. Even if it is initially still linked with a figural narrative, landscape now takes centre stage as a signifier of mood. This chapter of the exhibition highlights both the lyrical natural sceneries by the early Titian and the dramatically charged ones by such artists as Veronese or Bassano. Over time, these works would come to serve as the foundation for the establishment of the landscape as a genre in its own right. Especially in their mythological compositions, the painters breathed new life into the idea of Arcadia romanticized by the poets of antiquity as an ideal environment.

At this juncture, the exhibition rooms open onto an architecture traversed by arcades. Artistic compositions inspired by poetry – already alluded to in the previous section – are featured here as an independent genre. Sixteenth-century Venetian painters of mythological scenes were no longer content with merely illustrating the literary material, but now laid claim to equal rights in the poetic license of invention. Among the examples representing this development are

File:Titiaan - Boy with Dogs in a Landscape - Google Art Project.jpg

Titian’s Boy with Dogs in a Landscape (ca. 1570–76; Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen)



and Veronese’s Cupid with Two Dogs (ca. 1580; Munich, Alte Pinakothek), which bears a resemblance to the Titian work. Both paintings have continued to defy interpretation to this day.

The final section of this first part of the exhibition is like a return to reality – but only at first sight. That is because true-to-life likenesses of women were rare in Venice, whereas “ideal portraits” of beautiful ladies were quite common. Even if they are often classified as portrait paintings, the “belle donne” depicted in these works were presumably not real persons, but poetic ideals of feminine beauty.

Within the context of this exhibition, a new interpretation of

 


Sebastiano del Piombo’s fascinating Woman in Blue with Incense Burner (ca. 1510/11; Washington, National Gallery of Art) has led to its identification as an early example of this genre. It exhibits the typical features of the ideal of beauty prevailing in the period in question: a roundish face, voluptuous lips, an enigmatic gaze and dark blond hair.

An excursus in this section, based on the costume book De gli habiti antichi et moderni di diverse parti del mondo (1590; Of Ancient and Modern Dress of Diverse Parts of the World) by Cesare Vecellio, a cousin of Titian’s, is devoted to contemporary fashions in Venice and beyond.

Now the tour continues on the first floor of the exhibition annex. Taking its starting point in the Frankfurt portrait of a young man from Titian’s early period, this chapter explores how the Venetian male portrait came to flourish in the cinquecento – and to exert a lasting influence on European portrait painting.

Characteristic examples here are the portraits of casually elegant young men in black, for example by Titian or Tintoretto, based on Baldassare Castiglione‘s Libro del cortegiano (1528; The Book of the Courtier). Yet expensively dressed wearers of ermine and portraits of the doges – the chief magistrates of the Republic of Venice – also contributed to shaping the image of the era.

At the centre of the room, visitors encounter three depictions of men in splendid armour.  The special degree of mastery such paintings required of their makers is evident, for example, in Sebastiano del Piombo‘s Man in Armour (ca. 1511/12; Hartford, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art)



or Titian’s Portrait of Alfonso d’Avalos (ca. 1533; Los Angeles, The J. Paul Getty Museum). With their depictions of the gleaming metallic surfaces, the artists achieved a highly realistic impression of light.

Colour and effects – Unlike the painting of Florence and Rome, which was based more strongly on drawing, the Venetian Renaissance is distinguished above all by the art of colour, called “colorito”. The fact that Venice was a centre of the paint trade will surely have played a role in this phenomenon. The Venetian palette ranged from berry red to gloomy black, from chiaroscuro to brilliant polychromy. Whereas the Florentines favoured smooth, porcelain-like surfaces, the Venetians often left the brushstroke clearly visible as a testimony to the act of painting.

The second-to-last chapter of the show takes a look at the reception of Florentine art in the Venetian cinquecento. It was particularly the depiction of muscular male nudes as perfected by Michelangelo that impressed the Venetians in the art of Florence. Nude males such as Titian’s Frankfurt  



Study of St Sebastian (ca. 1520) and his St John the Baptist (ca. 1530–33; Venice, Gallerie dell’Accademia), or

 

Tintoretto’s St Jerome (ca. 1571/72; Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum) bear witness to an indepth artistic study of the great Florentine master’s work and to a reciprocal influence.

The final section of the exhibition features a number of works representing the long history of its influence. Many of the most prominent artists have schooled themselves on this powerfully colourful painting and exported it – in the case of El Greco, for example, to Spain. The great French painters of the nineteenth century, for instance Théodore Géricault, were likewise among those to learn from Titian and Veronese.

Art History News - February 2019

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Titian and the Renaissance in Venice

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 20 hours ago
*The Städel Museum* 2/13–5/26/2019 Titian (c. 1488/90–1576)*, Madonna and Child, St Catherine and a Shepherd (the “Madonna of the Rabbit”), c. 1530. Oil on canvas, 71 x 87 cm. Paris*, Musée du Louvre, Département des Peintures ©bpk / RMN - Grand Palais / Michèle Bellot. The Städel Museum is devoting a major special exhibition to one of the most momentous chapters in the history of European art: Venetian painting of the Renaissance. Entitled “Titian and the Renaissance in Venice”, the show unites more than a hundred masterpieces – In the early sixteenth century, artists of t... more »

Impressionism in the Age of Industry: Monet, Pissarro and More

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 days ago
* Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) * *Opening Feb. 16, 2019* Pulsing with life, Paris in the 1870's was transforming – thanks to wider streets, increased traffic, an explosion of factories in the suburbs, and faster and more frequent steam-powered trains. No one in France was immune to the rapid pace of change, least of all artists. This winter the AGO presents a groundbreaking new exhibition, exploring how French Impressionist artists and their contemporaries, famous for their lush landscapes and sea vistas, were equally obsessed with capturing the spirit of the industrial age. Openin... more »

Albrecht Dürer Drawings- Albertina Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 days ago
*Albertina Museum * *20 September 2019 –6 January 2020* With its nearly 140 works, the Albertina Museum is home to the world’s most important collection of drawings by Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528). And this exhibition, rounded out by valuable,rarely shown international loan works, focuses on Dürer’s drawn oeuvre—presenting it as an artistic achievement that is in every respect equal to his paintings and printed graphics. The historical backgroundof the Albertina Museum’s Dürer holdings islikewise a matter ofconsiderable distinction:their provenance can be traced back to 1528 withou... more »

Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature / Monet: Places.

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 days ago
*Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature * * Denver Art Museum*. * October 21, 2019 to February 2, 2020 * *Monet: Places. * *Museum Barberini in Potsdam, Germany* *February 29 to June 1, 2020 * *The Museum Barberini and the Denver Art Museum are currently collaborating on a large-scale Monet retrospective, exploring the role of the places that inspired the artist as well as his approach to rendering their specific topography, atmosphere, and light. * Denver's presentation of *Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature *will uncover *Claude Monet's* (1840– 1926) continuous dialogue with nature and ... more »

Sotheby’s American Art sale on 6 March. 2019

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 days ago
Sotheby’s American Art sale on 6 March will present a wonderful group of paintings, sculptures and works on paper. Among the highlights is Milton Avery’s *Portrait of the Artist’s Daughter Reading *from 1951. Also included is Andrew Wyeth’s *Cordwood*, a striking watercolor executed in 1968 at the artist’s neighbor’s farm in Chadds Ford, PA. Guy Carleton Wiggins WINTER'S STORM ON CENTRAL PARK SOUTH *Estimate* $120,000 — $180,000 Ernest Lawson MORET-SUR-LOING *Estimate* 40,000 — 60,000 William James Glackens WOMAN WITH WATCH *Estimate* 40,000 — 60,000 USD JUMP TO L... more »

From Rubens to Makart

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 days ago
Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections *ALBERTINA Museum* *16 February –10 June 2019 * On the occasion of the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Principality of Liechtenstein in 2019, the is presenting a comprehensive selection of the most outstanding works from the Princely Collections under the title From Rubens to Makart. The museum is also devoting a simultaneous, separate jubilee exhibition to the Viennese watercolor, an important and central category of works within the Princely Collections, in an exhibition entitled Rudolf von Alt and his Time. Five Centuries of... more »

The Print Series in Bruegel’s Netherlands: Dutch and Flemish Works from the Permanent Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 days ago
*The Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia * *Feb. 22-July 7, 2019* Just as modern streaming services give us unprecedented freedom to watch television series in our own order, time and place, print series allowed viewers in the Renaissance Netherlands to enjoy the same sets of images as their peers in more personalized and accessible ways. *The Print Series in Bruegel’s Netherlands: Dutch and Flemish Works from the Permanent Collection* places 16th- and 17th-century Netherlandish prints in their original series context to explore the practices of looking at a successio... more »

Sotheby’s London Impressionist & Modern Art Sale 26 & 27 February 2019

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
Marking the 100th anniversary of the founding of the influential German school of art and design, Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening and Day Sales will present artworks by th ose who taught at the Bauhaus and those whose outputs were transformed by its teachings. Founded in 1919 by the architect Walter Gropius , the Bauhaus – which resided in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin until it was closed down under pressure from the Nazis in 1933 – aimed to unite the disciplines of crafts, art and architecture. This core objective was conceived as a reimagining of the material world that... more »

All the Rembrandts

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Rijksmuseum *marks the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt’s death in 2019 with ‘Year of Rembrandt’. The year-long celebration opens with ‘All the Rembrandts’ (*15 February to 10 June)*, in which the Rijksmuseum will present for the first time an exhibition of all 22 paintings, 60 drawings and more than 300 best examples of Rembrandt’s prints in its collection As well as holding the world’s largest collection of Rembrandt paintings – including *[image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f0/Amsterdam_-_Rijksmuseum_1885_-_The_Gallery_of_Honour_%281st_Floor%29_-_De_Nachtwach... more »

Bouguereau & America

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Milwaukee Art Museum * *February 15–May 12, 2019* *Memphis Brooks Museum of Art* (06/22/19–09/22/19) *San Diego Museum of Art* (11/09/19–03/15/20) *Bouguereau & America* showcases more than forty masterful paintings by the French academic painter William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905). The exhibition explores the artist’s remarkable popularity throughout America’s Gilded Age, from the late 1860s to the early 1900s. During this period, owning a painting by the artist was de rigueur for any American who wanted to be seen as a serious collector: the artist’s grand canvases brought a s... more »

Monet: The Late Years

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*de Young museum * *February 16 through May 27, 2019* *Kimbell Art Museum * *June 16, 2019 to September 15, 2019* [image: Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) "Water Lily Pond" 1917-22. 130.2 x 201.9 51 1/2 x 79 1/2 in. The Art Institute of Chicago] Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) "Water Lily Pond" 1917-22. 130.2 x 201.9 51 1/2 x 79 1/2 in. The Art Institute of Chicago (Image courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco) The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Kimbell Art Museum have announced *Monet: The Late Years, *the first exhibition in more than 20 years dedicat... more »

City of Women Female Artists in Vienna from 1900 to 1938

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Belvedere* *25 January 2019 to 19 May 2019 * *Today, hardly anyone knows who they were, even though they made a part of art history: artists such as Elena Luksch-Makowsky, Helene Funke, and Erika Giovanna Klien contributed significantly to Viennese Modernism and artistic trends that manifested after the First World War. To commemorate these artists, their art, and their emancipatory achievements, a long overdue retrospective has now been staged in the Lower Belvedere.* *The exhibition expands the view of Viennese Modernism and focuses on those women who actively helped shape the a... more »

Vincent van Gogh: His Life in Art

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
Few artists have left behind as complete an account of their life and work as Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890). In March 2019, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, presents *Vincent van Gogh: His Life in Art*, an exhibition showcasing key passages in the artist’s life, from his early sketches to his final paintings, and chronicling his pursuit of becoming an artist. The Museum is the only venue for *His Life in Art*, presenting more than 50 portraits, landscapes, and still lifes. The exhibition will be on view at the *Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), from March 10 to June 27, 2019*. ... more »

Rudolf von Alt and his Time: Watercolors from the Princely Collections of Liechtenstein

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*The Albertina Museum * *16 February –10 June 2019* This presentation, which is the second part of the celebratory exhibition marking the Principality of Liechtenstein’s Tricentennial, is devoted to the Viennese watercolor from the Biedermeier era to realism. Nearly 100 of the most beautiful watercolors point to the vast knowledge underlying the princely collecting passion while providing a correspondingly overview of the watercolor artistry of this era.In the Viennese tradition of watercolor painting, the spontaneous handling of light and coloration plays a central role, conveyi... more »

Bonhams Impressionist And Modern Art Sale In London 28 Feb 2019

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
MARC CHAGALL (1887-1985) *Autour de 'La Révolution 1937'* Autour de 'La Revolution 1937', a remarkable, and joyous work painted in the aftermath of the Second World War by the Russian-French artist Marc Chagall, leads Bonhams Impressionist and Modern Art Sale in London on Thursday 28 February. It is estimated at £300,000-500,000. The 1917 Revolution and subsequent Russian Civil War were key events in Chagall's artistic development. 20 years later – having moved to Paris in 1923 from his home town of Vitebsk – he embarked on his Révolution series. Over several, similarly structure... more »

Verrocchio, Master of Leonardo

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Palazzo Strozzi and Museo Nazionale del Bargello**Florence, Italy, **March 9‒July 14, 2019* *National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., * *September 29, 2019‒February 2, 2020* *Exhibition* *Verrocchio, Master of Leonardo* *Verrocchio, Master of Leonardo*, on view March 9‒July 14, 2019 in Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo Nazionale del Bargello, will present masterpieces by Andrea del Verrocchio in fascinating dialogue with works by his predecessors, contemporaries, and followers including *Desiderio da Settignano, Domenico del Ghirlandaio, Sandro Botticelli, Pietro Peru... more »

German Expressionism and European Avant-Garde

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
New York–*Swann Galleries’ March 5* auction boasts property from the *Ismar Littmann Family Collection*, a 160-lot offering of German Expressionism and European Avant-Garde. The afternoon session of *19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings* features an array of works from notable Modern, nineteenth-century and American artists. Compiled in a separate catalogue, the Littmann offering celebrates a singular collector. Ismar Littmann began collecting in the 1910s, and his habits and tastes were individual and contemporary to the time–a parallel to the independent spirit of the Breslau ... more »

Thomas Hart Benton: Mechanics of Form

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
xxx The *Surovek Gallery* in Palm Beach, Florida, is presenting a new exhibition of around 65 works by Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975), the famed Regionalist painter known for chronicling the beauty, joys and sorrows of everyday life in America. On view from *February 7 to March 15, 2019,* *"**Thomas Hart Benton: Mechanics of Form*," the second presentation of Benton's art at the gallery, includes works in oil, watercolor, and other media. Seminal works by Benton are on loan from private collections, along with the Thomas Hart Benton Trust, and a large selection is offered for sale... more »

