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VAN DYCK

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Alte Pinakothek
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 Image result for Anthonis van Dyck  Self-Portrait, c. 1615

Anthonis van Dyck

Self-Portrait, c. 1615
Oil on oak, 43 x 32.5 cm
© Gemäldegalerie der Akademie der bildenden Künste, Vienna


Anthony van Dyck – celebrated all over Europe for his portraits of the rulers, military commanders, artists, and beauties of his time. He captured his subjects with unparalleled vitality while also clearly denoting their status. Yet Van Dyck’s path to fame was not easy: his artistic beginnings were shaped by the famous Peter Paul Rubens: the equally admired and almost unassailable role model. Early histories testify to an intense engagement with Rubens, but also a tough struggle against his overpowering precedent. It was only in Italy, under the influence of Venetian painters, of Titian and Tintoretto, that Van Dyck found his own style. His portraits are marked by a sensitive observation of personality, which he represented with an equally fine, almost tactile rendering of fabrics, presented against a backdrop of stately décor.

This exhibition presents the results of a research project over several years, exploring in particular the genesis of Van Dyck’s works and his workshop practice. The Alte Pinakothek’s own Van Dyck collection will be enriched by international loans, including drawings and oil sketches, allowing the visitor to follow the artist’s working process.



Anthony van Dyck, The Engraver Karel van Mallery, c. 1630‒1635. Oil on canvas, 99.5 x 84 cm © The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo.

Anthony van Dyck, Two Studies of a Bearded Man, c. 1616/17. Oil on paper, canvas and wood, 40.5 x 53.5 cm © KBC Art Collection Belgium, Museum Snijders&Rockox House, Antwerp.

Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch & Spanish Masters

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Rijksmuseum 
11 October 2019 to 19 January 2020
 


Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch & Spanish Masters will present an outstanding selection of paintings by Dutch and Spanish Masters of the 17th century, including some of the greatest pieces by, amongst others, Rembrandt, Velázquez, Murillo, Hals, Zurbarán and Vermeer. In this exhibition, 60 paintings by Spanish and Dutch masters hang alongside each other in pairs, resulting in fascinating visual dialogues on realism and eternity, religion and beauty. 

This exhibition is the result of a special partnership between the Rijksmuseum and the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid, marking the Year of Rembrandt 2019 and the 200th anniversary of the Prado.

Religion and Realism

During a time of war and political tension, the Dutch and Spanish painting traditions approached closer to each other than it is generally thought. The 17th century has become known as the Golden Age of painting in both the Netherlands and Spain. It was a period of tremendous artistic achievement that saw the emergence of two of the greatest painters in history, Rembrandt and Velázquez, the leading artists of their respective countries. Both masters worked in a climate that included many other painters who enjoyed great reputation, such as Zurbarán and Murillo in Spain, and Vermeer and Frans Hals in the Netherlands.

Although there was no direct contact between the painters from the North and South, they show clear similarities, not only in artistic ambition, but in the impulse towards realism and their illustration of religious themes.

Display in pairs

In this exhibition, paintings of highly-renowned masters will be displayed in pairs, combining two works from each country, to explore, for the first time, the stimulating and often surprising dialogues that inevitably arise between the works. By pairing the paintings together, the exhibition sheds light on their common points, although sometimes the differences might seem stronger than the similarities. Each pair has a story behind, a specific theme that brings the two paintings together. A wide variety of themes will be therefore represented: from concepts such as religion, faith, wealth or love to artistic challenges such as composition, light and shadow.

Partnership

Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch & Spanish Masters has come about through a unique partnership between the Rijksmuseum and Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid.

The exhibition in Madrid titled Velázquez, Rembrandt, Vermeer: Parallel Visions, which ran to 29 September 2019, was different in form and content from this exhibition in Amsterdam. The Rijksmuseum loaned a large number of works to the Prado, including three paintings by Rembrandt.

The Prado has loaned 14 masterpieces to the Rijksmuseum, including six paintings by Velázquez. In addition, the exhibition in the Rijksmuseum presents works from more than 20 other museums and collections from all over the world, including the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain and the Netherlands.





Velázquez, View of the Gardens of the Villa Medici, Rome, c. 1630 or c. 1650. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado
 
 
Velázquez, Self-Portrait, c. 1640. Valencia, Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Carlos

Francisco Ribalta, Christ Embracing St Bernard, c. 1625–1627. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado
Image result for Francisco de Zurbarán, Agnus Dei, 1635–1640. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado
Francisco de Zurbarán, Agnus Dei, 1635–1640. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado
Image result for Francisco de Zurbarán, St Serapion, 1628. Hartford (CT), Wadsworth Atheneum
Francisco de Zurbarán, St Serapion, 1628. Hartford (CT), Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art. The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection Fund

Johannes Vermeer, View of Houses in Delft, known as The Little Street, c. 1658. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, gift of H.W.A. Deterding, London
 
 
Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Baret and Golden Chain, 1654. Kassel, Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister



Rembrandt, Isaac and Rebecca, known as The Jewish Bride, c. 1665. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. on loan from the City of Amsterdam (A. van der Hoop Bequest)

Pieter Saenredam, Interior of the St Odulphuskerk in Assendelft, 1649. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. on loan from the City of Amsterdam (A. van der Hoop Bequest)

Jan Asselijn, The Threatened Swan, c. 1650. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum

Curators and design

The exhibition has been curated by Gregor Weber, the head of the Rijksmuseum’s Fine and Decorative Arts Department, and assistant curator Cèlia Querol Torelló.

The exhibition design is by the French designer Jean Michel Wilmotte.

Book

In the book published to accompany the exhibition, Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch and Spanish Masters, Gregor J.M. Weber explores the underlying themes of the pairs, Dutch author Cees Nooteboom takes the reader on an exploration of his memories of Spain, and Hans den Hartog Jager describes the differences, bust most importantly, the similarities between two of the greatest painters of all time. The graphic design is by Irma Boom.

Title: Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch and Spanish Masters
Dutch and English edition.
Price: €25.00
ISBN: NL 9789462085282 | ENG 9789462085275

James Tissot: Fashion & Faith

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Legion of Honor 
October 12, 2019 - February 9, 2020

Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie, Paris
March 23 through July 19, 2020,

James Tissot (1836–1902) was one of the most celebrated French artists during the 19th century, yet he is less known than many of his contemporaries today. Presenting new scholarship on the artist’s oeuvre, technique, and remarkable life, James Tissot: Fashion & Faith provides a critical reassessment of Tissot through a 21st-century lens. The exhibition, co-organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie, Paris, includes approximately 60 paintings in addition to drawings, prints, photographs, and cloisonné enamels, demonstrating the breadth of the artist’s skills. The presentation at the Legion of Honor is the first major international exhibition on Tissot in two decades and the first ever on the West Coast of the United States.

“The work of James Tissot provides a fascinating lens onto society at the dawn of the modern era. Long recognized as a keen observer of contemporary life and fashion, this exhibition brings new light to his narrative strengths and his skill in portraying the emotional and spiritual undercurrents that exist below surface appearances,” states Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “Continuing the Fine Arts Museums’ tradition of contributing original scholarship around key works in our collection, we are thrilled to introduce the perspective of this enigmatic, prolific artist in the first exhibition of his work to take place on the West Coast.”
Tissot’s works have been highly sought after for US collections, and, as such, James Tissot: Fashion & Faith draws from the rich holdings of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; and numerous private collections, in addition to private and public collections throughout Europe and Canada, including those of Tate, London; the Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie; the Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris; the Musée d’Arts de Nantes; the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; and the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal.

In addition, new findings on Tissot’s materials and painting technique—resulting from an extensive, unprecedented study of Tissot paintings and led by the paintings conservation department at the Fine Arts Museums—are revealed in the exhibition. The study was undertaken in collaboration with the Northwestern University/ Art Institute of Chicago Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts (NU-ACCESS) and the Centre for Research and Restoration of the Museums of France.

Arranged chrono-thematically, James Tissot: Fashion & Faithwill trace the extraordinary turns of the artist’s life, as he consistently defied traditional conventions, both professionally and personally. A Frenchman who started out painting medievalized scenes from history and literature, Tissot maintained a complicated friendship with mentee Edgar Degas, went on to adopt an Anglicized version of his name; Jacques, and spent a decade as an expatriate in London, immersing himself in and chronicling modern society. For a time, he ventured into a love affair with the young divorcée Kathleen Newton, who became his model and muse, but, after her tragic premature death, he returned to Paris and spent long periods of productive retreat at his family estate in the French countryside, nurturing a growing, deep commitment to religion.

Tissot’s career spanned the English Channel, garnering commercial and critical success both in London and Paris. Though invited by Degas to exhibit with the Impressionists, Tissot declined. He turned to social events and balls, painting metropolitan life with great attention to detail, humor, and pathos. Upon close study, even his most ebullient society pictures reveal rich and complex commentary on Belle Époque culture, religion, fashion, and politics.