Fortuny: Friends and Followers

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Meadows Museum, SMUFebruary 3, - June 2, 2019* This February, the Meadows Museum, SMU, will examine the far-reaching influence of 19th-century Spanish painter Mariano Fortuny y Marsal (1838–1874) in the new exhibition *Fortuny: Friends and Followers.* During his lifetime and well into the early 20th century, Fortuny was extremely popular in both Europe and the United States. His proto-Impressionist style and “exotic” genre scenes influenced so many artists that the style came to be described with its very own “ism”: “Fortunismo.” *Fortuny: Friends and Followers* will explore that ... more »

American Beauty and Bounty The Judith G. and Steaven K. Jones Collection of Nineteenth-Century Painting

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Crocker Art Museum* *October 28, 2018 — January 27, 2019* Cover image: Albert Bierstadt, A Golden Summer Day near Oakland (detail), c. 1873. Oil on paper on Masonite, 16 9/16 x 22 1/4 in. Crocker Art Museum, Judith G. and Steaven K. Jones Collection. Judith and Steaven Jones began to acquire 19th-century American paintings in the late 1970s. The collection has grown to include 29 works that the Joneses will leave as a bequest to the Crocker. The collection constitutes the most important gift of American art from beyond California’s borders to ever come to the Museum. Many pa... more »

Enduring Ideals: Rockwell, Roosevelt & the Four Freedoms’

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum* *February 13 - April 29, 2019* *Memorial de Caen in Normandy, France,* *75th anniversary of D-Day on June 6, 2019* *Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,* *December 2019 * *Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., * *Fall of 2020. * Seventy-eight years after President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous State of the Union address inspired artist Norman Rockwell to create his iconic “Four Freedoms” series of paintings, the works of art will be on display in the nation’s capital as part of *a seven-city international to... more »

Invention and Design: Early Italian Drawings at the Morgan

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*February 15 through May 19, 2019* The Morgan’s impressive collection of Italian Drawings documents the development of Renaissance drawing practice from its beginnings in the fourteenth century and over the following two centuries.From the influence of medieval manuscript and painting workshops to the new practice of sketching, artists gradually moved away from imitation of standard models and to the invention of novel ways of thinking on the page and representing traditional subjects. As artists came to be recognized more as intellectuals than as craftsmen, a new class of colle... more »

Phyllis Mills Wyeth: A Celebration

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
[image: Jamie Wyeth, Connemara, 1987, Oil on canvas, The Phyllis and Jamie Wyeth Collection] Jamie Wyeth,* Connemara,* 1987, Oil on canvas, The Phyllis and Jamie Wyeth Collection Now on view at the *Brandywine River Museum of Art*, in Chadds Ford, Penn., a memorial exhibition celebrating the life of Phyllis Mills Wyeth (November 13, 1940–January 14, 2019) features a selection of portraits created by her husband, artist Jamie Wyeth. From the late 1960s onward, Phyllis Wyeth served as a muse to her spouse and these intimate works capture moments from her life across the decades ... more »

Hidden Treasures/ Impressionist and Modern Art 27 February 2019 at Christie's in London

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Christie’s 20th Century Season will launch on 27 February with Hidden Treasures: Impressionist & Modern Masterpieces from An Important Private Collection, a prestigious collection of 23 seminal works by the leading Impressionist and Modern artists. Hidden Treasures will be led by [image: Claude Monet, Saule pleureur et bassin aux nymphéas, 1916-1919. Oil on canvas. 78¼ x 70¾ in. Estimate on request. Offered in Hidden Treasures on 27 February at Christies in London] Claude Monet, *Saule pleureur et bassin aux nymphéas*, 1916-1919. Oil on canvas. 78¼ x 70¾ in. Estimate on request.... more »

Mark Rothko

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
The Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna 12 March - 30 June, 2019 [image: Mark Rothko] Mark Rothko (1903-1970) *No. 16 (Red, White and Brown)* 1957, oil on canvas © 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko/Bildrecht, Vienna, 2019 © Photo: Kunstmuseum Basel Mark Rothko (1903–1970) was among the most remarkable artists of the twentieth century. This exhibition, the first ever to be mounted in Austria, brings together more than forty of his major works and presents a survey of Rothko’s artistic career, from his early figurative paintings of the 1930s, through the transitional years o... more »

Rembrandt, Vermeer & the Dutch Golden Age Masterpieces from The Leiden Collection and the Musée du Louvre

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Exhibition will open at Louvre Abu Dhabi on 14 February 2019 • The exhibition features 95 artworks and objects including 15 paintings by Rembrandt van Rijn • The exhibition will also include paintings and drawings by Rembrandt’s contemporaries in the Netherlands, as well as several small paintings by 17th-century fine painters, some of which were later owned by King Louis XVI of France • Johannes Vermeer’s The Lacemaker (Musée du Louvre) and Young Woman Seated at a Virginal (The Leiden Collection), painted on canvas cut from the same bolt, will hang next to eac... more »

Slab City Rendezvous: Red Grooms, Mimi Gross, Yvonne Jacquette, Alex Katz, Neil Welliver

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
[image: Red Grooms, Slab City Rendezvous, 1964, Oil on canvas with wood and cardboard, 56 1/2 x 60 in., Collection of Drs. Debra E. Weese-Mayer and Robert N. Mayer] Red Grooms, *Slab City Rendezvous*, 1964, Oil on canvas with wood and cardboard, 56 1/2 x 60 in., Collection of Drs. Debra E. Weese-Mayer and Robert N. Mayer On Saturday, *April 13, 2019, the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Maine* will open a major exhibition of close to forty works by 13 artists whose work contributed to Maine’s important place in the evolution of contemporary art. Entitled *Slab City Rendezvous... more »

Gainsborough’s Family Album

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*Princeton University Art Museum* *Feb. 23-June 9, 2019* Images of family may be a constant presence in contemporary life, but in the days before photography only the wealthiest had access to them. The British artist Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788) created more images of his family than any artist before him—pictures of his wife, father, sisters, pets and most particularly his two young daughters—leaving a remarkable visual legacy that is both poignant and ahead of its time. *Gainsborough’s Family Album* gathers together more than 40 of Gainsborough’s depictions of his f... more »

Balthus

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*Fondation Beyeler in Riehen / Basel* *2 September 2018 to 1 January 2019* *Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza* *From 19 February to 26 May 2019* In 2019 the museum will be presenting an exhibition on the legendary artist Balthasar Klossowski de Rola (1908-2001), known as Balthus. The exhibition is jointly organised with the Fondation Beyeler in Riehen / Basel, where it will be seen from September 2018 to January 2019. Considered one of the great masters of 20th-century art, Balthus is undoubtedly one of the most unique painters of his time. His diverse, ambiguous work, which has ... more »

British Painting from Turner to Whistler

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*The Fondation de l’Hermitage * 1 February to 2 June 2019 *The Fondation de l’Hermitage continues its exploration of the great centres of western art in the 19th century with an exhibition devoted to British painting from Turner to Whistler, taking in the Pre-Raphaelites. Nearly 60 paintings, on loan from the most prestigious collections in the United Kingdom and shown in Switzerland for the first time, offer an unrivaled survey of art produced during the golden age of the British Empire, highlighting its captivating originality.* *Frederick Sandys, Vivien, 1863. Huile sur toile,... more »

Art & Empire: The Golden Age of Spain

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
The *San Diego Museum of Art* presents the exhibition *Art & Empire: The Golden Age of Spain*, featuring more than 100 outstanding works by leading artists from Spain and its global territories during the pivotal years of around 1600 to 1750. On view *May 18, 2019 through Sept. 2, 2019,* the exhibition showcases a wide variety of exquisite paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts produced throughout the Spanish-speaking world. This exhibition is the first in the U.S. to examine the notion of “Golden Age” beyond the shores of the Iberian Peninsula by bringing together works from ... more »

Christie’s The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale, 27 February 2019

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Sixteen Artists including René Magritte, Joan Miró, Oscar Domínguez, Max Ernst, James Ensor and Salvador Dalí Launching *20th Century at Christie’s* on 27 February 2019, *The Art of the Surreal* sale will follow the *Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale*. This year’s 18th edition of Christie’s annual *The Art of the Surreal* auction includes Surrealist works spanning from 1890 to 1974, with 34 lots by 16 artists. The sale includes seven works by René Magritte, led by *Le lieu commun *(1964, Estimate on Request), one of the finest and largest examples of his iconic bowler-hatted m... more »

Prints in the Age of Bruegel

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*27.02 > 23.06.2019 - BOZAR, Centre for Fine ArtsIn co-production with the Royal Library of Belgium* * The landscapes of Bruegel, a research project by Bas Smets* As part of the commemorative year around Pieter Bruegel the Elder, the BOZAR spring season is dominated by the artistic productions of the dazzling sixteenth century. With the double bill ‘*The Age of Bruegel*’, BOZAR presents two major exhibitions around the renaissance in the Low Countries: ‘*Bernard van Orley*’ and ‘*Prints in the Age of Bruegel*’. *So many men, so many minds. Allegory on the difficulty of Govern... more »

History, Labor, Life: The Prints of Jacob Lawrence

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
Crocker Art MuseumJanuary 27, 2019 — April 07, 2019 Jacob Lawrence, The Studio, 1996. Lithograph on paper, 30 x 22 1/8 in. © 2019 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Jacob Lawrence, *Forward Together,* 1997. Silkscreen on paper, 25 1/2 x 40 1/8 in. © 2019 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. This exhibition provides an overview of influential American artist Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000). Lawrence was primarily concerned with the narration of African Am... more »

Life in the Age of Rembrandt: Dutch Masterpieces from the Dordrecht Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Columbus Museum of Art * *February 1 – June 16, 2019* *Life in the Age of Rembrandt: Dutch Masterpieces from the Dordrecht Museum, *on view at the Columbus Museum of Art (CMA), is the result of an innovative international partnership with Dordrecht Museum, The Netherlands. Spanning more than three centuries, *Life in the Age of Rembrandt* features 17th-century art from the Golden Age of Dutch painting and concludes with works of The Hague School of the late 19th-century. This exclusive exhibition, shown only in Columbus, Ohio, showcases some 90 works, including 40 masterworks, ma... more »

Thomas Cole’s Refrain: The Paintings of Catskill Creek

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Thomas Cole National Historic Site* *May 4-November 3, 2019* * Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York* *November 21, 2019, to February 28, 2020* *Thomas Cole’s Refrain: The Paintings of Catskill Creek* will open on May 4 in collaboration with Cornell University Press and the Hudson River Museum, with related programming in partnership with Scenic Hudson and Greene Land Trust. The exhibition, curated by H. Daniel Peck, John Guy Vassar, Jr., Professor Emeritus of English at Vassar College, reveals new scholarship on Thomas Cole, scholarship explored in Professor Peck’s forthcomi... more »

American Beauty: Highlights from the Richard M. Scaife Bequest

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
[image: Martin Johnson Heade, New Jersey Salt Marsh, ca. 1875 - 1885, oil on canvas, 17 × 36 1/4 in. Brandywine River Museum of Art. Richard M. Scaife Bequest, 2015] Martin Johnson Heade, *New Jersey Salt Marsh*, ca. 1875 - 1885, oil on canvas, 17 × 36 1/4 in. Brandywine River Museum of Art. Richard M. Scaife Bequest, 2015 This spring the *Brandywine River Museum of Art* in Chadds Ford, Penn., will present *American Beauty: Highlights from the Richard M. Scaife Bequest*, featuring the finest works from the bequest of Mr. Scaife—who left his impressive art collection to the Bra... more »

Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
[image: La couze chambon a murol] Louis Dewis, *The Couze Chambon near Murols*, 1940, oil on board, 23 ½ x 28 ¾ in. On loan from The Dewis Collection, LC. Image Courtesy of the Orlando Museum of Art More than a hundred works of the distinguished Belgian Post-Impressionist Louis Dewis, lost to the world for over 50 years, will be featured in Dewis’s first major museum exhibition* beginning January 25th at the Orlando Museum of Art* (OMA). Discovered by chance in the Paris attic of Dewis’s daughter by his American great-grandson, Mr. Brad Face, they were among thousands of the ar... more »

Whistler & Nature

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Fitzwilliam Museum* *8 January – 17 March, 2019* *Whistler & Nature *explores James McNeill Whistler’s (1834‐1903) revolutionary attitude and relationship towards the natural world throughout his life, as expressed in works ranging from his celebrated London Nocturnes to his European coastal and pastoral scenes. This fascinating exhibition of around 90 oil paintings, works on paper and objects ‐ such as the Whistler’s sketchbook ‐ shows how his singular vison was underpinned by his enduring kinship with the makers of railroads, bridges and ships ‐ the cornerstones of Victorian wealt... more »

Pontormo: Miraculous Encounters

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
An international traveling exhibition will bring works by the great 16th-century Florentine painter Pontormo (Italian, 1494-1557) to Los Angeles for the first time. *Pontormo: Miraculous Encounters,* on view at the* J. Paul Getty Museum from February 5, 2019 through April 28, 2019, *features the artist’s recently restored altarpiece the *Visitation* (about 1528-1529). The exhibition was previously at New York's Morgan Library and at the Pitti Palace (Uffizi Gallery) in Florence. “It is a privilege to bring the *Visitation, *one of Pontormo’s supreme masterpieces and one of the most... more »

Gauguin: Voyage to Paradise

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, Sarasota, Florida* *Feb. 10-June 30, 2019* Ten original dramatic woodcuts, wood engravings and lithographs that Gauguin created on his journeys to Brittany, Martinique and Tahiti will be the centerpiece of the Museum of Botany & the Arts, along with archival photographs of Tahiti by photographer Charles Georges Spitz (1857-1894), historic maps of Tahiti produced by explorers, historical photos of the colonial pavilions of the Universal Exhibition of 1889 in Paris, and other ethnographic sources that shaped Gauguin’s vision before he even set f... more »

Botticelli: Heroines and Heroes

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston * *14 February – 19 May 2019* Botticelli: Heroines and Heroes explores the work of the legendary Renaissance painter Sandro Botticelli, focusing on a genre called spalliera that Botticelli employed with staggering originality. The catalogue and exhibition, held at the Gardner Museum, Boston, include significant loans from European and American public collections. At the center of this exhibition is a spalliera reunited, the [image: The Death of Lucretia] Gardner’s *Tragedy of Lucretia * [image: VirginiaBotticelli.jpg] and its companion... more »

Winslow Homer to Georgia O’Keeffe: American Paintings from The Phillips Collection

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Taft Museum of Art
February 9–May 19, 2019 |  Fifth Third Gallery


Childe Hassam, Washington Arch, Spring, about 1893, oil on canvas, 26 1/8 in x 21 5/8 in. The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C. Acquired 1921
Winslow Homer to Georgia O’Keeffe traces a century of the modern creative spirit in the United States, ranging from realistic landscapes to bold abstract forms. Fifty-five works by American masters—including Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Helen Frankenthaler—span the 1860s through the 1960s. Nineteenth-century landscapes and portraits set the stage for light-filled scenes by the American Impressionists. Carefully structured cityscapes by the American Modernists give way to Cubist-inspired works, and, finally, to colorful experimental paintings by the Abstract Expressionists.

AC2Georgia O Keeffe Ranchos Church No II1929Georgia O'Keeffe, "Ranchos Church," No. II, NM, 1929, oil on canvas, 24 1/8 x 36 1/8 in., acquired 1930.The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C.


The exhibition honors the vision of Duncan Phillips, who transformed his private collection into America’s first museum dedicated to modern art. All works in the exhibition are drawn from The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C., which Phillips established in 1921, just six years before Charles and Anna Taft bequeathed their own collection and home to the people of Cincinnati, founding the Taft Museum of Art.

AC2Edward Hopper Sunday The Philips Collection Washinton DC1926Edward Hopper, Sunday, 1926, oil on canvas, 29 x 34 in., acquired 1926.The Philips Collection, Washington D.C.

"Taft Museum of Art’s current temporary exhibition in the third-floor gallery — begins with a lush work by George Inness. Set in an Italian countryside, associate curator Tamera Muente points out its three-dimensional appearance during a tour. 
File:George Inness - Lake Albano - Google Art Project.jpg

Entitled “Lake Albano,a cypress tree cuts softly through the middle, acting as a space divider. Tile-roofed villas peek out from hills in the distance. In the foreground, people lounge, their features hazy and soft. Painted in 1869, the work represents the crossroads of Romanticism and Realism. 

 File:Winslow Homer - To the Rescue - Google Art Project.jpg

In the same room, Homer’s painting “To the Rescue”hangs in contrast. Two women walk along a seashore; they blur into the indistinct horizon, surrounded by clashes of white, tan and grayish blue. One of the women’s scarves hovers in the wind as a man carrying a rope follows behind them. Here, Muente says, Homer uses “broad, expressive strokes” to create a sense of human struggle against the sea. "
Complete article


This exhibition has been organized by The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Great article, lots of images 

Travels with Turner: Watercolors from the Taft Collection

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Taft Museum of Art
January 18–April 14, 2019 | Sinton Gallery

Lake Nemi, about 1835. Watercolor, pencil, and gouache on paper, 10 1/2 x 8 11/16 in. Bequest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Phelps Taft, 1931.387
Follow nineteenth-century British painter J. M. W. Turner on his travels throughout the United Kingdom and Europe—through his watercolors and an interactive digital map. On his journeys, Turner filled sketchbook after sketchbook, gathering reference material he would later turn into more detailed watercolors and oil paintings. A prolific artist and intrepid traveler, Turner was especially drawn to natural features such as mountains, alpine lakes, glaciers, river valleys, and seashores, as well as the human presence within these dramatic settings.




This exhibition of the Taft Museum of Art’s ten watercolors by Turner focuses on the places he painted, including dramatic landscapes from Switzerland, Germany, France, England, Scotland, and Italy. Because these delicate watercolors are kept in storage to protect them from the damaging effects of light, this is a once-every-several-years opportunity to see these treasures from the Taft collection.

Travels with Turner Photo #1

Travels with Turner Photo #2

Travels with Turner Photo #3

Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections From Rubens to Makart

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ALBERTINA Museum
16 February –10 June 2019 

On the occasion of the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Principality of Liechtenstein in 2019, the  is presenting a comprehensive selection of the most outstanding works from the Princely Collections under the title From Rubens to Makart. The museum is also devoting a simultaneous, separate jubilee exhibition to the Viennese watercolor, an important and central category of works within the Princely Collections, in an exhibition entitled Rudolf von Alt and his Time. 

Five Centuries of Art History

Well over 100 of the most important paintings and sculptures from the exquisite collection of this family, rich in tradition like few others in Europe, span an impressive range from the Early Renaissance in Italy to the Baroque period, from Viennese Biedermeier to the historicism of the Makart era. Iconic works such as Antico’s Bust of Marcus Aurelius, which was acquired for the Princely Collections just recently, the life-size bronze sculptures of Adrian de Vries, and Peter Paul Rubens’s famous Venus in Front of the Mirror are the focus of an exhibition that amounts to a veritable promenade through five centuries of art history.

A Private Collecting Passion of The Highest Order

The documentation of the Liechtenstein Princes’ continuous and passionate collecting activities goes back over 400 years—a period during which outstanding personalities and their individual artistic tastes gradually gave rise to a private collection that remains unparalleled to this day.

And as a city in which the princely family maintained a permanent residence until 1938, Vienna is of exceptional significance:under Prince Johann Adam Andreas I, who acquired numerous masterpieces of the Flemish Baroque, the collection was presented on the second bel étage of the newly built Liechtenstein City Palace on Bankgasse (formerly known as Schenkenstraße) beginning in 1705.

In 1810, Prince Johann I of Liechtenstein made his masterpieces accessible to the Viennese public for the first time at the family’s Garden Palace in the Rossau neighborhood.During the Second World War, the family transferred its residence—and thus also its collections—to the Principality of Liechtenstein.

Ever since then, the official home of the Princely Collections has been in Vaduz. Selected works are permanently displayed in the galleries of the Liechtenstein Garden Palace and City Palace in Vienna, however, and these can be viewed bythe general public as part of guidedtours.

Recontextualization

This exhibition presents the Princely Collections’greatest treasures, providing an exemplary impression of their formidable richness. In contrast to the permanent presentation at the Liechtenstein family’s two Viennese palaces, within which these works can be experienced more or less in their traditional context, one of the central intentions of this exhibition lies in their recontextualization:the reduced setting of the ALBERTINA Museum, with its modern spaces, makes possible a fresh look at the masterpieces on exhibit.In lieu of art-historical stringency, the primary objective here has been to arrive at a form of presentation determined by aesthetic considerations. And it is thus that, through alternative groupings and/or deliberate isolation, these paintings and sculptures now tell entirely different stories. 


Peter Paul Rubens
Venus in Front of the Mirror, ca. 1614/15
Oil on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Giuseppe Arcimboldo
Terra (Earth), ca. 1570
Oil on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna



Anthonis van Dyck
Portrait of Maria de Tassis, ca. 1629/30
Oil on canvas
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
Roses, 1843
Oil on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Friedrich von Amerling
Young Girl, 1834
Oil on canvas
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Friedrich von Amerling
Portrait of Princess Marie Franziska von Liechtenstein (1834–1909) at the Age of Two, 1836
Oil on cardboard
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Jan Jansz van den Uyl
Breakfast Still Life with Pewter Flagon, 1635
Oil on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna




Hans Makart
The Death of Cleopatra, 1875
Oil on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


Peter Paul Rubens
Portrait of Clara Serena Rubens, the Daughter of the Artist (1611–1623), ca. 1616
Oil on canvas on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

Wall Texts(Selection)

Naddo Ceccarelli 

In addition to images of the Madonna, the Ecce Homo motif became akey theme of Christian art starting in the Trecento. In their depictions of Christ as the Man of Sorrows, both 




Naddo Ceccarelli
Christ as the Man of Sorrows, ca. 1347
Tempera and gold on panel
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

Naddo Ceccarelli (active c. 1330–60) 




and Marco Palmezzano (1459–1539) have succeeded in depicting Jesus's silent suffering in a most unique fashion. The two paintings represent highlights of religious art from the Princely Collections. The figure of the dead Savior is shown in the pose of a half-length figure standing in a sarcophagus that is also typical of icon painting. The unnatural posture illustrates the divinity of Christ, who died as a human. 

A devotional painting from fifteenth-century Ferrara was equally intended to arouse sympathy and compassion in the viewer. The Redeemer wears the coronation rohe and crown of thorns, his facial features expressing silent, introverted grief rather than suffering. This type of image in which the figure of Christ is removed from any narrative context is referred to as Christ in Repose. 

Antico

The medalist, goldsmith, and sculptor Pier Jacopo Alari-Bonacolsi (c. 1455–1528) was Mantua's leading sculptor at the time. His nickname ''Antico '' testifies to his profound knowledge of the classical word.



This Bust of a Youth, which dates from around 1520, was probably commissioned by Isabella d'Este. The young man turns his head slightly to the side, and his eyes gaze down into the void, as if in introspection. His pensiveness is combined with a hint of melancholy, yet his expression is wakeful and eloquent. The lavishly curled hair lends the head a strong sculptural appeal. Despite the alternation of smoothly polished suifaces, protruding forms, and linear accents, Antico infuses the bust with the greatest sense of coherence. In hardly any other work did the artist succeed in conveying such a subtle psychologizing consolidation of the sitter. 






Pier Jacopo Alari-Bonacolsi, known as Antico
Bust of Marcus Aurelius, ca. 1500
Bronze, gold-plated
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienn



This magnificent sculpture of Marcus Aurelius is one of most spectacular responses of the Italian Renaissance to antiquity. The Roman emperor was famous for his wisdom and in the sixteenth century was celebrated as the author of the Meditations. 

Pier Jacopo Alari-Bonacolsi, nicknamed ''Antico'' (c. 1455–1528), has created an entirely new image here, one that represents the experienced ruler at the height of his powers, but still in the vigor of full manhood. The gilding suggests that it must have been an exceptionally costly commission. The papal court in Rome would seem the most likely context for such a splendid and luxurious object as the Bust of Marcus Aurelius

Represented here is the very moment in the Gospel of Luke in which the archangel Gabriel delivers the good message of God to the Virgin: she has been selected to be the mother of his son, Jesus. In all probability there originally existed Gabriel's bust as a pendant. The intensely animated folds of her gown and the fluttering veil not only indicate Mary's startled pulling away at the moment of the angel's appearance, but in a fashion typical of the High Baroque they also lend tension and drama to the sculpture.

Sebastiano Ricci

The paintings The Rape of the Sabine Women and The Battle of the Romans and Sabineshave been conceived as companion pieces and rank among the most monumental and impressive compositions by the Venetian history painter Sebastiano Ricci (1659–1734). They illustrate a central episode in the Roman founding myth: in the newly founded city of Rome settled a mainly male population so that there was a lack of marriageable women. Romulus invited the Sabines, who lived in the surrounding countryside, to attend a festive banquet, in the course of which armed Roman troops abducted their women so as to ensure the Eternal Cityfuture. The Sabines swore vengeance and called for a battle toretaliate. However, the Sabine women, fearing not only for their brothers and fathers but also for their now-husbands and sons, interposed themselves between the battle lines and brought the conflict, which was eventually settled by merging the two regions under a dual government, to an end.

Giovanni Toschini

The monumental marble bust of the Greek philosopher Heraclitus fascinates with the expressive emotion of the internally agitated thinker, who turns to the right with facial features almost distorted with pain and a plaintively open mouth. The protruding eyebrows, the wrinkles on the forehead and the corners of his eyes, and the tears running down his cheeks intensify the expressive effect. The sweepingly curved cloak that envelops the head at the rear further illustrates the figure's intense inner experience. That the philosopher is turned to the side suggests that there was originally a second bust, which must certainly have been the laughing Democritus. The pair is often complemented by a globe as a symbol of human life, which is wept over by the one and mocked by the other.

Canaletto

The ltalian vedutist and landscape painter Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697–1768), known as Canaletto, acquired fame with numerous painted views of his native city Venice: his almost photorealist depictions were created with the aid of a camera obscura. 
 

Giovanni Antonio Canal gen. Canaletto
View of the Estuary of the Canale di Cannaregio, ca 1735-1742
Oil on canvas
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

His The Cannaregio Canaloffers a picturesque vista of the lagoon city: several boats and figures animate the scenery, which is bathed in warm light. Lying in the shade, the bridge in the middle ground forms a spatial separation between the gleaming palazzi in the foreground and the houses of the ghetto, which are represented in slightly darker colors.  

The Piazza San Marco in Veniceshows the prominent motif of the square Canaletto captured time and again from various perspectives. Starting out from the Palazzo Ducale, here it extends from today's Biblioteca Marciana and the Procuratie Nuove. Stalls and colorful staffage figures enliven the scene and give it an everyday atmosphere.

Hyacinthe Rigaud





Hyacinthe Rigaud
Portrait of Prince Joseph Wenzel I von Liechtenstein in the Full Regalia of the Order of the Golden Fleece (1696–1772), 1740
Oil on canvas
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna


To document the glorious moment of his appointment as Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece, Joseph Wenzel I von Liechtenstein commissioned the epoch's most famous portraitist, Hyacinthe Rigaud (1659–1743). The artist, who was already eighty-one years old at the time, has depicted the prince frontally and as a full-length figure, wearing the prestigious collar around his neck. In terms of composition type, the picture is an official state portrait. Against the backdrop of an imaginary palace, the sitter is depicted in a majestic pose, surrounded by huge stone pillars and pompous, cloud-like draperies. In its impressively tactile reproduction of the shimmering fabrics and the marble floor, the painting evidences Rigauds exceptional realism and highprecision as a painter.

Franz Anton von Scheidel & Bauer Brothers

As an illustrator, FranzAnton von Scheidel(1731–1801) documented the newly gained insights and discoveries of the Swedish scientist Carl von Linné. The drawings in Scheidel's Album of 80 Watercolors of Fishes or in his Album of 100 Watercolors of Birds identify the artist not only as a keen observer of nature but also as a skillful colorist. Among the probably most impressive scientific illustrations by his hand is the series Conches in Watercolor after Johann Carl Megerle von Mühlfeld, which comprises more than 200 sheets. The artist delved into the wealth of color and form of the various shells and snails, studying them with remarkable precision. Rendering their diversified surface textures in his virtuoso watercolor technique, he has lent the conches a three-dimensional and tactile quality through a most refined description using hard shadows. 

These depictions seem to be the last documents of a now-lost cabinet of natural curiosities compiled under Prince Johann I von Liechtenstein as collector and Megerle von Mühlfeld as scientific consultant.

A work closely related to the history of the Hause of Liechtenstein is the sumptuous fourteen-volume tome Liber regni vegetabilis(Book of the Plant Kingdom, also known as Hortus Botanicus), assembled over a period of more than thirty years. On 2,748 pages, the compilation contains illustrations of some 3,100 different species of plants. The book's initiator was the physician and monk Norbert Boccius from the convent of the Brothers Hospitallers at Valtice. Boccius had close ties with the Liechtenstein family and from 1799 on gave the work to them in successive installments. 