The exhibition will include many key modern-life works from his time in London and Paris, such as The Ball on Shipboard (1874), London Visitors (ca. 1874), Holyday (also known as The Picnic; 1876), The Prodigal Son in Modern Life suite (1882), and examples from the La Femme à Paris series (1883–1885).

“James Tissot was technically gifted across a variety of media and he experimented with major trends in art, including Aestheticism and Japonisme, yet his work defies classification and traditional labels,” notes Melissa Buron, exhibition curator and Director of the Art Division at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “For the past few years, my colleagues and I have been on the trail of Tissot, re-examining works and uncovering previously unpublished information that provides insight into his career, including his sales notebook (carnet de ventes) and hundreds of photographs. Drawing from our findings, James Tissot: Fashion & Faith provides new perspectives on where and how Tissot should be considered in the 19th-century canon.”
As was popular during the late 19th century, Tissot dabbled in mysticism and attended Spiritualist séances.



His famous mezzotint from the Fine Arts Museums’ collection, The Apparition (1885), depicts the ghost of Kathleen Newton with a spirit guide as they reportedly appeared to Tissot during a séance. This work and the painting on which it is based—long thought to be lost or destroyed until it was rediscovered in the course of researching this project—are both on view in the exhibition.

Though less is known about the last two decades of Tissot’s life, new scholarship has recently shed light on the final 20 years of his career.


 


During that time, he made three trips to the Holy Land and produced hundreds of watercolors to illustrate the Bible. Wildly popular during Tissot’s lifetime, these religious images became known as the “Tissot Bible” and have since influenced filmmakers from D. W. Griffith (Intolerance, 1916) to William Wyler (Ben-Hur, 1959), as well as Steven Spielberg and George Lucas (Raiders of the Lost Ark, 1981). A selection of biblical watercolors have been lent to the exhibition from the Brooklyn Museum and the Jewish Museum, New York.

Tissot also utilized the relatively new medium of photography by painting from photographs and recording many of his works as well as his home, family, and friends in carefully arranged albums. Photographs from the Fine Arts Museums’ collection in the exhibition, along with recently discovered, never-before-published photographs and a sales notebook published for the first time in the exhibition catalogue, provide a window into Tissot’s life and career, rendering him an artist worthy of reexamination in the 21st century.

James Tissot: Fashion & Faith is on view at the Legion of Honor from October 12, 2019, through February 9, 2020. The exhibition is organized by Melissa Buron, Director of the Art Division at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and Paul Perrin and Marine Kisiel, Curators of Paintings at the Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie, Paris, where the exhibition will be on view from March 23 through July 19, 2020, and Cyrille Sciama, Director of Musée des Impressionnismes Giverny.


James Tissot, "The Ball on Shipboard," ca. 1874. Oil on canvas, 33.125 x 51 in. (84.1 x 129.5 cm). Tate Britain Image courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
James Tissot, French, 1836–1902 La Femme à Paris: The Bridesmaid, ca. 1883-1885. Oil on canvas, 50 x 40 in. (147.3 x 101.6 cm). Leeds Museums and Galleries, LEEAG.PA.1897.0015. Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
James Tissot (1836-1902). "le départ de l'enfant prodigue". Huile sur toile. 1863. Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, Petit Palais. Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
James Tissot, French, 1836–1902 "Holyday" (The Picnic) , ca. 1876. Oil on canvas Image: 30 x 39 in. (76.2 x 99.4 cm) Frame: x in. (92.5 x 118.5 cm) Tate Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
James Tissot, French, 1836–1902 Portrait of Mademoiselle L. L..., 1864 Oil on canvas, 48 7/8 × 39 1/8 in. (123.5 × 99 cm) Musée d’Orsay, Paris, Acquired at the Thiébault-Sisson Sale, 1907, RF 2698 Musée d’Orsay,© RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY. Image provided courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

“Painters and Their Wives” by James Tissot

  
 


James Tissot, “October”


 
James Tissot, On the Thames, about 1876, oil on canvas, collection of the Hepworth Wakefield.

 
James Tissot, La Femme à Paris: The Shop Girl, 1883–85, oil on canvas, collection of Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, gift from Corporations’ Subscription Fund, 1968; Bridgman Images.

 


Catalogue
James Tissot: Fashion & Faith is accompanied by a 300-page catalogue, published in collaboration with DelMonico Books / Prestel. Edited by Melissa Buron, the lavishly illustrated volume spans Tissot’s life and career from his early period in Nantes to his later years when he made hundreds of religious illustrations. The catalogue also includes essays that introduce new scholarship and redefine Tissot’s life and career. 

Nice review

Upper East Side galleries NYC - October Art Week

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When 15 Upper East Side galleries open their doors on the evening of October 30 to celebrate October Art Week, art lovers of all stripes will be treated to an eye-dazzling array of fine art and jewelry. Organized to coincide with TEFAF New York FALL, Christie’s Classic Art Week of auctions and selling exhibitions, and the AADLA Fine Art & Antiques Show, these pre-eminent fine art dealers add to the week’s exciting round of activities by curating and hosting special exhibitions—all within walking distance of one another and open to the public from 5 to 9 p.m.

Here are some of the prime highlights that deserve special attention:

Didier Aaron, Inc., showcases The Grotto of Neptune in Tivoli by François-Marius Granet, executed in 1810. With the Grotto of Neptune as his subject, Granet positioned himself below the waterfalls of Tivoli, and used all his talent to transmit the atmosphere of the setting. 32 East 67th Street

Image result for Marsden Hartley’s Landscape, No 29,Vence,

Driscoll Babcock shines a spotlight on Marsden Hartley’s Landscape, No 29,Vence, a unique and key work from the artist’s embrace—from 1925 to 1927—of Aix-en-Provence, the land of Cézanne, which was instrumental in the formulation of his thought, his vision of where he would ultimately have to go with his being and with his art. 22 East 80TH Street, 2nd floor


At the center of the Christopher Bishop Fine Art show is a newly discovered late Il Guercino drawing called Allegory of Vigilance, circa 1662. With interesting symbolism—an allegory of martial and theological vigilance—the figure likely represents Bologna herself, paralleled with the fierceness of the rooster. 1046 Madison Avenue, 2nd floor

Pia Gallo Old Master and Modern Prints and Drawings features Roman Countryside with a Bridge and Figures, circa 1638-41, by the Dutch painter Jan Both, a very talented and prolific Dutch draughtsman, etcher and painter known for his Italianate landscapes. 19 East 74th Street, at Conner Rosenkranz



Hammer Galleries presents Coastline at Antibes, 1888, a work not seen in public since 1970. Part of the Armand Hammer Foundation Collection, this late picture has the effect of timeless idylls, reminiscent of the fêtes champêtres of Fragonard and Watteau. 32 East 67th Street
The Spitzer Renaissance Diamond, Ruby and Enamel Ring from Italy will dazzle the eye at Les Enluminures. The 16th-century ring epitomizes the grandeur of the best Renaissance jewelry and is likely to have been made for a princely patron who wished to be associated with the properties of invincibility, fortitude, and dignity signified by diamonds. 23 East 73rd Street

Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, "Ville d’Avray—Sur les Hauteurs " circa 1865-70
Mark Murray Fine Paintings

At Mark Murray Fine Paintings,Ville d’Avray—Sur les Hauteurs by Jean Baptiste Camille Corot returns to the market after 30 years. Owned by Jean-Baptiste Fauré, the famous operatic baritone and avid Corot collector, the painting depicts two young women conversing with laborers on the hills above Ville d’Avray with a distant view of Paris on the horizon.
159 East 63rd Street

At Ambrose Naumann Fine Art,The Share Reserved for Those Who Are Not in the Cheese by Marcel Delmotte, dated 1959, is a wonderful example of the artist’s interest in the surreal and bizarre.
74 East 79th Street, 1D


Pierre Bonnard "Le Cannet," 1941
Jill Newhouse Gallery, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary, will present Le Cannet, by Pierre Bonnard completed in 1941. An exceptional example of his late landscapes of the south of France where he lived, this painting captures the dense, lush foliage, the rich soil and humidity of the south.  The variety of leaves and tones of green contrast with his calm, muted landscapes of the Seine, north of Paris, which he painted years earlier. 4 East 81st Street
In their joint exhibition, Richard L. Feigen & Co. withW.M. Brady are featuring a painting by Jacques-Emile Blanche, Autoportrait de l’artiste au salon de musique au Manoir du Tot, Offranville (Self-portrait of the Artist in the Salon du Musique at the Manoir du Tot, Offranville), a depiction of a charming and much loved interior, as well as a self-portrait of the artist at work. 16 East 77th Street
The Child Virgin Spinning by Juan Simón Gutiérrez is one of the showstoppers at Robert Simon Fine Art. The earliest and most elaborate depiction of the Child Virgin Spinning theme, this beautiful image is representative of the religious culture in Seville during the Baroque period–at a time of increased devotion to the cult of the Holy Childhood, most often through painting. 22 East 80th Street, 4th floor
Taking center stage at the Tambaran Gallery is a rare Lega Bwami mask from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
5 East 82nd Street
The AADLA Fine Art & Antiques Show features 25 of the top fine and decorative arts specialists and features an eclectic array of paintings, furniture, sculpture, tribal art, Native American art, Asian art, books, and jewelry that span five centuries. Wallace Hall at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, 980 Park Avenue