Most of the illustrations are by the hand of the Valtice-born brothers Joseph Anton (1756–1831), Franz Andreas (1758–1840), and Ferdinand Lukas Bauer (1760–1826). They likely began working on this large-scale project shortly after 1770, when they were only ten, twelve, and fourteen years old-a fact that earned the brothers the reputation of being "child prodigies" during their own lifetime.

Ferdinand GeorgWaldmüller

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793–1865) was not only remarkably successful as a portraitist and genre painter but also as a landscapist and, above all, painter of still lifes. In this discipline the artist benefited from his profound training as a miniaturist: especially his depictions of flowers were admired for their freshness, brilliant colors, and virtuoso rendition of details. Waldmüller mostly arranges his compositions against black backdrops, thereby achieving an effective coloristic contrastto the sheen of the pieces of fruit and blossoms, the gleam of the silver, or the dull white of the vases. The artist skillfully sets the matte and waxy surface of the flowers against the hard, metallic luster of the vessels and dishes. In his compositions, Waldmüller has depicted an innumerable diversity of richly nuanced textures. The result is an impressive play of light and shadow, of reflection and opacity. In 1829 Waldmüller traveled to the Salzkammergut for the first time. 

His painting View of Lake Altaussee and the Dachstein betrays the wonderful idiosyncrasy with which the artist has interpreted the Biedermeier landscape. The imposing mountainscape is practically devoid of humans: only in the middle ground can we see a handful of houses along a strip of dense forest, against which the sunlit mountain massif and the sparkling blue lake are sublimely set off. Waldmüller knew how to lend his  View of the Dachstein with Lake Hallstattan outstanding presence and virtually palpable luminosity through his intense pleinairism. In the history of Austrian painting, the picture is considered a milestone on the way to modernism, due to its enhanced and almost Impressionist atmosphere. 

Friedrich von Amerling 

Alongside Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Friedrich von Amerling (1803–1887) was the leading Austrian portraitist of the nineteenth century. A keen observer, he used his talent not only for pure character studies but also documented the self-image of his sitters as members of the aristocracy and the bourgeoisie in a most unique fashion. This outstanding painting in the Princely Collections shows the melancholy face of a girl delicately modeled by means of light. Both the black veil the artist has skillfully draped over her hair and shoulders and the book of music in her hand identify the depicted as a praying widow. Her brownish green eyes, gently looking to the left, avoid direct contact with the viewer and give the impression of deep introspection.

Friedrich Gauermann

Friedrich Gauermann (1807–1862) established a new naturalistic Viennese landscape school by abandoning the genre of vedute animated with figures and instead leaning on seventeenth-century Netherlandish painting. Over the years he accumulated sketches made from nature, which were then amalgamated in the studio to create ever-new compositions. He masterfully understood how to combine different ambiences to forma coherent and convincing whole. Gauermann renders each and every element of a scene in jewel-like colors and an almost photorealist sharpness. The signed painting The Harvest Wagon with its impressive rendering of a thundery sky is regarded as one of the artist's absolute masterpieces.

Hans Makart

With a prayer book in her lap and a rosary in her hands, the elegant lady in this painting by Hans Makart (1840–1884) appears to be completely lost in thought. What is particularly striking is the great freedom and spontaneity with which the tonal brown foreground of the picture has been executed. Since a completely identical costume photograph related to this work exists, it is probably not an ordinary portrait but rather the painted likeness of a role in a play: Makart was frequently involved in the organization and decoration of semi-private theater performances and tableaux vivants reenacting various works of the visual arts with living people. The costume of the woman depicted leads back to the Elizabethan age or to the epoch of Charles V, which Makart likewise studied intensively. This outstanding masterpiece shows the Egyptian queen Cleopatra at the moment of her death, sitting upright, alone, staring into oblivion. Hans Makart has depicted the pharaoh on the verge of her demise, brought about by the bite of a snake, in a sensuous nakedness that can hardly be surpassed in its immediacy. The complexion and the textural details of the fabrics and draperies lavishly enveloping the body have been rendered with equal refinement. The famous Burgtheater actress Charlotte Wolter posed for the painting. The picture shows the artist at the height of his creative powers. Receptive to all currents of contemporary painting in Europe, he opened the door to the final phase of Viennese painting in the nineteenth century.











The Self-Portrait, from Schiele to Beckmann

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Neue Galerie New York
- June 24, 2019

“The Self-Portrait, from Schiele to Beckmann” is an unprecedented exhibition that examines works primarily from Austria and Germany made between 1900 and 1945. This groundbreaking show is unique in its examination and focus on works of this period. Approximately 70 self-portraits by more than 30 artists—both well-known figures and others who deserve greater recognition—will be united in the presentation, which is comprised of loans from public and private collections worldwide.

Admired for their revelatory nature, self-portraits yield insight into both the appearance and the essence of the artist, in some cases providing almost confessional portrayals, sharing profound insights regarding their self-image as a maker, and their perceived relationship to society. On a more universal level, they can also expose deeper truths about the human condition. During the first four decades of the twentieth century, the self-portrait, a genre that has transcended the ages, reached new heights in Germany and Austria.

Among artists in the Neue Galerie collection, the types of self-portraiture vary widely.

https://www.neuegalerie.org/sites/default/files/work/2.%20Egon%20Schiele%2C%20Self-Portrait%20in%20Brown%20Coat.JPG.JPG

Egon Schiele, gazing into a large studio mirror, created an unprecedented number of raw, even shocking self-portraits composed only of his face and body. He stripped away layers of social conventions to expose thoughts and feelings beneath the surface of his skin.

https://www.neuegalerie.org/sites/default/files/work/6.%20Max%20Beckmann%2C%20Self-Portrait%20with%20a%20Cigarette.JPG

Max Beckmann (1884–1950), Self-Portrait with a Cigarette, 1923. Oil on canvas, 60.2 x 40.3 cm (23 3/4 x 15 7/8 in.) The Museum of Modern Art, Gift of Dr. and Mrs. F. H. Hirschland. Photo: © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY © 2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn.
Max Beckmann found his stride using an open, brushy style with heavy black outlines, and created some of the greatest self-portraits of the twentieth century; they possess an expressive power that reaches back to the Old Masters.

https://www.neuegalerie.org/sites/default/files/work/10.%20Felix%20Nussbaum%2C%20Self-Portrait%20with%20Jewish%20Identity%20Card.JPG

Felix Nussbaum—employing the more realistic style of the Neue Sachlichkeit—reflected the misery of and threat to his life as a persecuted Jew, as well as his personal resolve to record his circumstances faithfully.

Some of the most outstanding self-portraits in this exhibition are by women, including

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Paula Modersohn-Becker, who painted a number of bold, groundbreaking self-portraits, some of which highlighted her pregnancy;

 https://www.neuegalerie.org/sites/default/files/work/3.%20Ka%CC%88the%20Kollwitz%2C%20Frontal%20Self-Portrait_0.JPG

 and Käthe Kollwitz, who cast an unsparing eye on her own world-weary visage. The best of these works always engage the viewer in a complex and meaningful way.

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Imaginary Travels

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Bundeskunsthalle
16 November 2018 to 3 March 2019


 INTRODUCTION 

Today, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880–1938) is deemed to be one of the most important German artists. As a pioneer of German Expressionism and co-founder of the Brücke[Bridge] group of artists, he found new means to give expression to the societal changes taking place during the early 20th century. 

Imaginary Travels traces Kirchner’s artistic development and his life-long search for the primal and authentic. By absorbing the widest range of influences, the artist arrived at a synthesis of art, life and work. This was mirrored both in his artistic output and in the environment—a Gesamtkunstwerk—that he created in which to live and work. Nonetheless, Kirchner never chose to travel to foreign lands. Instead, he spent his summers at the Moritzburg Lakes near Dresden or on the Baltic Sea island of Fehmarn. 

In 1918, he went into self-imposed exile in Davos, Switzerland. Despite this, Kirchner’s oeuvre bears witness to the artist’s passionate encounter with non-European cultures. As a traveller in spirit, he studied ethnographic objects, in order to transmute them into a new formal language for use in his work. The photographs taken in some of his studios in Germany and Switzerland show exuberantly decorated, fascinating rooms furnished in a manner very unlike any bourgeois traditions then current. Kirchner made ‘exotic’ refuges for himself, that were simultaneously expressions of his creativity and sources of inspiration for him. He imagined exotic worlds into being in his art. 

The Brücke Artists’ Group 

Young Kirchner’s search for an ‘authentic’ and ‘primitive’ way of living, free of the accumulations and pressures of modern life, began in 1905. It was during that year, together with three other architecture students, Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and Fritz Bleyl, that he co-founded the artists’ group, Brücke. Working in close collaboration, the four students quickly discovered a shared passion that would definitively shape their artistic practice: an intense interest in the material culture of non-European civilisations. Whilst Max Pechstein travelled throughout the South Pacific, Emil Nolde took part in an expedition to New Guinea, and Erich Heckel and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff journeyed across Europe, Kirchner always remained in Germany and Switzerland. 

The Nude 


The depiction of the nude is a consistent theme through out Kirchner’s oeuvre. His fantasies about the ‘exotic’ and ‘alien’, above all, are mirrored in the numerous images of nudes in his early works, such as in  

 

Negro Dancer*. The way in which he depicts the nude figure and her relaxed nakedness is inspired by ideas integral to the Lebensreform(life reform) movement. This alternative lifestyle was aimed at recreating a unity between human and nature. The theme of the ‘bather’ recurs constantly in Kirchner’s early works. He was able to free his art from the Classical motif of the nude, as seen in academic painting, in the natural environment he found at the Moritzburg Lakes and on Fehmarn, where he captured in his work the natural, candid movements and nudity of the primal human state. From today's perspective, the child models Lina Franziska (Fränzi) Fehrmann and Marzella Albertine Sprentzel are in some cases depicted in unacceptable sexualised poses inappropriate to their age. 

The Nude


 

 Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Women Bathing (Triptych – Centre Panel)
1915/1925
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos


Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880–1938), co-founder of the Brücke artists’ group, is widely regarded as the most important German Expressionist painter. One of the leitmotifs of his life and work is the quest for the ‘exotic’ and the primal, for far-off lands and cultures. Although he never ventured beyond the borders of Germany and Switzerland, his work bears witness to his passionate engagement with non-European cultures. Responding to social and artistic influences, he broke new ground, both personally and pictorially and created strikingly colourful images that conjure vividly imagined far-away worlds. 

Tracing the artist’s progress through Dresden, Berlin, Fehmarn and Davos, Imaginary Travels sheds light on Kirchner’s life and career from 1909 to his death in the Swiss mountains in 1938. A selection of international loans, above all from Switzerland and the United States, allows us to bring together motifs recurring throughout his oeuvre and to highlight the central importance Kirchner placed on working from the imagination. 

Thanks to the co-operation of the Dresden Museum of Ethnology, this exhibition is the first to trace Kirchner’s visits to the ethnographic collection and the profound influence it had on his work and creative practice. Sketchbooks, letters and historical photographs are presented in the context of important events in the history of non-European cultures – as Kirchner would have seen them around the turn of the century. 


The exhibition scrutinises Kirchner’s fervent enthusiasm for these cultures and addresses the complex issue of how to deal with the legacy of colonialism. Imaginary Travelspresents a comprehensive survey of Kirchner’s work after 1918, juxtaposing it with well-known early works of his time in Dresden and Berlin. 

Kirchner’s late work in Switzerland in the late 1920s singles him out as an uncompromising, progressive artist, ceaselessly trying to give adequate expression to a constantly changing world. The exhibition brings together some 220 works – 56 paintings, 72 prints, four sketchbooks, ten sculptures, five textiles, 45 photographs as well as 26 ethnographic objects from 40 collections in seven countries. 

Among the exhibits are numerous important and rarely shown works, such as the painting The Drinkerand Seated Girl (Fränzi Fehrmann), the bed Kirchner carved for his companion Erna Schilling and cast brass plaques from Benin. Rein Wolfs, director of the Bundeskunsthalle, sums up the exhibition, ‘Ernst Ludwig Kirchner is one of the most prominent German Expressionist artists. 

The exhibition Imaginary Travels showcases his work and also addresses some of the more controversial aspects of his oeuvre, chief among them Kirchner’s appropriation of non-European cultures and his idealisation of Alpine Swiss popular culture. 

The exhibition brings together numerous outstanding works, early as September 1915, Kirchner was temporarily discharged from military service due to mental illness on the intervention of his riding instructor, Professor Hans Fehr. The artist’s existential distress was mirrored in his self-portraits, and his photographs and portrait shots document his interrogation of this period of his life. In a letter to Gustav Schiefler dated 12 November 1916, he wrote, “The pressure of war, and superficiality run riot, weigh heavier than everything else. I always have the impression of a bloody carnival. How is it all supposed to end?” 

STAYS IN THE SANATORIUM 

The use of intoxicating substances had been widespread amongst literary figures and visual artists since the early 19th century. They were intended to overcome people’s inhibitions and increase their openness to new experiences. Aside from his alcohol and tobacco addictions, Kirchner suffered from insomnia, anxiety conditions and lung problems. His unchecked self-medication with morphine and Veronal, a barbiturate sleeping pill, and his lack of care for himself, due to sleep deprivation and excessive fasting, led to him staying on several occasions at sanatoria between 1915 and 1918. 

Discharged from the military in November 1915 with the express order that he should take himself off to a clinic to convalesce, from December that year, Kirchner started a seven-month stay at Oskar Kohnstamm’s private sanatorium in Königstein im Taunus. After threatening suicide in December 1916, he was admitted to the closed ward at privy councillor, Dr Edel’schen Sanatorium for Depressive and Nervous Diseases in Charlottenburg in Berlin. 

In mid-January 1917, Kirchner travelled to Davos for the first time and entrusted himself to the medical care of Dr Lucius Spengler and his wife Helene. A second stay followed in early May, during which Kirchner was put up in a cottage on the Stafelalp. From September, at the suggestion of his friend, Henry van de Velde, he spent 10 months at Dr Ludwig Binswanger’s Sanatorium Bellevue in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, prior to his final return to Davos in 1918. 

THE DAVOS YEARS 

Kirchner finally withdrew to the Swiss mountains in 1918. In this landscape, and these people and their folk art, he found the authenticity and ‘primitive’ way of life, which he had been seeking since his time in Dresden, until then believing that he would only find it in non-European cultures. The Swiss mountains became the canvas onto which he was able to project these longings. In 1918, he moved into a house named ‘In den Lärchen’, and in 1923, he acquired a property known as ‘Wildboden’. 

Kirchner’s intense encounter with his new home of Davos is most strikingly evident in the motifs of his paintings and woodcuts, and later in Lise Gujer’s woven carpets. He repeatedly drew upon visual subject matter from his immediate surroundings, linking peasant life and traditions with his expressive formal language and use of coloration. Many of the Alpine pictures can be definitively identified as Davos motifs, such as the Stafelalp, the town hall or the Wildboden.


THE STUDIO AS GESAMTKUNSTWERK

At the end of Kirchner’s first great period of creativity, between 1909 and 1914, his turn towards the imaginary really emerged. In 1911, he moved from Dresden to the metropolis of Berlin. He found painterly stimuli in the hurly-burly of the city and in like-minded people, with whom, in a Bohemian manner, he sought to create a fusion of art and the everyday. Although he consciously chose the metropolis as a place to live, he designed his studio as a refuge, a meeting place, a space to live and experiment and as somewhere to realise his unfettered lifestyle. With his friends, lovers and admirers, he created an alternative world countering the aesthetics of the Wilhelminian home. 

The ideas of the Lebensreform movement, which sought to unify human and nature, became their guiding principles and provided Kirchner with a foundation for his unconventional lifestyle. Inspired by African artworks, Kirchner increasingly depicted the human body by employing simple, stylised forms. The black, female body, whether of a living model or of a museum artefact, was often used by the artist as inspiration. He instrumentalised these women’s bodies, in order to give expression to the ‘alien’ and ‘exotic’ in his work. 

Kirchner accorded equal importance to his painting and sculptural work, and his paintings and sculpture were reciprocal in influencing one another. Works he had sculpted were often to be seen in his pictures. Non-European Influences The German Expressionists’ interest in non-European art was influenced, amongst other things, by the founding of German colonies in the South Pacific and in Africa and of new ethnographic museums. 

Kirchner was struck and inspired by his reading of publications on ethnographic subjects and by his visits to the ethno logical museum in Dresden. He was entranced by the reconstructions of Sudanese and Samoan villages, idealised and romanticised from a European perspective, which were staged by Carl Marquardt as part of his ethnographical expositions at the Zoological Gardens in Dresden. Without taking into consideration the heinous atrocities that were being perpetrated in the colonies, Kirchner believed that he was being given authentic insight into what were then called ‘primitive’ peoples, in what in today’s view would be considered contemptuous and inhuman shows. Here, he thought, he was able to view people from these far-off lands ‘as seen in nature’, without having to travel himself. 

The ethnographic collection in Dresden 

The European tradition for collecting artefacts from all over the world reaches back to the 16th century and the cabinets of curiosities and art amassed by princes and scholars. Studies of natural history and culture at the Electoral Court of Saxony in Dresden were based predominantly on the comprehensive collections of gifts from foreign guests and envoys. It was these collections, which would form the basis of a museum, founded in 1878, with an anthropological and ethnographical focus. 

Even in the early 20th century, the guiding principle of the museum was not only to document cultures from all corners of the world, but also to accord them due recognition. A conception of the Enlightenment, the notion that humankind and its cultural development were worthy of research did not automatically lead to an inhuman differentiation between cultures with the aim of asserting the cultural inferiority of other peoples. Nonetheless, elements of such a worldview increasingly came to the fore in connection with the economics of colonialism and the political nationalism of the time. 

The illegal acquisition of cultural artefacts*, such as the skilfully cast or carved sculpture from the Kingdom of Benin, was also enabled by the violent colonialist occupation of foreign countries. It is one of the paradoxes of history that this questionable appropriation of non-European artworks would mean that they would be accorded international attention and world heritage status, neither of which they might otherwise have achieved. It is precisely because elements of the collections were acquired within a context of illegality that, aside from its importance as a locus for unparalleled knowledge creation and as a repository of learning, the local and international significance of the ethnological museum also lies in its function as a site of critical reflection and responsible cultural exchange. 

* Commentary: today, the illegal appropriation of cultural artefacts is generally termed ‘looted art’. 



 Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Garden Restaurant in Steglitz
1911/1912
Oil on canvas


LEBENSREFORM: FROM THE MORITZBURG LAKES TO FEHMARN 

Towards the end of the 19th century, many movements critical of civilisation were called into being, which are now grouped together under the heading of Lebensreform (reform of life). They sought to return society to a much more natural way of life, intended to free people from the consequences of industrialisation —the so-called ‘ravages of civilisation’. For the young artists of the Brücke, this movement offered instruction and a theoretical foundation, an opportunity for self-reflection, a means to intensify sensory perception, and a way of freeing themselves from the superficial, decorative culture of the Empire. The (naked) body in a natural setting was seen as the ideal way of being. Thus, the Moritzburg Lakes near Dresden offered them a perfect environment for their artistic production. It was there that their swiftly executed free-hand sketches were made. The worked-up oil paintings are characterised by a warm palette of colours and brisk brushstrokes. The imaginary was the central focus of this work; in his depictions of archaic scenes, Kirchner was attempting to realise his vision of a primal lifestyle.  

Moritzburg From 1904 onwards

Kirchner and his Brücke colleagues put their ideas about ‘primitive’ life to the test on their summer outings to the Moritzburg Lakes. With their bathing and naturism, liberated sexuality, archery and boomerang-throwing, they were seeking to draw nearer to the ideals of the Lebensreformmovement. What they experienced in doing so became the subject of numerous sketches and drawings. In a deliberate departure from academic drawing of the nude, the Brücke artists developed what they termed the “quarter-of-an-hour nude”. The models had to alter their postures after only fifteen minutes. The artists were not concerned to depict them in detail; it was more a question for them of swiftly capturing the models’ key characteristics and expressiveness. Because the young men wanted, above all, to record informal, natural movements they worked with their girlfriends and the child models, Lina Franziska (Fränzi) Fehrmann and Marzella Albertine Sprentzel. The women and children are shown frolicking around unclothed in the open air, sometimes even in sexualised poses inappropriate for the ages of the children. 

Fehmarn 

The outings into the open air, away from urban life and the familiar surroundings of the studio, were an enormous spur to Kirchner’s creative drive. After his first visit to the island of Fehmarn in 1908, he returned in 1912. He went to Staberhuk, in the south-eastern part of the island, where he took up residence in the attic room belonging to the lighthouse keeper, Mr Lüthmann. For the artist, these stays on the island were a natural extension of his search for a ‘primitive’ way of living. In the Fehmarn drawings, one can now see how he was able to capture in his confident lines, the relaxed nature of the bathing scenes and the undulating forms of the landscape of the bay. 

Kirchner’s predilection for exoticising the bleak Baltic Sea landscape is evident in his paintings. A jungle-like wood can be seen in  

 
Colby CollegeMuseum of Art  (Waterville, Maine)1912-1913

1


Laburnum Tree, and  

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Fehmarn dunes with bathers under Japanese umbrellas

 Fehmarn Dunes With Bathers Under Japanese Umbrellas. Museum: Kirchner Museum Davos.

Dunes on Fehmarn with Bathersunder Japanese Umbrellas depicts a bathing scene typical of Kirchner—both are fantastical landscapes that invite the viewer to explore further. Many years later, Kirchner recalled that he often thought about his ‘earthly paradise’, mentioning it in letters to his friends and supporters. 

‘BLOODY CARNIVAL’ 

The outbreak of the First World War forced Kirchner and Erna to end their last summer on Fehmarn, which was declared a strategically important zone. In 1915, Kirchner volunteered “unwillingly” for military service—in the hope of thus being able to influence where he was posted. He was conscripted to serve with the Mansfeld Field Artillery in Halle an der Saale. His early attraction to the military life gave way to anxiety and a strongly held opposition to the war. 

As early as September 1915, Kirchner was temporarily discharged from military service due to mental illness on the intervention of his riding instructor, Professor Hans Fehr. The artist’s existential distress was mirrored in his self-portraits, and his photographs and portrait shots document his interrogation of this period of his life. In a letter to Gustav Schiefler dated 12 November 1916, he wrote, “The pressure of war, and superficiality run riot, weigh heavier than everything else. I always have the impression of a bloody carnival. How is it all supposed to end?” 

Bloody Carnival


Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
The Patient’s Bath
1917
Oil on cardboard
Private collection


STAYS IN THE SANATORIUM 

The use of intoxicating substances had been widespread amongst literary figures and visual artists since the early 19th century. They were intended to overcome people’s inhibitions and increase their openness to new experiences. Aside from his alcohol and tobacco addictions, Kirchner suffered from insomnia, anxiety conditions and lung problems. His unchecked self-medication with morphine and Veronal, a barbiturate sleeping pill, and his lack of care for himself, due to sleep deprivation and excessive fasting, led to him staying on several occasions at sanatoria between 1915 and 1918. 

Discharged from the military in November 1915 with the express order that he should take himself off to a clinic to convalesce, from December that year, Kirchner started a seven-month stay at Oskar Kohnstamm’s private sanatorium in Königstein im Taunus. 

After threatening suicide in December 1916, he was admitted to the closed ward at privy councillor, Dr Edel’schen Sanatorium for Depressive and Nervous Diseases in Charlottenburg in Berlin. In mid-January 1917, Kirchner travelled to Davos for the first time and entrusted himself to the medical care of Dr Lucius Spengler and his wife Helene. A second stay followed in early May, during which Kirchner was put up in a cottage on the Stafelalp. From September, at the suggestion of his friend, Henry van de Velde, he spent 10 months at Dr Ludwig Binswanger’s Sanatorium Bellevue in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, prior to his final return to Davos in 1918. 

THE DAVOS YEARS 

Kirchner finally withdrew to the Swiss mountains in 1918. In this landscape, and these people and their folk art, he found the authenticity and ‘primitive’ way of life, which he had been seeking since his time in Dresden, until then believing that he would only find it in non-European cultures. The Swiss mountains became the canvas onto which he was able to project these longings. In 1918, he moved into a house named ‘In den Lärchen’, and in 1923, he acquired a property known as ‘Wildboden’. Kirchner’s intense encounter with his new home of Davos is most strikingly evident in the motifs of his paintings and woodcuts, and later in Lise Gujer’s woven carpets. He repeatedly drew upon visual subject matter from his immediate surroundings, linking peasant life and traditions with his expressive formal language and use of coloration. Many of the Alpine pictures can be definitively identified as Davos motifs, such as the Stafelalp, the town hall or the Wildboden. 

The Davos years

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Mandolin Player
1921
oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos,
photo: Kirchner Museum Davos, Jakob Jägli


Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Sertig Valley in Autumn
1925/1926
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos



 Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Life in the Alps, Triptych
1917–1919
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos, Jakob Jägli

 

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Elderly Alpine Herdsman Wearing a Black Hat – Kaspar Cadiepolt
1919
Woodcut
© Kirchner Museum Davos



Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Two Goats
1919
Woodcut
© Kirchner Museum Davos,
photo Stephan Bösch


 

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
The Three Old Women
1925/1926
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos



THE RENEWAL OF THE STUDIO AS GESAMTKUNSTWERK 

Kirchner focused on the décor of his home in Davos, continuing the tradition he had created in his studios in Dresden and Berlin. His living room is shown as a refuge in his images. He repeatedly portrays its interior, which featured his own paintings, decorative drapery, carpets and sculptures, thus providing insight into his living space for later researchers. Nonetheless, the way in which he decorated his immediate surroundings underwent a marked development. It no longer related just to the internal space of his home, but also had an influence on its exterior appearance. 

Kirchner carved the monumental sculptures, Adam and Eve, which flanked the door to his house, for instance, in native Swiss stone pine or larch wood. These figures are immortalised in the photograph, Nina Hard in front of the Entrance to the House ‘In den Lärchen’
 


and in the painting, Before Sunrise

The renewal of the studio as Gesamtkunstwerk



https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9e/Ernst_Ludwig_Kirchner_-_Bergatelier_-_1937.jpg

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Mountain Studio
1937
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos


Ernst Ludwig Kirchner und Lise Gujer 

Kirchner’s fondness for textile art played an important role even when he was decorating his studio in Dresden. In Davos, he made the acquaintance of the Swiss weaver, Lise Gujer, who went on to fabricate carpets and wall-hangings according to his designs. The collaboration between Kirchner and Gujer is presumed to have begun around 1922 and it continued until the end of his life. They produced work in magnificent colours, the technique of weaving going on to have a long-term influence on Kirchner’s painting. It contributed significantly to his ‘New Style’. 

Thanks to his interest in textiles for use in the home, Kirchner was ultimately able to facilitate the exhibition, and the sale under the name of Lise Gujer, of these woven works. He acted in the role of an intermediary, and vehemently disputed, despite the fact that the designs were his, that he was the creator of the textiles. As an independent artist, Gujer took the lead from Kirchner’s world of forms and ideas and rendered his artistic vocabulary via the medium of her work, amplifying it by employing her own stylistic devices. A close confidante of Kirchner’s, she safely stored his original sketches and templates, and his Davos diary, for posterity. 

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Lise Gujer


Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Erna Schilling
Erna and Nina Hard at the House 'In den Lärchen'
1921
embroidery
E. W. K., Bern / Davos


THE ‘NEW STYLE’ 

Kirchner’s predilection for monumental panoramas, already evident in his landscape painting of the 1920s, was the preparatory ground for his later planar style. This shift in his work originated in the textile works designed by Kirchner and executed by Lise Gujer. However, it also displayed influences drawn from Picasso’s Surrealist work, which Kirchner, always well-informed, saw at the Kunsthaus Zürich in 1932. This departure, which the artist himself termed his ‘new style’, was characterised by precise fields of colour, geometric compositions and stylised forms. 

Powerful, prominent lines and light, shadow and movement depicted in a symbiotic unity represented Kirchner’s turning away from Expressionism and towards complex planar compositions. The significance of his immediate life and experiences also took second place during this new phase. Instead of the Davos motifs and its bucolic world, Kirchner’s work again depicted urban scenes. From his Davos home, he no longer painted his surroundings alone, but also drew on his memories of journeys to Frankfurt am Main, Dresden and Berlin during the winter of 1925–26. 

The ‘New Style’



https://uploads7.wikiart.org/images/ernst-ludwig-kirchner/store-in-the-rain-1927.jpg!HalfHD.jpg

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Department Store in the Rain
1926/1927
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos


 
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Pair of Acrobats
1932–1933
Oil on canvas
© Kirchner Museum Davos, Jakob Jägli

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Three Nudes in the Woods
1933
Woodcut
© Kirchner Museum Davos,
photo: Kirchner Museum Davos



'Hockney - Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature

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Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam
March 1- May 26, 2019
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From March 1, the colossal works of David Hockney will be on display in the Netherlands. For the first time, this spectacular exhibition offers an extensive and colourful exploration of the common ground between the work of Vincent van Gogh and David Hockney. The exhibition 'Hockney - Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature' continues to May 26, 2019, at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

The world-famous Yorkshire landscapes by David Hockney (1937) are a vivid feast for the eyes. This is the first time that these works will be on display in the Netherlands. The blockbuster exhibition Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature demonstrates the unmistakable influence that Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) had on the displayed works.