Image result for Bedroom Face with Blowing Curtain by Tom Wesselmann

At Waterhouse and Dodd, Bedroom Face with Blowing Curtain by Tom Wesselmann re-creates the monumental scale of the advertising billboards from which the artist derived his iconoclastic iconography and is one of the largest and most highly worked examples of his metal cut-outs, and as such is very rare. 15 East 76th Street
Some of the galleries participating in October Art Week, which runs from October 30 through November 5, are open to the public during fair hours, including Saturday & Sunday. For an Art Walk map and each gallery’s hours, visit www.octoberartweek.com

El Greco, Goya, and a Taste for Spain: Highlights from The Bowes Museum

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This fall, the Meadows Museum, SMU, will present 11 paintings produced by some of Spain’s most celebrated artists, drawn from the collection of England’s The Bowes Museum. Curated by Amanda Dotseth, El Greco, Goya, and a Taste for Spain: Highlights from The Bowes Museum will mark the first time that works from that museum will travel to the US.


The son of a British aristocrat, prominent Northeast England landowner, John Bowes (1811–1885) pursued an interest in politics, business, and the arts during his lifetime, becoming a part of English and French high society. Joséphine Coffin-Chevallier (1825–1874) was a French actress, painter, and the daughter of a clockmaker. After their marriage in 1852, John and Joséphine’s shared passion for the arts prompted them to create a public museum in the market town of Barnard Castle, near John’s estate. Using John’s wealth and influence, along with Joséphine’s intuitive eye, the couple began acquiring art in 1860, with a strong focus on underappreciated Spanish works of the time.



Between the years 1862 and1874, John and Joséphine would amass a collection of approximately 15,000 paintings and objects—from silver to tapestries. This also included 102 Spanish paintings, creating within The Bowes Museum one of the most comprehensive collections of Spanish art in the British Isles. Unfortunately, neither John nor Josephine would live to see the completion of their museum, which opened to the public in 1892.



John and Joséphine’s interest in Spanish painting came on the recommendation of one of their art dealers, who identified an important opportunity following the death of Conde Francisco Javier de Quinto y Cortés in 1860. A Spanish politician, de Quinto was also the director of the Museo de la Trinidad in Madrid and an established collector.



After the Conde de Quinto’s death, his collection was auctioned in Paris in 1863; the 11 works presented in this exhibition are all works the Boweses acquired from that collection.



The exhibition will also include selected archival materials that demonstrate John and Josephine’s process of collecting, such as the catalogue from the de Quinto sale with John Bowes’s annotations. 

previous
El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos), (Greek, 1541–1614), The Tears of Saint Peter, 1580s. Oil on canvas. The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham, UK; B.M.642.



Religious themes and iconography are displayed in most of these works. Other works, such as  

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (Spanish, 1746–1828), Interior of a Prison, 1793–94. Oil on tinplate. The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham, UK, B.M. 29.


Francisco de Goya’s (1746–1828) Interior of Prison (1793–94), track the evolution of Spanish art at the end of the 18th century—from depictions of the monarchy or Catholic saints, to a minimalistic focus on literary figures and social injustices. 


Juan deValdés Leal (Spanish, 1622–1690), Saint Eustochium, 1656–57. Oil on canvas. The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham, UK; B.M.10




Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (Spanish, 1746–1828), Portrait of Juan Antonio Meléndez Valdés, 1797. Oil on canvas. The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham, UK, B.M. 26.
 



It is this range in thematic resonance and style—from the vivid and spiritual depictions of El Greco, to the restrained and naturalistic work of Goya—that identify these 11 Spanish works as some of the most important of the Boweses’ collection.

Carreño de Miranda_Belshazzar’s Feast_b-m-19



Juan Carreño de Miranda (1647-1649)
The Bowes Museum
 

“This exhibition is, in a sense, telling two histories: one about artistic production in Spain in the 16th through 18th centuries, and the other about its modern legacy,” said Amanda W. Dotseth, Curator at the Meadows Museum. “In the 19th century, the Conde de Quinto built an important private collection of historic Spanish paintings. John and Joséphine later recognized the collection’s edifying potential by purchasing key works to include in their public museum. In so doing, they ensured Spanish art would have a prominent role among the museum’s diverse collections. The Boweses were ahead of their time for collecting Spanish art a century before the Meadows Museum opened its doors to the public in 1965.”


Degas at the Opera

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Musée d'Orsay
24 September 2019 - 19 January 2020
National Gallery of Art, Washington
1 March to 5 July 2020
Throughout his entire career, from his debut in the 1860s up to his final works after 1900, the Opera formed the focal point of Degas’ output. It was his “own room”. He explored the theatre’s various spaces - auditorium and stage, boxes, foyers, and dance studios - and followed those who frequented them: dancers, singers, orchestral musicians, audience members, and black-attired subscribers lurking in the wings. This closed world presented a microcosm of infinite possibilities allowing all manner of experimentations: multiple points of view, contrasts of lighting, the study of motion and the precision of movement.



This is the first exhibition to consider the Opera as a whole, examining not only Degas’ passionate relationship with the House and his musical tastes, but also the infinite resources of this marvellous ‘toolbox’. The work of a truly great artist offers us the portrait of the Paris Opera in the 19th century.

General curator

Henri Loyrette

Curators

Leila Jarbouai, graphic arts curator at the Musée d'Orsay, Marine Kisiel, curator at the Musée d'Orsay and Kimberly Jones, curator of 19th century French paintings at the National Gallery of Art in Washington


Exhibition organized by the Musée d'Orsay and Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, where it will be presented from 1 March to 5 July 2020 on the occasion of the three hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Paris Opera.

Image result for Degas at the Opera
Edgar Degas
French, 1834 - 1917
Dancers at the Old Opera House
c. 1877
pastel over monotype on laid paper
overall: 21.8 x 17.1 cm (8 9/16 x 6 3/4 in.)
framed: 35.5 x 31.1 x 3.8 cm (14 x 12 1/4 x 1 1/2 in.)
Lemoisne 1946, no. 432


Image result for Degas at the Opera

Rembrandt Masterpieces from the Collection

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Hamburger Kunsthalle
30 Aug 2019 to 05 Jan 2020

The 4th of October 2019 marks the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt's death (1606–1669). On this occasion, the Hamburger Kunsthalle will present a special showcase of one of the major artists of the Dutch Golden Age. On display will be a selection of outstanding works from the museum's Old Masters holdings and Prints and Drawings Collection, for example


Simeon and Hannah in the Temple (1627)

 




These will be supplemented by the painting The Expulsion of Hagar (1612) by Pieter Lastman, who taught Rembrandt for six months in his workshop circa 1625. Exhibited alongside the three paintings will be a selection of around 70 etchings, including landscapes, portraits and works on religious themes.
In total, the Hamburger Kunsthalle's Prints and Drawings Collection houses more than 350 etchings by Rembrandt. All of them came from the Hamburg art dealer and collector Georg Ernst Harzen (1790–1863), who bequeathed his collection to the City of Hamburg in his will for the eventual founding of the Kunsthalle in 1869, 150 years ago. This important collection of international standing makes it possible to show Rembrandt's print oeuvre in all its many facets. Rembrandt: Masterpieces from the Collection will be presented in a cabinet in the Old Masters galleries and in the Harzen Cabinet.