David Hockney, 'The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven)', Oil on 32 canvases (36 x 48" each), 144 x 384" overall, © David Hockney, Photo Credit: Richard Schmidt, Centre Pompidou, Paris.  Musée national d’art moderne – Centre de création industrielle
David Hockney, 'The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven)', Oil on 32 canvases (36 x 48" each), 144 x 384" overall, © David Hockney, Photo Credit: Richard Schmidt, Centre Pompidou, Paris. Musée national d’art moderne – Centre de création industrielle


One of the highlights is the colossal The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven), consisting of 32 parts and measuring 9.75 metres wide by 3.66 metres high. Sketchbooks, videos, photographic drawings and 20 large iPad drawings are also on display for the first time in the Netherlands.

Especially for this exhibition, photographer Rineke Dijkstra created a portrait of the artist, who is now 81 years old.

Back to Yorkshire

In the 1990s, Hockney started to return from Los Angeles to his native region: the Yorkshire Wolds in Great Britain, where he painted the characteristic countryside. These paintings, the Yorkshire landscapes, reveal thorough observations of the changing four seasons, and how light, space and nature are constantly in flux. These imposing landscapes offer a vivid insight into Hockney’s love of nature.

The landscape paintings show clear links with Van Gogh’s landscapes, such as  

 

The Harvest by Vincent van Gogh (1853 - 1890), Arles, June 1888, oil on canvas, 73.4 cm x 91.8 cm. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)

The Harvest (1888),  




Field with Irises near Arles (1888)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1a/Vincent_van_Gogh_-_The_garden_of_Saint_Paul%27s_Hospital_%28%60The_fall_of_the_leaves%27%29_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg/623px-Vincent_van_Gogh_-_The_garden_of_Saint_Paul%27s_Hospital_%28%60The_fall_of_the_leaves%27%29_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg

and The Garden of Saint Paul’s Hospital (‘Leaf-Fall’) (1889).

The stylised vertical lines of the tree trunks in the latter work by Van Gogh are analogous to the repetitive lines in Hockney’s renowned The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven).

‘Everyone loves spring. Everything emerges and straightens up. It’s like nature’s erection’. - David Hockney

Hockney on Van Gogh

Hockney: ‘His paintings are full of movement. What people love about Van Gogh’s paintings is that all the brush marks are visible and you can see how they are painted. When you’re drawing one blade of grass you’re looking and then you see more. And then you see the other blades of grass and you’re always seeing more. Well, that’s exciting to me and it was exciting to Van Gogh. I mean, he saw very clearly’.

‘The world is colourful. It is beautiful, I think. Nature is great. Van Gogh worshipped nature. He might have been miserable, but that doesn’t show in his work. There are always things that will try to pull you down. But we should be joyful in looking at the world’. - David Hockney

Unique exhibition

Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature demonstrates the influence of Van Gogh on Hockney’s work, exploring both artists’ fascination with nature, their use of bright, contrasting colours and their experimentation with perspective.

Axel Ruger: ‘The monumental Yorkshire landscapes play a central role, including The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven), on loan from the Centre Pompidou, which absorbs the viewer in nature, as it were, and incorporates them in the artwork. These colourful landscapes clearly reveal Hockney’s love of nature; in the exhibition, these works are displayed alongside Van Gogh’s landscape paintings’.

It was in his Yorkshire period that Hockney began experimenting with his iPad, using the device to create scintillating landscapes. Twenty (from a series of over 100) of these accomplished drawings will be displayed in large format in Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature. The exhibition features some 60 works, including two series of watercolours and charcoal drawings (that consist of 36 and 25 smaller works respectively). Hockney’s sketchbooks are also on display, as well as several loose sheets that undeniably take their cue from Van Gogh’s drawing style.

 Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature also features masterful videos of the four seasons and one of Hockney’s recent – technically innovative – photographic drawings, alongside watercolours, black-and-white drawings and prints. Especially for the exhibition, photographer Rineke Dijkstra created a portrait of Hockney, in which the artist’s perceptivity and open take on the world are tangible.

Inspiration

Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature is the first extensive monographic Hockney exhibition to be organised in the Netherlands. The exhibition features works representing all of the techniques in his oeuvre. None of the works have been on display in the Netherlands before. Hockney – Van Gogh follows suit with a series of presentations in which the Van Gogh Museum shows how numerous generations of artists are inspired by Van Gogh’s work. Since 2014, presentations in this series have been on display featuring paintings by Francis Bacon, Edvard Munch, Frank Auerbach, Willem de Kooning and Peter Doig, as well as expressionist works from the Merzbacher Collection. These modern and contemporary artists not only show how Van Gogh inspires, in turn, they also influence how Van Gogh is viewed now and in the future.

David Hockney




David Hockney, 'Kilham to Langtoft II, 27 July 2005', Oil on canvas, 24 x 36", © David Hockney, Photo Credit: Richard Schmidt



Hockney is one of the best-known representatives of pop art. He moved to the United States in the mid-1960s, where he developed a more realistic approach to painting. His painting


Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures) (1972) was sold at auction in 2018 for $ 90 million, a record sum for a work by a living artist. Hockney is considered to be one of the most prominent artists of the past century.

Nice article, lots of images



Catalogue

 

The catalogue Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature explores the story behind Hockney’s imposing landscape paintings, comparing them to Van Gogh’s monumental landscapes. In a unique interview, Hockney recounts what inspires him, and how he shares Van Gogh’s passion for looking at the world.
  • Author: Hans den Hartog Jager. Available in Dutch and English, 176 pages, richly illustrated, € 29.95.
  • Van Gogh Museum in collaboration with Tijdsbeeld publishers.

The Impressionist’s Eye

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Philadelphia Museum of Art
April 16 – August 18, 2019




Although they are regarded first and foremost as painters, the Impressionists were equally dedicated to making and exhibiting drawings, pastels, and sculptures. Over a quarter of the work exhibited in their group shows were on paper. The exhibition explores Impressionist paintings, watercolors, drawings, and sculptures together, demonstrating the versatility, experimentation, and innovation of these artists and the fluidity with which they moved from one medium to another.

File:Mary Stevenson Cassatt, American - A Woman and a Girl Driving - Google Art Project.jpg

 "A Woman and a Girl Driving,"by Mary Stevenson Cassatt, 1881. Oil on canvas, 35 5/16 × 51 3/8 inches. Purchased with the W. P. Wilstach Fund, 1921. Image courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2018.

Approximately 70 Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works by Manet, Degas, Monet, Pissarro, Sisley, Renoir, Morisot, Cassatt, Seurat, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec, Rodin, drawn largely from the collection will be on view.

The exhibition will explore the perspective and originality that the Impressionists brought to landscapes, still lifes, portraits, nudes, and scenes of modern life. Cropping, unusual angles, flattened grounds, vibrant color, and vigorous brushwork are tools these artists used to add a startling modern angle to their painting and drawing.

Image result

"In the Loge," around 1879, by Mary Stevenson Cassatt. Philadelphia Museum of Art: Gift of Mrs. Sargent McKean, 1950.

File:Pierre-Auguste Renoir, French - The Large Bathers - Google Art Project.jpg

Among the highlights will be a close examination of a major work by Renoir : his The Large Bathers.

The Impressionist’s Eye. Courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art

Monet's Path on the Island of Saint Martin, Vetheuil, 1881,

Two drawings by Van Gogh—both from 1888 but worked in very different styles—demonstrate how he created large-scale drawings in an exaggerated “painterly” style for the art market or transformed his paintings into meticulous drawings as gifts for friends.

Pages from Cézanne’s sketchbooks, last displayed at the Museum in 1989, will be on view.

Curator
Jennifer Thompson, The Gloria and Jack Drosdick Curator of European Painting and Sculpture, and Curator of the John G. Johnson Collection

Sotheby's Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale 14 May 2019 | New York

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This spring,

 File:William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - The Youth of Bacchus (1884).jpg

 La Jeunesse de Bacchus (The Youth of Bacchus), the most important work of William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s celebrated career, will highlight our Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale in New York. Equally impressive in both scale and technical artistry, this monumental canvas is an astounding 20 feet long and 10 feet high. The work has hung in Bouguereau’s Paris studio since it was completed in 1884 — only leaving three times in its 135-year history. Offered now from the direct descendants of the artist, The Youth of Bacchus is as rare as it is spectacular. Sotheby’s sale presents the rare opportunity to own one of the greatest pictures painted in the 19th century. The work will be on view alongside Sotheby’s Asia Week exhibitions from 14 March – 24 March, and again beginning 3 May in Sotheby's newly expanded and reimagined New York galleries. (14 May | New York)

Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art Evening sale features a breathtaking array of works from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.




From a bird’s eye view of the Parisian streets painted by Gustave Caillebotte in 1878




to a delicate depiction of Pierre Bonnard’s muse at her toilette

 

to a vivacious large-scale Mousquetaire by Pablo Picasso, whose braggadocio leaps from the canvas, the paintings, drawings and sculpture assembled convey the complexity and dynamism of this crucial period.





Further highlights include two stunning oils by Claude Monet depicting the fields outside of Giverny,




an evocative transparence by Francis Picabia,




and, with a touching dedication to his wife, Marc Chagall’s canvas Le Paysan, replete with his favored motifs.

Early Rubens

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Legion of Honor in San Francisco
April 6 to Sept. 8, 2019

Art Gallery of Ontario
October 12, 2019 to January 5, 2020

In 1608, after a period of intense artistic study in Italy, Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) returned to his hometown of Antwerp. He found a city eager to renew its visual culture and ready to support him, a bold artist who worked at a rapid pace and dramatic scale that could satisfy the demand for religious images while also supplying private collectors with works of ancient history and mythology.


Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640) Boar Hunt, ca.  1615/1617.  Oil on canvas, 98 7/16 X 126 in.  (250 x 320 cm).  Musée des Beaux-Arts, Marseille, France, Inv.  BA103 Photo: Jean Bernard.  © RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY

Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640) Boar Hunt, ca. 1615/1617. Oil on canvas, 98 7/16 X 126 in. (250 x 320 cm). Musée des Beaux-Arts, Marseille, France, Inv. BA103 Photo: Jean Bernard. © RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY
(Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco)
Early Rubens is the first exhibition dedicated to the pivotal years between 1609 and 1621 when the Northern Baroque master established his career. In more than 30 paintings and 20 works on paper, the exhibition will trace Rubens’s early development as a master painter with a unique gift for depicting seductive and shocking narratives. Rubens was not only a sought-after artist, but also a diplomat, shrewd business man, and a friend to scholars and monarchs. Early Rubens will explore the artist’s meteoric rise to the first rank of European painters through a series of social and artistic choices that laid the groundwork for his international fame.

“Peter Paul Rubens was both a prodigious and influential artist and one of the most extraordinary figures of the 17th century,” says Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “We are delighted to present this examination of Rubens’s early work at the Legion of Honor in partnership with the Art Gallery of Ontario. Inspired by continual scholarship and study of our collections of work by Flemish masters, the exhibition will contextualize Rubens’s importance and legacy for our audiences.”



Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, Seigen 1577–1640 Antwerp) "The Dreaming Silenus", 1610–1612. Oil on canvas, 62 1/4 x 85 3/8 in. (158 x 217 cm). Gemäldegalerie der Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien.
Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

More than 50 works from private and public collections in Europe and North America — including the Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp; the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna; the Princely Collections of Liechtenstein; the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; the British Museum, London; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York will be brought together for the exhibition. Many will be exhibited in North America or on the US West Coast for the first time. The exhibition is arranged thematically, thereby revealing Rubens’s mastery of a broad range of visual styles and subject matter, both historical and mythological.

“What distinguished Rubens and made his pictures so thrilling for his early viewers, was his ability to re-interpret important models he encountered both on the Italian peninsula and in the Low Countries through his own developing sense for vibrant, naturalistic color and his virtuoso brushwork,” says Kirk Nickel, assistant curator of European painting at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “His inclination to work quickly and at a large scale was essential for Rubens’s success in repopulating the city's churches with religious images, even while he painted startling episodes of ancient valor, obscure Greco-Roman mythologies, and unsettling moments of biblical history for private collectors.”

Rubens tribute money.jpg

Early Rubens is anchored in The Tribute Money (ca. 1610 –1615), a treasured Flemish Baroque masterpiece from the collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco,



and the recently rediscovered The Massacre of the Innocents (ca. 1611–1612), a centerpiece of the Art Gallery of Ontario’s collection.

"Early Rubens is a story of a painter and his city, of how Rubens’s return to his chosen home at a particular moment in history sparked in Antwerp an artistic, intellectual and commercial revitalization,” says Sasha Suda, curator of European art at the Art Gallery of Ontario. “The Massacre of the Innocents not only highlights Rubens’s achievement as a painter, it provides powerful insight into the mindset of the citizens of Antwerp in 1610. I am excited for our visitors to see it in a new way, and to understand the incredibly important place it holds in Rubens’s development.”

Early Rubens is organized by Kirk Nickel, assistant curator of European paintings at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and Sasha Suda, curator of European art and R. Fraser Elliott Chair of Prints and Drawings at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. The exhibition will be on view at the Legion of Honor from April 6 through September 8, 2019, and then at the Art Gallery of Ontario from October 12, 2019, through January 5, 2020.

In Detail

After an eight-year sojourn in Italy, Rubens returned to Antwerp in 1608 to attend to his dying mother. Italy had been transformative for Rubens, both in terms of his artistic skills and his professional ambitions. A group of works from Rubens’s Italian years, including altarpiece commissions and smaller cabinet pictures, will open the exhibition, setting the context for the artist’s later artistic developments.

Rubens’s experience in Italy informed the social and intellectual circles that he sought to join in Antwerp. A selection of portraits —some commissioned, others intimate portrayals of close friends and family members—will show how Rubens sought to establish himself as a “gentleman painter” and how he acquired increased social and professional footing through his relationships with Antwerp’s mix of humanists, merchants, and religious thinkers.


The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco’s portraits (ca. 1611)

 

of silk merchant Rogier Clarisse and his wife, Sara Breyel, reflect his widening network of relationships that also touched the humanist Jan Woverius and the leadership of Antwerp’s religious communities.

As a bastion of Catholic faith in the face of Dutch Protestantism, Antwerp was eager for a visual language to match its strident support of Rome’s Counter-Reformation priorities. Rubens’s talent for capturing emotion and complex psychology in the movements of the human body was essential to his success as a painter of Christian history.

Peter Paul Rubens - Annunciation - WGA20189.jpg
Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, Seigen 1577–1640 Antwerp) "The Annunciation", 1609. Oil on canvas, 88 1/4 x 78 3/4 in. (224 x 200 cm) Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, Picture Gallery, Inv. no. GG 685 © KHM–Museumsverband
Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
The jewel-toned Annunciation from the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna,

 File:Peter Paul Rubens - Lamentation of Christ.jpg


alongside Christ on the Straw (the Michielsen Triptych) from the Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp will introduce a gallery featuring scenes from the life of Jesus. These images not only stunned Antwerp at the time of their unveiling; but also set a new template for religious images in Europe and far beyond.

Rubens’s talent for portraying gripping human drama was not limited to devotional imagery, it was also integral to his success as a painter of scenes for domestic spaces and galleries. His patrons were well informed about antique art and literature, as well as recent artistic developments in Italy, and they were delighted by Rubens’s skill at incorporating these sources into his own works.

The psychological drama in paintings such as The Tribute Money and The Massacre of the Innocents exemplifies his aptitude for distilling a narrative to its moment of highest dramatic tension.

During the 1610s, Rubens began to consider how best to publish his pictorial inventions though reproductive engravings and he cultivated relationships with the engravers he felt could best translate his compositions to print. With major examples, such as The Raising of the Cross and The Battle of the Amazons from the Rijksmuseum, the exhibition will present the varied array of printmaking projects in which Rubens collaborated.

As large-scale paintings by Rubens began to enter the collections of aristocrats and royal advisors during the 1610s, his international reputation soared. By the 1620s, Rubens was a favorite of monarchs in France, England, and Spain, and capable of conducting international diplomacy alongside his artistic activities at foreign courts. The exhibition culminates with a selection of Rubens’s large gallery pictures, scaled to compete with tapestry or fresco painting.

File:Sir Peter Paul Rubens - Daniel in the Lions' Den - Google Art Project.jpg

Mural-size works such as the National Gallery of Art’s Daniel in the Lions’ Den (1614/1616) will be joined by other life-size scenes, allowing visitors to the exhibition to appreciate the scope of Rubens’s ambition while also understanding the role his workshop played in his international success.

More on Sotheby’s Contemporary and Impressionist & Modern Art this May

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 Highlights include:    Willem de Kooning Untitled X Oil on canvas 77 by 88 in. Executed in 1975 Estimate $8/12 million.Courtesy Sotheby's. Willem de Kooning’s Untitled X, a stunning example from the group of works created in 1975 that marked the artist’s transition from a period of radical experimentation to the lush abstracts which are among his most celebrated and sought after works today;    
Francis Bacon, Study for Portrait Signed, titled and dated 1981 on the reverse. Oil and dry transfer lettering on canvas, 78 by 58 in. Executed in 1981. Estimate $12/18 million. Courtesy Sotheby's. 
Francis Bacon’s Study for Portrait, the last of the artist’s famed portraits of his lover and muse George Dyer (pictured left, estimate $12/18 million);  he most comprehensive group of late works by Philip Guston ever to appear at auction, including Legs, Rug, Floor from 1976 (estimate $6/8 million) and Red Sky from 1978 (estimate $6/8 million); and signature portraits by Frank Auerbarch depicting his wife Julia Wolstenhome and his friend Catherine Lampert. 
Also: 


Max Beckmann Liegender Akt in starker Verkürzung (Reclining Nude Sharply Foreshortened) Oil on canvas 29 by 21 in. Signed Beckmann and dated St. L. 48 lower left Executed in 1948 Estimate $3/5 million.Courtesy Sotheby's.

Polyphenols, found in coffee, reduce cardiovascular disease risk

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A new report from the Institute for Scientific Information on Coffee (ISIC) titled 'Coffee, polyphenols and cardiovascular disease' highlights the potential role of polyphenols - which are found in coffee, cocoa and wine, as well as other plant-based foods - in reducing the risk of CVD.
The report, authored by Professor Kjeld Hermansen, Department of Endocrinology and Internal Medicine, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark discusses the research that suggests that there is an association between the consumption of polyphenols and a reduction in CVD prevalence.1,2
Coffee is one of the main sources of polyphenols in the diet; the compounds naturally occur in the beverage and contribute to its unique flavours and aromas.1 In recent years there has been growing academic interest in the role of polyphenols in health through their antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects.
The new ISIC report authored by Prof Hermansen discusses the range of potential cardio protective functions of polyphenols and the mechanisms involved.
Key research findings highlighted in the report include:
  • Epidemiological research suggests that there is an association between the consumption of polyphenols and reduction in CVD prevalence.1,2
  • Polyphenols may have a range of cardio protective functions but the precise mechanisms are not yet fully understood. It is suggested that they may alter cholesterol absorption and the processing of fats in the body, and reduce inflammation.1,2
  • Coffee is one of the main sources of polyphenols in the diet.1

Bonhams Impressionist And Modern Art Sale In London 28 Feb 2019

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Autour de 'La Revolution 1937', a remarkable, and joyous work painted in the aftermath of the Second World War by the Russian-French artist Marc Chagall, leads Bonhams Impressionist and Modern Art Sale in London on Thursday 28 February. It is estimated at £300,000-500,000.
The 1917 Revolution and subsequent Russian Civil War were key events in Chagall's artistic development. 20 years later – having moved to Paris in 1923 from his home town of Vitebsk – he embarked on his Révolution series. Over several, similarly structured, works, Chagall juxtaposes political upheaval, represented by the revolutionaries on the left side of the canvases, with artistic and domestic harmony in the form of musicians, roof tops, animals and lovers on the right. Separating these two worlds, the figure of Lenin is shown performing a handstand on a table, at which sits a rabbi contemplating the Torah.

Chagall returned to the theme in the years following World War Two. Being Jewish, he had fled France after the German invasion of 1940, and lived in America until 1948 when he returned to the country he saw as home. Autour de 'La Revolution 1937' was painted at some point between 1945-1950, and is a reflection on the earlier series (the title translates as Around 'The 1937 Revolution'.) The tone is markedly apolitical and lighter. The figure of Lenin has been replaced by an acrobat – a favorite Chagall motif - and the rabbi is now an elderly violinist. The revolutionary crowd has shrunk to a small group of banner-waving protestors.

Bonhams Global Head of Impressionist and Modern Art India Phillips commented: "After the Second World War, Chagall made a deliberate decision to emphasize beauty and peace. From exile in New York, he had followed the fate of European Jewry with mounting horror. Unlike many of his contemporaries, however, he chose to process his reaction to this unimaginable suffering through determined and conscious optimism."

Renoir


Christie’s New York Impressionist and Modern May 2019

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Christie’s is honored to present The Collection of Drue Heinz, which encompasses a remarkable selection of fine art that will be offered throughout Christie’s New York Impressionist and Modern Evening and Day Sales in May. The collection of Drue Heinz is a reflection of her keen observation and innate eye. Heinz was married to H.J. (Jack) Heinz II – CEO of the H. J. Heinz Company – from 1953 until his death in 1987, and she made most of her acquisitions over the course of their three decades of marriage. Throughout her life, Heinz enjoyed nothing more than taking on new endeavors that advanced the work of emerging artists of all kinds. Her spirit is very much reflected within her collection, and as such, proceeds from its sale will go to support her beloved Hawthornden Literary Retreat among other charitable projects. From these and other benefactions one takes away the overall impression of an energetic collaborator who took a personal interest in undertakings that she felt were important to nourishing the human spirit. Works from the collection will also be offered across the Spring Sales of Post-War and Contemporary and Latin American Art. Further, A striking range of decorative arts will be sold in a dedicated sale taking place in London on June 4.
Jessica Fertig, Head of Evening Sale, Impressionist and Modern Art, New York, remarked:

The collection of fine art that Mrs. Heinz assembled includes the most important artists of the early modern period —Picasso, Modigliani, Giacometti, Monet, Magritte and Matisse. From Bonnard’s Une terrasse à Grasse, one of the finest and most sumptuous examples of the artist’s terrace series, or in the suspended drama of Picasso’s Course de taureaux, through to the intimate dimensions of Cézanne’s pencil study of five bathers, related to the celebrated Basel painting of the same subject, or the quietude of an exquisite Morandi still-life. In every case, the art reflects careful, informed selection. And it was displayed in the Heinz homes so that at every turn the eye would fall on something thought-provoking and beautiful.


Highlights from the Evening Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art to include: 




Amedeo Modigliani, Lunia Czechowska (à la robe noire), 1919. Oil on canvas. $12-18 million
Leading the collection is Amedeo Modigliani’s Lunia Czechowska (à la robe noire), 1919 (estimate: $12-18 million). Modigliani was infatuated with his subject, a young Polish émigré, who was married to a close friend of the artist’s dealer, Léopold Zborowski, and would ultimately go on to paint her likeness in ten known paintings. Czechowska was 25 when she sat for the present portrait, a canvas that Joseph Lanthemann praised for being “plein de noblesse, de beauté et de communion”. Czechowska’s fine, delicate features bespeak a discerning intelligence and a rare sensitivity, which perfectly suited the artist’s fascination with this type. Her serious demeanor and youthfully lithe, feminine figure lent themselves well to the primary influences the artist liked to incorporate and show off in his portraits—the elongated forms of the 16th century Italian Mannerists Parmigianino and Pontormo, filtered through his modernist attraction to aspects of African tribal art.



Pierre Bonnard’s La Terrasse ou Une terrasse à Grasse, 1912 (estimate: $6-9 million) is a pageant of high-keyed color and luxuriant, Mediterranean vegetation. This idyllic scene — one of Bonnard’s earliest tours de force on the theme of the terrace — depicts the grounds of the Villa Antoinette at Grasse, some twelve miles north of Cannes, where the artist and his future wife Marthe stayed on holiday from January to May 1912. La Terrasse is one of the two largest canvases that Bonnard painted during his exceptionally productive stay at Grasse, both major decorative statements visualizing the Côte d’Azur as a modern-day Arcadia. In La Terrasse, Bonnard creates a private, enclosed world that evokes the sultry heat and languorous reverie of a Mediterranean afternoon. Marthe is now subordinate to the colorful profusion of vegetation, her motionless figure registering to the viewer within the composition only after a slight, almost imperceptible delay; her sun-dappled blue jacket and brown cloche hat seem to merge, wraithlike, with the surrounding ground of the terrace. “This dreaming feminine presence, Marthe,” Sasha Newman has written, “who so often appears in cutoff views—glimpsed on a balcony, through a door, or reflected in a mirror—is central to the underlying air of mystery in much of Bonnard’s art.”


 
Henri Matisse, Nu à la fenêtre. Estimate: $7-10 million. © Christie's Images Ltd 2019.
 
Henri Matisse painted Nu à la fenêtre (estimate: $7-10 million) – also known as Nu nacré (Pearly Nude) for the iridescent quality of its light—in his new studio during the first part of 1929 and sold the canvas to Bernheim-Jeune that September. The painting was reproduced shortly thereafter in two important monographs, one by Florent Fels and the other by Roger Fry, which paid tribute to the artist on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday in December 1929;  it was first exhibited publicly at the Kraushaar Galleries in New York the following fall. The focal point of this luminous,canvas is the nude model, the subject par excellence of Matisse’s exemplary Nice period. “The Odalisques were the bounty of a happy nostalgia, a lovely vivid dream, and the almost ecstatic, enchanted days and nights of the Moroccan climate,” the artist recounted. “I felt an irresistible need to express that ecstasy, that divine unconcern, in corresponding colored rhythms, rhythms of sunny and lavish figures and colors”. Here, Matisse depicted a sultry brunette named Loulou, one of several ballet dancers from the Compagnie de Paris who populated the artist’s private pictorial theater in 1928-1929. The paintings that Matisse created in early 1929 represent the culmination of his work at Nice during this transformative period.



Pablo Picasso, a lifelong aficionado of the heroism and pathos of the bullfight, executed Course de taureaux in 1900 (estimate: $4-6 million), capturing the brief, electrifying moment immediately before the bull charges into the corrida, its every nerve-ending fired with the anticipation of combat. Picasso rendered this scene, laying down pastel in vivid hues and with a material density that conjures the physicality of the impending encounter, in mid-1900, the artist was just eighteen years old, ablaze with youthful ambition and preparing for his own dramatic entry into a new arena. The previous year, he had returned home to Barcelona after a brief stint at the prestigious but stiflingly traditional Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid; now, ever more forceful and independent, he was just months away from his first trip to Paris, determined to prove his worth in the very center of the art world. 

For America: Paintings from the National Academy of Design

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Dayton Art Institute, Dayton, OH
(02/20/19–06/02/19)

New Britain Museum of American Art, CT
(11/07/19–02/02/20)

Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, FL
(02/22/20–04/26/20)

The Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis, TN
(07/02/20–09/27/20)
New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe
(10/22/20–01/17/21)



Figge Art Museum, Davenport, IA
(02/20/21–05/09/21)
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
(06/06/21–09/12/21)



For America: Paintings from the National Academy of Design is the first exhibition to highlight a pivotal aspect of the collection of the National Academy of Design—the joint presentation of an artist’s portrait with his or her diploma work.


 For America is the first exhibition to highlight the fundamental characteristic of the National Academy’s collection: the joint presentation of an artist’s portrait with her or his representative work. The exhibition’s one hundred extraordinary paintings present not only a visual document of the Academy’s membership but a unique history of American painting from 1809 to the present.

The exhibition will tour to eight venues across the United States, bringing important paintings to audiences across the country while also enriching the dialogue of scholars, students, and artists of all ages with the firsthand experience of American masterpieces.

From its founding in 1825 to the present, the NAD has required all Academicians to donate a representative work to the Academy’s collection, and, from 1839 to 1994, the Academy also required Associates to present a portrait of themselves, whether painted by their own hand or that of a fellow artist.


For nearly two centuries, the National Academy of Design has been a leading artistic voice in America. Founded in 1825 (and known simply as the National Academy), this honorary artists’ society, school, and museum has helped shape America’s art and continues to be an active and influential institution to this day. Selected by their peers, members have always been among the most distinguished artists of our nation. 

This exhibition of 100 paintings by 78 artists tells the story of the National Academy, from the early 19th century into the 21st. 

 Included are works by some of the most recognizable names in American art: Winslow Homer, John Singer Sargent, Maxfield Parrish, William Merritt Chase, N.C. and Andrew Wyeth, Thomas Eakins, Robert Henri, Ernest Blumenschein, Isabel Bishop, Richard Estes, Charles White, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Wayne Thiebaud, Peter Saul, and many more.