Goya, Fragonard, Tiepolo: The Freedom of Imagination

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Hamburger Kunsthalle
to
With Goya, Fragonard, Tiepolo: The Freedom of Imagination, the Hamburger Kunsthalle is devoting a large-scale show to one of the most momentous chapters in European art history: the 18th century. This heyday and period of great change in European art brought forth such disparate figures as Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746–1828), Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806) and Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770). The exhibition assembles around 100 important paintings and works of graphic art from major national and international museums. It also marks the final event for the anniversary year 2019, which marks 150 years of the Hamburger Kunsthalle.
This ambitious exhibition will make it possible for the first time to directly compare works by Goya, Fragonard, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and his son Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo by placing them in a common context. The artists will namely be pre-sented as precursors and pioneers of modernism whose works already illustrate the upheavals in the mid-18th century that would end up liberating art from the strictures of convention.
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, his son Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (1727–1804), Fragonard and Goya all reflected in their art the ideological, political and social transformations that shaped the 18th century. They developed a more radical formal language, lastingly changing painting by flouting artistic norms and breaking with the canon in unusual and innovative ways. Their loose and free-flowing brushwork can be taken to stand for the freedom of imagination, a freedom they also claimed for themselves in their pictorial language. The exhibition illustrates this developmental process in powerful images, tracing the different creative phases of the selected artists to chronicle the fundamental changes that laid the foundations for modernism in the art centres of Venice, Paris and Madrid.
In general, the virtuoso and versatile bodies of work created by Tiepolo, Fragonard and Goya seem to be characterised by contradictory approaches. At first glance, we see a conventional mode of painting contrasted by bold pictorial inventions, while atmospheric, idealised images meet up with the uncanny and grotesque, and a penchant for theatre and the theatrical shows itself in a play of reflection and illusion. Painting style becomes here something radically personal and contem-plative. These masters hence introduced a stylistic transformation in painting as early as the mid-18th century, setting the course for modernism with their innovative formal language even before the French Revolution of 1789 would finally bring the most drastic upheaval of all.





Curator: Dr. Sandra Pisot

The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits

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National Gallery
7 October 2019 –  26 January 2020

The first-ever exhibition devoted to the portraits of Paul Gauguin will open at the National Gallery in October 2019.

The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits (7 October 2019 – 26 January 2020) will show how the French artist, famous for his paintings of French Polynesia, revolutionised the portrait.

Paul Gauguin, 'Self Portrait as Christ', 1890-1, Musée d'Orsay, Paris (RF 1994-2) © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Orsay) / René-Gabriel Ojéda

Paul Gauguin, 'Self Portrait with Yellow Christ', 1890-1, Musée d'Orsay, Paris (RF 1994-2) © RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay) / René-Gabriel Ojéda
This landmark exhibition of major loans from museums and private collections throughout the world will show how Gauguin used portraits primarily to express himself and his ideas about art.
Although he was fully aware of the Western portrait tradition, Gauguin was rarely interested in exploring his sitters’ social standing, personality, or family background, which had been among the main reasons for making portraits in the past.



Paul Gauguin, Portrait of the Painter Slewinski, 1891. Oil on canvas, 53.5 × 81.5 cm. National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo. Matsukata Collection © National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo.


From sculptures in ceramics and wood to paintings and drawings, an extraordinary range of media for a National Gallery exhibition, visitors will see how Gauguin interpreted a specific sitter or model over time, and often in different guises. A group of self portraits in the exhibition, for example, will show how Gauguin created a range of personifications including his self-image as Jesus Christ. Together with his use of intense colour and his interest in non-Western subject matter, his approach had a far-reaching influence on artists throughout the late 19th and 20th centuries including Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso.

'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits' will show how the artist – inspired by his time spent in Brittany and French Polynesia from the mid-1880s to the end of his life in 1903 – became fascinated by societies that to him seemed close to nature. With their folk tale heritage and spirituality, these communities appeared to him to be far removed from the industrialisation of Paris.

Gauguin’s inspiration to visit French Polynesia was partly drawn from the exotic novels of Pierre Loti (whose naval training included a stay in Tahiti), his photographs of Borobudur sculptures, and Pacific exhibits he had seen at Paris’s Exposition Universelle in 1889. At the same time his own upbringing in Peru allowed him to think of himself as someone who stood outside the European tradition, a ‘savage,’ while the European artistic and literary circles in which he moved also helped shape his views towards Tahiti and the Marquesas.

Gauguin’s life and art have increasingly come under scrutiny, especially the period he spent in South Polynesia. The Gallery aims to explore this controversial subject matter in the exhibition interpretation and accompanying programme and to join conversations now taking place that consider Gauguin's relationships and the impact of colonialism through the prisms of contemporary debate.

Featuring over fifty works, the exhibition includes paintings, sculptures, prints, and drawings many of which have rarely been seen together. These include works from the Musée d’Orsay, Paris, France; The National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, USA; The Art Institute of Chicago, USA.; The National Gallery of Canada; The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo, Japan; and The Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium.

With pictures from his early years as an artist through to his final visit to the South Seas, the first room of the exhibition will be dedicated to self portraits; the most numerous of all Gauguin’s paintings. By making himself his chief subject and by assuming different personalities these images show Gauguin constantly reinventing himself. Included in this room is a rough, grotesque self-portrait head with his thumb in his mouth demonstrating his interest in non-Western iconography and art, and also his radical experimentation in different media ('Anthropomorphic pot', enamelled sandstone, 1889, Musée d'Orsay, Paris).

Room 2 is devoted to the period he spent in Brittany (1884–-91) where, in the remote village of Le Pouldu, he turned his back on his life as a Paris stockbroker to become the leading figure of a new artists’ colony. This room also contains portraits of some of the friends he had made in Paris and members of his family including

 Image result for Mette in Evening Dress', 1884 (The National Museum of Art, Architecture, and Design, Oslo).

'Mette in Evening Dress', 1884 (The National Museum of Art, Architecture, and Design, Oslo).

Paul Gauguin, Be Symbolist: Portrait of Jean Moréas, 1890-1891. Brush and pen and ink, 25.4 × 28.2 cm. Talabardon & Gautier, Paris.  Photo courtesy of the owner

In paintings such as 'Be Symbolist: Portrait of Jean Moréas' (1890–1, Talabardon & Gautier, Paris)

 Image result for 'Young Breton Woman', (1889, Private Collection) Gauguin

and 'Young Breton Woman', (1889, Private Collection) Gauguin started to push the boundaries of portraiture by eschewing its usual conventions of resemblance, flattery, and coherence of time and space.

Gauguin’s fraught relationships with fellow artists are explored in Room 3, particularly two key friends who, in spite of falling out with him, remained as portrait subjects for the rest of his life: Vincent van Gogh and Meijer de Haan (1852–1895). A group of portraits of de Haan shows how he became a symbolic cipher within his work that far outlived their friendship (and the sitter himself), stretching the possibilities for portraiture into something new across different media, such as the wooden bust of de Haan (1889–90, National Gallery of Canada).

Room 4 covers Gauguin’s first Tahitian trip (1891–3) where he sought an escape from ‘civilisation’ yet always with an eye to France, and how he was trying and failing to break into the Parisian art market from a distance. As well as including paintings of Teha’amana a Tahura, this room also tracks his continued experiments in different media, which made direct reference to the indigenous objects now surrounding him, in works such as 'Tehura (Teha’amana)' in wood, (1891–3, Musée d'Orsay, Paris);


Image result for 'Arii Matamoe (The Royal End)', (1892, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).




and 'Arii Matamoe (The Royal End)', (1892, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles).

Featuring his return to Paris and Brittany and his second stay in Tahiti (1893–5), Room 5 will also include works containing distinctly Tahitian imagery. In a portrait made in Brittany, a young Breton woman in prayer is shown wearing a Tahitian missionary dress


Young Christian Girl
('Young Christian Girl', 1894, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts, USA);

while in '
 Paul Gauguin,Self-portrait with a hat,© RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski

Self Portrait with Manao Tupapau', (1893–4, Musée d'Orsay, Paris) can be seen the painting
 Paul Gauguin- Manao tupapau (The Spirit of the Dead Keep Watch).JPG

'Manao Tupapau (The Spirit of the Dead Watching)', the print of which will also be on display (1894, National Gallery of Canada).

Room 6 has a selection of portraits in which Gauguin used symbolic objects, arranged into still lifes, to stand in for absent figures. These surrogate portraits had been part of Gauguin’s repertoire from the 1880s, but this room shows how they took on increasing significance during the isolation of his later years. They include proxy portraits of Van Gogh, his former friend who had been dead for a decade, which depict the blooms from sunflower seeds sent from France (such as'Still Life with ‘Hope’', 1901, Private collection, Milano, Italy); Gauguin may have been the first to understand that sunflowers were Van Gogh’s signature motif and he would be famous for them.

The final room of the exhibition will be devoted to Gauguin’s late portraits. Despite a recurring illness and a decline in the quantity of his output, the portrait remained essential to Gauguin’s art in his final years on the Marquesan Island of Hiva Ooa. His use of portraits to express his role in local politics is reflected in the form of the wooden carved sculpture made for the home he built himself caricaturing the local bishop, as a lecherous devil (Père Paillard, 1902, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC).

His last self portrait, perhaps the simplest and most direct of all, probably made shortly before the end of his life, aged 55, brings the exhibition to a close

 https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fa/Paul_Gauguin_-_Self_Portrait_1903_-_Kunstmuseum_Basel_1943.jpg

(Self Portrait, 1903, Kunstmuseum Basel).