Catalogue



April 30, 2019
304 pages, 8 1/4 x 11
200 color illus.
ISBN: 9780300244281
HC - Paper over Board 


A sweeping look at the ways American artists have viewed themselves, their peers, and their painted worlds over two centuries

This stunning book provides an unprecedented glimpse into the past two centuries of American art, tracing artistic tradition and innovation at the National Academy of Design from its 19th-century founding to the present. The nation’s oldest artist honorary society has maintained a unique collecting principle: each member gives a self-portrait (or, until 1994, a portrait by a contemporary Academician) as well as an example of their work. By presenting artists’ portraits in tandem with their self-selected representative works, this book offers a unique opportunity to explore how American artists have viewed both themselves and the worlds they depicted.

The diverse selection of artists whose work is showcased here includes Frederic Edwin Church, Eastman Johnson, Winslow Homer, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, Cecilia Beaux, Isabel Bishop, Andrew Wyeth, Charles White, Wayne Thiebaud, Louisa Matthíasdóttir, David Diao, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Peter Saul. Essays by a stellar roster of distinguished historians and art historians, curators, artists, and architects delve into single artworks or pairs of paintings, while others explore themes such the representation of landscapes and the figurative tradition in American art. Additionally, 17 current Academicians—visual artists and architects including Walter Chatham, Catherine Opie and Fred Wilson—contribute personal responses to individual artworks.
Jeremiah William McCarthy is associate curator at the American Federation of Arts. Diana Thompson is director of collections and curatorial affairs at the National Academy of Design.





Will Barnet, Self - Portrait, 1981. Oil on canvas, 31 ⅛ × 45 ½ in. National Academy of Design, New York © 2018 Will Barnet Trust / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY Courtesy American Federation of Arts.

Samuel F. B. Morse

Samuel F. B. Morse, Self-Portrait, c. 1809, watercolor on ivory.National Academy of Design, New York. Gift of Samuel P. Avery, John G. Brown, Thomas B. Clarke, Lockwood de Forest, Daniel Huntington, James C. Nicoll, and Harry W. Watrous, 1900. Courtesy American Federation of Arts


William J. Whittemore, Charles Courtney Curran, 1888-89. Oil on canvas, 17 × 21 in. National Academy of Design, New York Courtesy American Federation of Arts.   



Asher B. Durand
Self-Portrait, ca. 1835
Oil on canvas
30 1/8 x 25 1/4 in.
National Academy of Design,
New York, Gift of the Artist



 Cecilia Beaux. Self-Portrait, 1894. Oil on canvas 25 x 20 in. National Academy of Design,


Artists in the exhibition: Samuel F. B. Morse, Asher B. Durand, Frederic Edwin Church, John Frederick Kensett, Albert Bierstadt, Emanuel Leutze, Ferdinand Thomas Lee Boyle, Edward Harrison May, George Henry Hall, Daniel Huntington, Eastman Johnson, Oliver Ingraham Lay, Winslow Homer, Elihu Vedder, George Inness, Wyatt Eaton, William J. Whittemore, William Merritt Chase, Robert Frederick Blum, John Singer Sargent, Cecilia Beaux, Kenyon Cox, Maxfield Parrish, Thomas Eakins, Robert Reid, Childe Hassam, Frederick Carl Frieseke, J. Alden Weir, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Richard E. Miller, Henry Ossawa Tanner, George Bellows, Robert Henri, Daniel Garber, Gertrude Fiske, Mary Shepard Greene Blumenschein, Ernest L. Blumenschein, Walter Ufer, Ellen Emmet Rand, Guy C. Wiggins, Paul Sample, Isabel Bishop, Peter Hurd, John Steuart Curry, N. C. Wyeth, Reginald Marsh, Aaron Bohrod, Andrew Wyeth, Ivan Albright, Jules Kirschenbaum, Philip Pearlstein, Jane Freilicher, Hughie Lee-Smith, George Tooker, Richard Estes, Lois Dodd, May Stevens, Charles White, Will Barnet, Wayne Thiebaud, Reuben Tam, Rosemarie Beck, Paul Resika, Gretna Campbell, William Clutz, Louisa Matthíasdóttir, Altoon Sultan, W. Lee Savage, James McGarrell, Emma Amos, Benny Andrews, David Kapp, Jacqueline Gourevitch, David Diao, Walter Hatke, Albert Kresch, Ann Gale, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Peter Saul.

John Driscoll American Drawings Collection

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The Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State announced a transformational gift of 140 American works on paper, recently donated by Penn State alumnus Dr. John P. Driscoll. The expansive gift, one of the most important in the forty-seven-year history of the University’s art museum, establishes a significant American drawings collection at the Palmer Museum of Art.

The John Driscoll American Drawings Collection spans more than 150 years of American art history from 1795 to 1950, and in many ways, reflects the wide-ranging scholarly and collecting interests of its namesake.

John Vanderlyn (1776-1852), Study After Poussin (Study for the Baptism of Christ), c. 1795, charcoal on paper, 11 x 17 inches. Palmer Museum of Art, John Driscoll American Drawings Collection.


Highlights of the collection include a rare and early charcoal sketch by the neoclassical painter John Vanderlyn, important Hudson River School drawings by Jasper Francis Cropsey, Sanford Robinson Gifford, David Johnson, Jervis McEntee, and William Trost Richards, as well as city and architectural scenes by the most accomplished artists of the nineteenth century. Works on paper by women artists and a rare sketchbook by Jane Peterson, as well as Native American and western subjects, are well represented in the collection.

Additional important works by Edwin Austin Abbey, Kenyon Cox, Arthur B. Davies, and Charles Hawthorne traverse the late nineteenth and early twentieth century and lead into an important group of six drawings done between 1908 and 1934 by the early American modernist Marsden Hartley. Driscoll’s gift also includes oil paintings by Arthur B. Davies, John Francis, William Sidney Mount, and Russell Smith, as well as the only extant complete set of Marsden Hartley’s 1923 “Berlin Prints.”

William Trost Richards (1833–1905), Landscape, c.  1865, graphite and gouache on paper, 17 1/2 x 23 1/2 inches.  Palmer Museum of Art, John Driscoll American Drawings Collection
William Trost Richards (1833–1905), Landscape, c. 1865, graphite and gouache on paper, 17 1/2 x 23 1/2 inches. Palmer Museum of Art, John Driscoll American Drawings Collection



Marsden Hartley (1877–1943), Flowers in Goblet #3, 1923, lithograph, 16 ⅜ x 10 ½ inches. Palmer Museum of Art, John Driscoll American Drawings Collection



John William Hill (1812–1879), Under the Falls, Niagara, c. 1870, watercolor on paper, 29 x 21 1/2 inches. Palmer Museum of Art, John Driscoll American Drawings Collection

Driscoll, who earned a master’s degree as well as Ph.D. in art history from Penn State, is a scholar, collector, gardener, and art dealer based in New York City. His involvement with Penn State’s university art museum dates back nearly fifty years to the summer of 1972, when he began working at the museum as a graduate assistant. In 1976, he became the museum’s first official registrar. In late 1978, Driscoll left Penn State for a position as curator of the William H. Lane Foundation in Massachusetts, followed by a guest curatorial post at the Worcester Art Museum before establishing an art gallery in Boston and then, acquiring Babcock Galleries, New York, in 1987. In 2012, he renamed the business Driscoll Babcock. This year marks the gallery’s 167th year, making it New York’s oldest art gallery.

Christie's Old Masters sale in New York on May 2, 2019

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Christie’s has announced Property from the Collection of Richard L. Feigen, the renowned and influential American art dealer. Featuring early Italian and Baroque paintings, as well as 18th century British landscapes, several paintings from the Collection will be offered in the Old Masters sale in New York on May 2, 2019. Artists represented in the sale include Annibale Carracci, Guercino, Lorenzo Monaco, and John Constable, among others. A global tour of select highlights from the collection will tour to Los Angeles, New York, London, Dubai and Hong Kong.

Francois de Poortere, Head of Department, Old Masters, comments, “Known for his discerning eye and impeccable taste, Richard Feigen has always been a true visionary in the global art world. He has made countless and startling discoveries throughout his career and continues to champion the field of Old Masters. It is an honor to be offering several of his most cherished paintings.”

Mr. Feigen is renowned for his connoisseurship which spans from Italian paintings to contemporary art, and for counting top collectors and institutions around the world as his clients. His first gallery opened in Chicago in 1957 with a focus on Expressionism and Surrealism, and soon thereafter he opened his New York gallery in Soho specializing in contemporary art. He represented several artists early in their careers notably Francis Bacon, and in 1970 he organized John Baldessari’s first exhibition. With galleries in New York and London, Mr. Feigen was influential in placing important works at the Louvre in Paris, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, among other institutions. Mr. Feigen also authored a semi-autobiographical collection of essays TALES FROM THE ART CRYPT: The Painters, the Museums, the Curators, the Collectors, the Auctions, the Art.

An important group of early Italian and Baroque works compose the core of the collection, led by 


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Annibale Carracci (1560-1609), Virgin and Child with Saint Lucy and the Young Saint John the Baptist, oil on panel, 30 7/8 x 24 13/16 in. (78.5 x 63 cm.) Estimate on Request. © Christie's Images Ltd 2019.
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 Annibale Carracci’s Virgin and Child with Saint Lucy and the Young Saint John the Baptist, which is a naturalistically rendered tender moment that was likely made for a Bolognese patron and inspired by the influence of Correggio and Parmigianino (estimate on request). A testament to his connoisseurship, after Mr. Feigen bought the Virgin and Child at auction in 1987, he was responsible for firmly reattributing the work to Carracci. 



Also on offer is Lorenzo Monaco’s The Prophet Isaiah, a gold-ground tondo made in the first decades of the 15th century from the Annunciation alterpiece in the Galleria dell’ Academia, Florence (estimate: $1,500,000-2,500,000) 
 

and two works by Guercino, Vanitas Still Life, the only known still life by the artist (estimate on request) 

 

and Saint John in Wilderness (estimate: $500,000-700,000). 

British Romanticism is represented with 



John Constable’s The Skylark, Dedham (recto);  Study of a Cow Standing in a Stream (verso), a nearly Impressionistic work created late in the artist’s career with a palette knife (estimate: $800,000-1,200,000). 

J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate

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Mystic Seaport Museum
October 5, 2019-February 23, 2020 

J.  M.  W.  Turner, "Venice Quay, Ducal Palace," exhibited 1844, Oil paint on canvas.  Tate: Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 © Tate, London 2018

J. M. W. Turner, "Venice Quay, Ducal Palace," exhibited 1844, Oil paint on canvas. Tate: Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 © Tate, London 2018

     
    Mystic Seaport Museum, in partnership with Tate, London, will host a major monographic exhibition devoted to the watercolors of one Britain’s greatest painters: J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851). Mystic Seaport Museum will be the only North American venue for J.M.W. Turner: Watercolors from Tate, which will be on display October 5, 2019-February 23, 2020, in Mystic, Conn..

    The exhibition – curated by David Blayney Brown, Tate’s Manton Senior Curator of British Art 1790-1850 – will provide an exceptional opportunity to see key works spanning the entire career of the famous artist. A unique collection of about 90 works, the selection will provide a view into the evolution of the artist’s vision and creative process.

    “Few artists have captured the beauty and majesty of the sea as J.M.W. Turner. Anyone who has sought art that accurately represents their personal experience of the sea has had to contend with the sheer genius of his lifelong look at that subject,” said Steve White, president of Mystic Seaport Museum. “This is not an exhibition of the sea, but Turner represents for so many the most sublime representation of that feeling in art, and this remarkable exhibition is a unique opportunity to step into his world and view in this country some of the riches he left his nation upon his death.”
    The exhibition at the Museum – divided into six thematic sections – focuses on the critical role played by watercolors in defining Turner’s deeply personal style.

    The works have been selected from the vast legacy that comprises more than 30,000 works on paper, 300 oil paintings, and 280 sketchbooks, known as the “Turner Bequest,” donated to Great Britain after the artist’s death in 1851 and mostly conserved at Tate Britain. The bequest includes the entire body of works housed in the artist’s personal studio and produced over the years for his “own pleasure,” to cite the words used by the critic John Ruskin.

    While Turner is perhaps better known for his oil paintings, he was a lifelong watercolorist and fundamentally shaped what was understood to be possible within the medium during his lifetime and after. An inveterate traveler, Turner rarely left home without a rolled-up, loose-bound sketchbook, pencils, and a small traveling case of watercolors. These memories of journeys, emotions, and fragments of landscapes seen during his long stays abroad illustrate the development of Turner’s stylistic language focused on experimenting with the expressive potential of light and color.
     J .M. W. Turner, "Aldborough, Suffolk," c.1826, Watercolor and gouache on paper. Tate: Bequeathed by Beresford Rimington Heaton 1940 © Tate, London 2018
    J .M. W. Turner, “Aldborough, Suffolk,” c.1826, Watercolor and gouache on paper. Tate: Bequeathed by Beresford Rimington Heaton 1940 © Tate, London 2018

    The intimate and personal character of the works on display will also provide an opportunity to explore the man himself, gaining an understanding of how the radical developments in Turner’s style anticipated trends of the late 19th century. From his love of seaside towns to his interest in depicting atmospheric English and Alpine landscapes, and his detailed study of domestic interiors and architectural reliefs, the artist devoted himself tirelessly to experimentation, particularly in watercolors, with a compositional and stylistic freedom and an innovative and surprising use of colors that led his peers to believe that Turner “appeared to paint with his eyes and nose as well as his hand.”

    Deemed to be an extraordinary artist ever since his own time, Turner has had a profound and continuing influence on artists that continues to this day.

    J.M.W. Turner, "Venice: San Giorgio Maggiore - Early Morning," 1819, watercolour on paper. Tate: Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 © Tate, London 2018

    J.M.W. Turner, “Venice: San Giorgio Maggiore – Early Morning,” 1819, watercolour on paper. Tate: Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 © Tate, London 2018


    The exhibition will be accompanied by a major new publication edited by Nicholas Bell, the Museum’s senior vice president for Curatorial Affairs. Titled Conversations with Turner: The Watercolors, the book will bring together scholars of Turner’s art from around the world to engage with each other about the force of his paintings and why they continue to serve as a touchstone for Western culture.


    J .M. W. Turner, "Aldborough, Suffolk," c.1826, Watercolor and gouache on paper. Tate: Bequeathed by Beresford Rimington Heaton 1940 © Tate, London 2018




    J. M. W. Turner, "Venice: San Giorgio Maggiore - Early Morning," 1819, Watercolor on paper. Tate: Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 © Tate, London 2018
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