Christopher Riopelle, The Neil Westreich Curator of Post-1800 Paintings at the National Gallery, and co-curator of 'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits', says:
'Gauguin radically expanded the parameters of portraiture. He understood how deeply modern art would be the expression of the individual, idiosyncratic personality, and he realised that the portrait must serve as the portal to rich, contradictory interior worlds. That he found the stylistic vocabulary to evoke this complexity is the mark of his genius.'
Dr Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery, says:
“This is the first time that an exhibition focuses on portraits by Gauguin. Never a conventional portrait painter, his radical, highly personal vision led to the creation of a group of works that are striking, moving and at times disturbing. Through paintings, prints, sculptures and ceramics the exhibition explores how he defined his own persona in his self -portraits and how he fashioned the images of friends, lovers, and associates.”
David Mathers, CEO of Credit Suisse International, says:
“We are delighted to be supporting 'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits' at the National Gallery, London. This exhibition proposes a new approach to Gauguin by looking, for the first time, specifically at portraits inspired by those he knew intimately in the later years of his life. His posthumous fame demonstrates the lasting impression left on modern art by this enigmatic and talented figure. Gauguin’s unique relationship with Vincent van Gogh and his contribution to Symbolism during the turn of the 20th century make this a fascinating foray into his artistic production.”
'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits' is organised by the National Gallery and the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa.

The exhibition is curated by Cornelia Homburg and Christopher Riopelle from an initial concept by Cornelia Homburg. Cornelia Homburg is the guest curator for the National Gallery of Canada, and Christopher Riopelle is the Neil Westreich Curator of Post-1800 Paintings at the National Gallery, London.

Many more images!





The Alana Collection Masterpieces of Italian Painting

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The Musée Jacquemart-André 
Du 13 septembre 2019 au 20 janvier 2020




Antonio Vivarini, (Venice and Veneto, circa1415 - 1476/1484, documented from 1440), San Pietro da Verona che esorcizza il demonio apparso nelle sembianze della Madonna [Saint Peter Martyr exorcising a demon having taken the features of Madonna], circa 1450 Tempera and gold on wood, 53.4 x 36 cm, Alana Collection, Newark, DE, United States, Photo: © Allison Chipak. 
The Musée Jacquemart-André is focusing on the Alana collection, one of the most precious and little-known private collections of Renaissance art in the world, which is currently located in the United States. Echoing its exceptional collection of Italian art, the Musée Jacquemart André is holding an exhibition of more than seventy-five masterpieces by the greatest Italian masters, such as Lorenzo Monaco, Fra Angelico, Uccello, Lippi, Bellini, Carpaccio, Tintoretto, Veronese, Bronzino, and Gentileschi. 


Fra Filippo Lippi, (Florence, circa 1406 - Spoleto, 1469), St John the Evangelist, circa 1432-1434, Tempera and gold on panel, 42.8 x 32 cm, Alana Collection, Newark, DE, United States, Photo: © Allison Chipak.

This exhibition gives visitors a unique chance to admire for the first time pictures, sculptures, and objets d’art that have never been exhibited to the general public. 

The Musée Jacquemart-André was a model for collectors who, in turn, established collections that largely focused on the Italian Renaissance. The collection assembled by Édouard André and Nélie Jacquemart inspired the most prestigious American collectors, who built up considerable collections of works.

In keeping with the original aims of its founders, the Musée Jacquemart-André is presenting for the first time in the world a selection of masterpieces from the Alana collection.

Although art historians are familiar with the collection it remains unknown to the general pubic, because it has never been exhibited.

In the tradition of all the greatest American collections, the Alana collection is the fruit of a passion for art and an intensive selection process, adopted over several decades by Àlvaro Saieh and Ana Guzmán; the combination of the couple’s forenames make up the name of the Alana collection.

These masterpieces have been exceptionally loaned to the Musée Jacquemart-André due to the two collectors’ passion for this period of art. The exhibited works attest to the enduring taste for the Italian Renaissance, considered as a founding stone of Western civilisation. They provide a comprehensive overview of one of the greatest collections of private art, from thirteenth-century painting to Caravaggesque works.
CURATORSHIP
Carlo Falciani, an art historian, exhibition curator, and professor of the History of Modern Art at the Accademia di Belle Arte in Florence.

Pierre Curie, curator at the Musée Jacquemart-André and a specialist in seventeenth century Italian and Spanish painting.
 
  Cette œuvre fourmille de détails, ouvrez l'œil !Giovanni di ser Giovanni Guidi, dit Lo Scheggia, (Florence 1406 – 1486), L’Histoire de Coriolan (devant de cassone), vers 1460-1465, Tempera et or sur bois, 43 x 155 cm, Collection Alana, Newark, DE, États-Unis, Photo : © Allison Chipak#Exposition #Exhibition #Art #Musee #Museum #JacquemartAndre #Paris ...
 

Rome semble bien mystérieuse derrière ces hautes murailles rouges.Giovanni di ser Giovanni Guidi, dit Lo Scheggia, (Florence 1406 – 1486), L’Histoire de Coriolan (devant de cassone), vers 1460-1465, Tempera et or sur bois, 43 x 155 cm, Collection Alana, Newark, DE, États-Unis, Photo : © Allison Chipak#Exposition #Exhibition #Art #Musee #Museum #JacquemartAndre #Paris ...










Lucian Freud: The Self-portraits

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Royal Academy of Arts, London

27 October 2019 — 26 January 2020



See more than 50 paintings, prints and drawings in which this modern master of British art turns his unflinching eye firmly on himself:  Lucian Freud’s self-portraits in one extraordinary exhibition.

One of the most celebrated portraitists of our time, Lucian Freud is also one of very few 20th century artists who portrayed themselves with such consistency.

Spanning nearly seven decades, his self-portraits give a fascinating insight into both his psyche and his development as a painter – from his earliest portrait, painted in 1939, to his final one executed 64 years later. They trace the fascinating evolution from the linear graphic works of his early career to the fleshier, painterly style he became synonymous with.

When seen together, his portraits represent an engrossing study into the process of ageing. Confronting his self-image anew with each work, he depicted himself in youth as the Greek hero Acteon, in sombre reflection later in life and fittingly, for the great painter of 20th century nudes, naked aged 71 but for a pair of unlaced boots.

When asked if he was a good model for himself Freud replied, “No, I don’t accept the information that I get when I look at myself, that’s where the trouble starts”. It is precisely this “trouble” that makes Freud’s self-portraits so intensely compelling – and makes this an unmissable chance to see a life’s work in one show.

Image result for Lucian Freud: The Self-portraits

Image result for Lucian Freud: The Self-portraits

Image result for Lucian Freud: The Self-portraits

More images

Exhibition organised by the Royal Academy of Arts, London in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Raphael and His Circle

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Raphael Eight Apostles, c. 1514 red chalk over stylus underdrawing and traces of leadpoint on laid paper, cut in two pieces and rejoined; laid down sheet: 8.1 x 23.2 cm (3 3/16 x 9 1/8 in.) support: 9.4 x 24.8 cm (3 11/16 x 9 3/4 in.) National Gallery of Art, Washington, Woodner Collection

Raphael (1483–1520) was the first and greatest figure in the modern classical tradition of Western art. In celebration of the 500th anniversary of his death, the National Gallery of Art will present 26 prints and drawings from its own collection of works by Raphael’s contemporaries as well as four drawings by the Renaissance master himself. Raphael and His Circle will convey the complexity, range, and immediate influence of his style as it became the standard for aesthetic excellence in Western art. The exhibition will be on view from February 16 through June 14, 2020.
Raphael 500

Several major exhibitions have been organized to mark the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death. The Gallery will lend several important works to these exhibitions while offering its own homage through this exhibition and the continuing permanent display of its five paintings by Raphael—the largest and most important group outside of Europe. The Galleria Nazionale delle Marche inaugurates the year’s tribute with an exhibition in his hometown of Urbino (Raphael and His Friends of Urbino, October 3, 2019–January 19, 2020). The celebration continues with exhibitions at the Scuderie del Quirinale, Rome, and the National Gallery, London (The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Raphael, October 3, 2020–January 24, 2021). At the Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Milan, a newly conserved preparatory cartoon (c. 1508) for the Vatican fresco School of Athens (1509) is on view. The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, will be highlighting their set of seven full-scale cartoons by Raphael for tapestries.
Exhibition Organization
The exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

Exhibition Curator
The exhibition is curated by Jonathan Bober, Andrew W. Mellon Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings, National Gallery of Art.About the Exhibition.

About the Exhibition

Raphael and His Circle
features 26 prints and drawings by Raphael’s collaborators and followers, and by printmakers who were inspired by him. The exhibition includes four drawings by Raphael from the Gallery’s collection: the sheet from which the design of his painting Saint George and the Dragon (c. 1506, National Gallery of Art, Washington) was transferred; the cartoon for the so-called Belle Jardinière (La Vierge à l'Enfant avec le petit saint Jean-Baptiste, 1507 or 1508, Musée du Louvre, Paris); a detailed representation of the prophets Hosea and Jonah; and a well-known study for part of the frescoes in the church of Santa Maria della Pace in Rome. Each of these drawings is an advanced preparatory study for an important extant work. Together they represent Raphael’s immediate influence and artistic development.

Nine drawings by his closest collaborators and followers suggest the collective nature of Raphael’s later activity and the origins of mannerism. Four pen-and-ink drawings by Giulio Romano (1499–1546) include a dramatic rendering of Saint Michael (c. 1530). Two chalk drawings by Polidoro da Caravaggio (c. 1499–probably 1543) feature a fleeing barbarian from the early 1520s and A Deathbed Scene (c. 1521/1522) with a drawing of a seated woman on the reverse in red chalk. Also on view are two pen-and-ink drawings by Perino del Vaga (1501–1547), including the remarkable Alexander Consecrating the Altars for the Twelve Olympian Gods (1545/1547) and a sheet of figure studies.

Raphael was the first artist to exploit the possibilities of printmaking to disseminate his inventions, enhance his reputation, and generate income. This practice caused his art to become a universal European language. Raphael’s prints demonstrated to an international audience his magisterial command of complex, multifigure compositions and his modern style rooted in the study of ancient art.

This exhibition includes 10 engravings by one of the earliest interpreters of his designs,

Marcantonio Raimondi (c. 1480–c. 1534), whose engravings of Parnassus and The Holy Family,



as well as The Massacre of the Innocents (c. 1511) show Raphael’s influence.

Around 1510 Raphael began collaborating with Marcantonio on several engravings that successfully circulated Raphael’s works beyond the Roman churches and palaces in which they were housed.


Raimondi’s followers, Agostino dei Musi (c. 1490–1536) and Marco Dente (c. 1493–1527), also directly reference works by Raphael in their engravings,

Image result for Musi’s The Battle with the Cutlass.

including Musi’s The Battle with the Cutlass.



Also on view is Ugo da Carpi’s (c. 1480–1532) David Slaying Goliath, based on a design by Raphael in the Vatican, which is the only chiaroscuro woodcut in the exhibition.
Raphael (1483–1520)

Raffaelo di Giovanni Santi, known as Raphael, was a younger contemporary of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, all of whom epitomize the High Renaissance in Italy. It is thought that Raphael’s early training was with his father, who was a painter at the court of Urbino. He joined the workshop of Pietro Perugino sometime after the death of his father, when Raphael was 11 years old.

Late in 1504, Raphael moved to Florence, drawn by Leonardo’s softly shadowed forms, natural figure groupings, and simplified settings. In 1508 the pope summoned Raphael to Rome, where he was influenced by the idealized classical art of the city's ancient past. He also responded to the more energetic and physical style of Michelangelo, whose works he had already begun to study in Florence. Raphael remained in Rome for the last 12 years of his life, preparing monumental frescoes for the papal chambers, designing tapestries for the Sistine Chapel, and painting mythological scenes. He was also the city’s leading portraitist, creating penetrating images that engage viewer and sitter with a new intensity for the time. When he died at age 37, the pope ordered that Raphael, who had been keeper of antiquities, be buried in the Pantheon.

Truly Bright and Memorable: Jan de Beer’s Renaissance Altarpieces

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25 October 2019 – 19 January 2020


Famed in his lifetime and for several generations after his death for his stylish and elegant paintings, Antwerp’s Jan de Beer (c. 1475 – 1527/28) created dazzling altarpieces that appealed to churches at home and abroad, copyists, patrons and collectors.

However, his star subsequently waned until the early 20th century, when experts and connoisseurs began to re-evaluate his significance. De Beer’s known oeuvre now comprises about 40 works, principally devotional paintings and triptychs, but also drawings and a stained-glass window.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e1/Jan_de_Beer_Annunciation2.jpg

Title
Annunciation
Datebetween circa 1510 and circa 1530
Mediumoil on panel
DimensionsHeight: 90 cm (35.4 ″); Width: 130 cm (51.1 ″)

This exhibition – the latest in the Barber’s ‘Masterpiece in Focus’ series – focuses on

 

the Barber’s own double-sided altarpiece featuring The Nativity 

 

and the Apocryphal tale of Joseph and the Suitors, and brings together for the first time all his paintings and drawings from public and private collections in Britain.

Jan de Beer, Adoration of the Magi, c1515 © Private collection:



Image result for Jan Debeer Barber’s own double-sided altarpiece featuring The Nativity
Image credit: Jan de Beer and assistant, ‘Adoration of the Magi’, c. 1515 © Private collection

Art History News - September-October

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Click on title for complete article and illuustrations

 

The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 13 minutes ago
*National Gallery* *7 October 2019 – 26 January 2020* The first-ever exhibition devoted to the portraits of Paul Gauguin will open at the National Gallery in October 2019. The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Gauguin Portraits (7 October 2019 – 26 January 2020) will show how the French artist, famous for his paintings of French Polynesia, revolutionised the portrait. [image: Paul Gauguin, 'Self Portrait as Christ', 1890-1, Musée d'Orsay, Paris (RF 1994-2) © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Orsay) / René-Gabriel Ojéda] Paul Gauguin, 'Self Portrait with Yellow Christ', 1890-1, Musée d'Orsay, Par... more »

Goya, Fragonard, Tiepolo: The Freedom of Imagination

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 hours ago
*Hamburger Kunsthalle* *13 Dec 2019 to 13 April 2020* With Goya, Fragonard, Tiepolo: The Freedom of Imagination, the Hamburger Kunsthalle is devoting a large-scale show to one of the most momentous chapters in European art history: the 18th century. This heyday and period of great change in European art brought forth such disparate figures as Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746–1828), Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806) and Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770). The exhibition assembles around 100 important paintings and works of graphic art from major national and internationa... more »

Rembrandt Masterpieces from the Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 hours ago
*Hamburger Kunsthalle* *30 Aug 2019 to 05 Jan 2020 * The 4th of October 2019 marks the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt's death (1606–1669). On this occasion, the Hamburger Kunsthalle will present a special showcase of one of the major artists of the Dutch Golden Age. On display will be a selection of outstanding works from the museum's Old Masters holdings and Prints and Drawings Collection, for example Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (1606–1669)Simeon und Hanna im Tempel, 1627Öl auf Eichenholz, 55,5 x 44 cm © Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Elke Walford Simeon and Hannah in the Tem... more »

Degas at the Opera

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 hours ago
*Musée d'Orsay* *24 September 2019 - 19 January 2020* *National Gallery of Art, Washington* *1 March to 5 July 2020 * Throughout his entire career, from his debut in the 1860s up to his final works after 1900, the Opera formed the focal point of Degas’ output. It was his “own room”. He explored the theatre’s various spaces - auditorium and stage, boxes, foyers, and dance studios - and followed those who frequented them: dancers, singers, orchestral musicians, audience members, and black-attired subscribers lurking in the wings. This closed world presented a microcosm of infinite poss... more »

El Greco, Goya, and a Taste for Spain: Highlights from The Bowes Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 hours ago
This fall, the Meadows Museum, SMU, will present 11 paintings produced by some of Spain’s most celebrated artists, drawn from the collection of England’s The Bowes Museum. Curated by Amanda Dotseth, *El Greco, Goya, and a Taste for Spain: Highlights from The Bowes Museum* will mark the first time that works from that museum will travel to the US. The son of a British aristocrat, prominent Northeast England landowner, John Bowes (1811–1885) pursued an interest in politics, business, and the arts during his lifetime, becoming a part of English and French high society. Joséphine Cof... more »

Upper East Side galleries NYC - October Art Week

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 hours ago
When 15 Upper East Side galleries open their doors on the evening of October 30 to celebrate *October Art Week*, art lovers of all stripes will be treated to an eye-dazzling array of fine art and jewelry. Organized to coincide with TEFAF New York FALL, Christie’s Classic Art Week of auctions and selling exhibitions, and the AADLA Fine Art & Antiques Show, these pre-eminent fine art dealers add to the week’s exciting round of activities by curating and hosting special exhibitions—all within walking distance of one another and open to the public from 5 to 9 p.m. Here are some of the ... more »

James Tissot: Fashion & Faith

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 hours ago
*Legion of Honor * *October 12, 2019 - February 9, 2020* *Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie, Paris* *March 23 through July 19, 2020,* James Tissot (1836–1902) was one of the most celebrated French artists during the 19th century, yet he is less known than many of his contemporaries today. Presenting new scholarship on the artist’s oeuvre, technique, and remarkable life, *James Tissot: Fashion & Faith* provides a critical reassessment of Tissot through a 21st-century lens. The exhibition, co-organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie... more »

Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch & Spanish Masters

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 23 hours ago
*Rijksmuseum * *11 October 2019 to 19 January 2020* Rembrandt-Velázquez. Dutch & Spanish Masters will present an outstanding selection of paintings by Dutch and Spanish Masters of the 17th century, including some of the greatest pieces by, amongst others, Rembrandt, Velázquez, Murillo, Hals, Zurbarán and Vermeer. In this exhibition, 60 paintings by Spanish and Dutch masters hang alongside each other in pairs, resulting in fascinating visual dialogues on realism and eternity, religion and beauty. This exhibition is the result of a special partnership between the Rijksmuseum an... more »

VAN DYCK

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 day ago
* Alte Pinakothek 25.10.2019 ‐ 02.02.2020 * [image: Image result for Anthonis van Dyck Self-Portrait, c. 1615]Anthonis van Dyck Self-Portrait, c. 1615 Oil on oak, 43 x 32.5 cm © Gemäldegalerie der Akademie der bildenden Künste, Vienna Anthony van Dyck – celebrated all over Europe for his portraits of the rulers, military commanders, artists, and beauties of his time. He captured his subjects with unparalleled vitality while also clearly denoting their status. Yet Van Dyck’s path to fame was not easy: his artistic beginnings were shaped by the famous Peter Paul Rubens: the e... more »

Phillips Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art on 14 November

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 day ago
On 14 November, Phillips will offer Norman Rockwell’s *Before the Shot*, marking the first time that a work by the iconic American illustrator will appear in an Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, as well as the first time that one of his paintings will be offered at Phillips. The work has never before been sold publicly, having remained in just two families’ collections since it was painted, the first of which was Rockwell’s own doctor and the model for the painting. [image: Image result for Norman Rockwell’s Before the Shot,] Elizabeth Goldberg, Senior Internat... more »

Modigliani – Picasso. The Primitivist Revolution

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 days ago
*ALBERTINA Museum* *18 September 2020 until 10 January2021 * is honoring Amedeo Modigliani with a comprehensive presentation to mark the 100th anniversary of his death. Modigliani (*1884 in Livorno; † 1920 in Paris), who was active as a painter, draftsman, and sculptor, numbers among the early 20th century’s most important artists. Amedeo Modigliani went to Paris in 1906, a time at which Picasso—having taken an interest in Iberian and African sculpture—was beginning to work on *Les Demoiselles* *d’Avignon.* This work was to be quite directly influential: it made Picasso famous, pa... more »

Peasants in Pastel: Millet and the Pastel Revival

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 days ago
*J. Paul Getty Museum* *October 29, 2019 through May 10, 2020 * . *“Je suis paysan paysan*” (I am a peasant’s peasant), the artist Jean-François Millet once declared. Born into a farming family in northern France, he astonished the Parisian art world with the frank portrayal of agricultural labor in oil paintings he exhibited at the semi-annual state-sponsored Salon during the mid-nineteenth century. Shepherdess and Her Flock by Jean-François Millet (French, 1814 - 1875) about 1864–1865. Black chalk and pastel, 36.4 × 47.5 cm (14 5/16 × 18 11/16 in.)*The J. Paul Getty Museum* To h... more »

Beloved by Picasso – The Power of the Model.

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 days ago
*ARKEN* *12 October 2019 to 23 February 2020* [image: BELOVED BY PICASSO] Pablo Picasso, Nu couché, 1932 (MP142). Oil on canvas. Musée national Picasso-Paris © Succession Picasso/ VISDA 2019 ARKEN is showing a wide and dazzling array of Pablo Picasso’s (1881-1973) best works in the exhibition *Beloved by Picasso – The Power* *of the Model*. The exhibition has been created in close collaboration with Musée national Picasso-Paris. *Beloved by Picasso* presents a total of 51 works in painting, sculpture, drawing and prints – including many masterpieces from the museum’s collection. Th... more »

Sotheby’s Contemporary Art Evening Auction on 14 November 2019

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 days ago
This November, Sotheby’s Contemporary Art Evening Auction will comprise a particularly robust offering of impeccable works by American artists, including Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, Wayne Thiebaud, and Clyfford Still. Anchored by a strong grouping of Abstract Expressionist works, this November’s sale will also encompass significant examples of distinct artistic movements from the latter half of the 20th century through today. [image: Image result for Mark Rothko, Blue Over Red, 1953. Estimate $25,000,000 – 35,000,000.] Mark Rothko, *Blue Over Red*, 1953. Estimate $25,000,000 –... more »

Christie’s Evening Sale of Post-War and Contemporary Art November 13

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 days ago
David Hockney, *Sur la Terrasse,* 1971 (Estimate: $25-45 million). Now on view to the public at Christie’s Los Angeles for the first time since 1973. © Christie's Images Ltd 2019. On November 13, Christie’s will offer David Hockney’s *Sur la Terrasse, *1971 ($25-45 million) as a central highlight of its Evening Sale of Post-War and Contemporary Art. A glowing sun-drenched vision rendered on a spectacular life-sized scale, Sur la Terrasse stands among David Hockney’s most poignant works. Begun in March 1971, and completed that summer, it was painted during the decline of his relat... more »

Van Gogh and His Inspirations

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 days ago
*The Columbia Museum of Art *has debuted the major exhibition *Van Gogh and His Inspirations*, on view *now through Sunday, January 12, 2020*. Organized by the CMA and presented by the Blanchard Family, *Van Gogh and His Inspirations* is an original exhibition that brings the work of one of the most beloved artists in the world to Columbia, South Carolina, alongside a variety of handpicked paintings and drawings that shaped his vision. “Van Gogh and His Inspirations represents an exhilarating high-water mark for exhibitions at the Columbia Museum of Art,” says Executive Director D... more »

Cézanne, Matisse, Hodler. The Hahnloser Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 6 days ago
*ALBERTINA Museum* *22 February until 24 May 2020* The Hahnloser Collection came together between 1905 and 1936, initially on the basis of close and friendly exchange between the collecting couple of Arthur and Hedy Hahnloser-Bühler and artist-friends including Pierre Bonnard, Ferdinand Hodler, Henri Matisse, and Félix Vallotton. Later on, the collection also came to include works by their predecessors including Cézanne, Renoir, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, and others. The ALBERTINA Museum’s ca. 120-work exhibition presents an overview of this internationally unique collection of m... more »

Monet to Picasso: A Very Private Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston* *October 20, 2019–January 12, 2020* *Monet to Picasso: A Very Private Collection* features paintings by the pivotal artists who sparked the major art movements of the late-19th through mid-20th century, including Mary Cassatt, Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, and Pablo Picasso. [image: Image result for Monet to Picasso: A Very Private Collection] Claude Monet, *Valley of the Creuse, Afternoon Sunlight (Vallée de la Creuse, soleil d’après-midi),* 1889, oil on canvas, private collection. Paul Cézanne, *The Turning Road... more »

Berthe Morisot: Impressionist Original

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston* * October 20, 2019–January 12, 2020* . *• Berthe Morisot: Impressionist Original* highlights Berthe Morisot’s approach to portraiture, her focus on the life of women in 19th-century Paris, and her role as one of the founding members of the Impressionist group. Berthe Morisot, *At the Ball (Au bal),* 1876, oil on canvas, Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris, gift of Victorine Donop de Monchy. Berthe Morisot, *Woman with a Fan (Femme à l’éventail)*, 1876, oil on canvas, private collection Berthe Morisot, *Young Woman (Jeune femme),* 1871, oil on c... more »

Hindman’s American and European Art sale October 17

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
xx Hindman’s American and European Art sale was conducted on October 17 at 10am CST at the Chicago sale room (1338 W. Lake St.). Notable highlights include Henry Moret, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Kees Van Dongen, Jean Dufy, Jasper Francis Cropsey, Childe Hassam, Fern Isabel Coppedge and Thomas Hart Benton. The catalog for the October 17 auction is available here. Also for sale was a wonderful example of Thomas Hart Benton’s commissioned work, Whiskey Barrels (or Whiskey Barrels Going into the Rackhouse to Age) at an estimated $600,000 - $800,000. [image: Image r... more »

Munch Chagall Picasso. The Batliner Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
The Albertina houses one of Europe’s most important compilations of Modernist art in the form of the Batliner Collection. Its permanent display starts off with such artists of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism as Degas, Cézanne, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Gauguin. Further highlights include examples of German Expressionism, with the groups of *Brücke* and *Der Blaue Reiter, *(including paintings by Kirchner, Kandinsky, and Nolde) and the art of New Objectivity, with works by Wacker, Sedlacek, and Hofer. An in-depth focus on Austrian art comprises works by Kokoschka and paintings by E... more »

Old Master Through Modern Prints at Swann Galleries on Tuesday, October 29

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
*Rembrandt Etchings from the John Villarino Collection * *Feature in Old Master Through Modern Prints at Swann* *Old Master Through Modern Prints* at *Swann Galleries* on *Tuesday, October 29* will offer an important selection of prints by Rembrandt van Rijn. Also on offer are works from European and American virtuosos. *Rembrandt *etchings from the John Villarino Collection form the cornerstone of the Old Master offering. In 1995 Villarino turned his collecting tastes toward Rembrandt as he recognized the profound influence the Dutch artist had on the works of later artists. Villa... more »

Old Master Drawings at Swann November 5

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
In addition to *Swann Galleries*’s biannual sale of Old Master Through Modern Prints, the house will offer a curated sale of *Old Master Drawings* on *November 5*. The auction traces the development of draftsmanship over several centuries from late-Gothic, early-Renaissance works of the fifteenth century, to Baroque and Rococo drawings of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The Italian Renaissance is represented by early-sixteenth-century studies of eagles ($4,000-6,000); *Christ’s Charge to Peter*from the circle of Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, based on one o... more »

Flesh and Blood: Italian Masterpieces from the Capodimonte Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
Seattle Art MuseumOCT 17 2019 – JAN 26 2020Kimbell Art Museum *1 March – 14 June 2020* Imposing or intimate, violent or tender, extravagant or humble, a selection of 40 masterpieces from the Capodimonte Museum in Naples, one the most important fine arts collections in Europe, will constitute an exceptional journey through the major achievements of Italian Renaissance. It will feature masterpieces by Titian, Raphael, Parmigiano, El Greco, Annibale Carracci, Artemisia Gentileschi, Guido Reni, Ribera and Luca Giordano. *Flesh and Blood: Italian Masterpieces from the Capodimonte Museum... more »

An artist-nun's masterwork at the Santa Maria Novella Museum in Florence some 450 years after it was created

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 week ago
Detail, Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588) The Last Supper*Advancing Women Artists*Conservator Rossella Lari with Nelli's painting during restoration.*Advancing Women Artists* *Revealed this week after a multiyear restoration, an artist-nun's masterwork is now on public view at the Santa Maria Novella Museum in Florence some 450 years after it was created*. The only known *Last Supper* by a female artist in the modern age, Plautilla Nelli’s 21-foot canvas is one of the largest works by an early woman artist in the world—and one of the most challenging compositionally. Though Nelli lived in... more »

The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Raphael

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*National Gallery* *3 October 2020 – 24 January 2021 * A painter, draughtsman, architect, archaeologist, and poet who captured in his art the human and the divine, love, friendship, learning, and power, who gave us quintessential images of community and civilisation: Raphael’s life was short, his work prolific, and his legacy immortal. In the year that marks the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death, the National Gallery will present one of the first-ever exhibitions to explore the complete career of this giant of the Italian Renaissance. In his brief career, spanning just two decade... more »

Fantasy and Reality: The World According to Félix Buhot

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
*Palmer Museum of Art* *September 29–December 15, 2019 * Félix Buhot was one of the most original printmakers in France during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. This exhibition, selected entirely from a private collection, examines the full range of Buhot’s graphic effort, from his highly imaginative intaglios to the more somber lithographs, a medium to which he turned near the end of his career. Also included are several drawings and paintings related to the prints. Organized by the Palmer Museum of Art. Félix Buhot, Convoi funèbre au Boulevard de Clichy (Funeral Process... more »

Sotheby's Impressionist & Modern Art November 12

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Claude Monet’s *Charing Cross Bridge* from 1903 (estimate $20/30 million) was announced at Sotheby’s. The collection—which also features works by Pierre Bonnard, Lyonel Feininger, Jacques Lipchitz, Emil Nolde and Edgar Degas —was assembled primarily in the 1970s and ‘80s by Andrea Klepetar-Fallek and her then-husband, Fred Fallek. According to Sotheby’s, “her extraordinary life story is one of incomparable resilience, independence and optimism – including her flight from Nazi-occupied Vienna, escape from an Italian concentration camp, and departure from Peronist Argentina.” *Ch... more »

Picasso. Magic paintings

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Musée national Picasso-Paris1 October 2019-23 February 2020 Curators: Marilyn McCully, Michael Raeburn and Emilie Bouvard Many of the paintings that Picasso did over a period of some four years (summer 1926-spring 1930) form a cohesive group, which Christian Zervos would later (1938) as “Tableaux magiques”. With these works principally figure paintings – Picasso opened a new chapter in his oeuvre, probing a deep emotional dimension, which anticipates the power of Guernica a decade later. This was accompanied by formal developments that are as radical as anything he had done befo... more »

Swann Galleries American Prints & Drawings

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 2 weeks ago
Swann Galleries opened the fall season on Thursday, September 19 with a marathon sale of 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings earning more than $2M. Works by Martin Lewis proved popular with collectors. Of the 16 works offered nearly all found buyers, and five works reached among the top 20 overall. Highlights included Martin Lewis, *Men Working on Elevated Train Tracks, Looking at Airplane in Sk*y, circa 1919—the rare early etching made its auction debut at $42,500; [image: Image result for Martin Lewis, Glow of the City] Martin Lewis,* Glow of the City,* drypoint, 1929, brou... more »

More Christie's Sales Oct 28-29

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*European Art Part II* | *October 28 at 2pm* The European Art Part II sale includes a strong selection of paintings and sculptures which reflect the extraordinary diversity of this pivotal period in art history. Leading the sale are beautiful examples of the artists’ styles by *Eugen von Blaas* and *Louis Marie de Schryver*. Additional highlights include *Émile Munier*’s *Un Sauvetage*, a selection of three works by Orientalist painter *Frederick Arthur Bridgman* (American 1847-1928), and *Edmund Blair Leighton*’s *My Lady Passeth By*. The sale also features works by the Barbizon pai... more »

Christie's European Art Part I | October 28 at 10am

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
[image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/59/The_Soul_of_the_Rose_-_Waterhouse.jpg] JOHN WILLIAM WATERHOUSE (1849–1917), *The Soul of the Rose*, 1908, Estimate: $3,000,000–5,000,000, This carefully curated sale offers 24 lots of masterpiece-level quality from the most well-known artists of 19th century Europe. Highlights include *The Soul of the Rose*, a magnificent and rare work by *John William Waterhouse*, and *Dante Gabriel Rossetti*’s depiction of his lover Jane Morris as *Prosperpine,* a stunning example of the pinnacle of the Pre-Raphaelite movement. *Franz... more »

Sotheby's Modernités Sale on 16 October

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
On 16 October 2019 , the same week as the International Contemporary Art Fair (FIAC), the third Modernités sale is the promise of a first - class evening event: a select number of outstanding works of modern and contemporary art reflect ing the greatest moments in 20 th - century art. Auction highlights include a superb Transparence by Picabia, a major Cirque from Chagall, two Fontana paintings and a large Dubuffet shaped canvas works . Also being sold are works by Magritte, Fernand Léger, Pierre Soulages and Hans Hartung, along with bronzes from Julio Gonzalez, Hans Arp, Germ... more »

Sotheby’s Evening and Day Sales of Impressionist & Modern Art in New York, on 12 and 13 November

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
Marc Chagall, Fleurs de St. Jean-Cap-Ferrat. Estimate $2.5/3.5 million. Courtesy Sotheby's. 1 Sotheby’s will present Everything you can imagine is real: Property from an Important Private European Collection as a highlight of their marquee Impressionist & Modern Art auctions this November in New York. This distinguished group of 35 works represents one of the greatest and most renowned collections of a generation, offering a richly varied selection that includes paintings, works on paper and sculpture by icons of the late-19th and 20th centuries, such as Alberto Giacometti, ... more »

Inspiration Matisse

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Kunsthalle Mannheim* *September 27, 2019 – January 19, 2020* Inspiration Matisse: This special exhibition is to display works by the many leading artists who built bridges between France and Germany Many French and German artists followed in the footsteps of Henri Matisse (1869–1954) in the early period of modern art. A very popular painter, Matisse is renowned for innovations that made him a forerunner of abstract art. He was called “the artist’s artist”. With works characterized by vivid strokes and intense colors that broke with a deadlocked painting tradition, he inspired the ... more »

The figurative paintings of Piet Mondrian

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Musée Marmottan Monet, opening in September 2019* A member of the De Stijl group, Piet Mondrian is best known for his early, pared-down abstract paintings and his squares of red, yellow and blue. In this unique exhibition at the Musée Marmottan Monet, opening in September 2019, the emphasis is on his figurative work. Some sixty outstanding paintings that Mondrian himself chose in about 1920 for his biggest collector, Salomon B. Slijper, are being presented in this exclusive Parisian show which reveals a little-known facet of this artist’s career. Landscapes, portraits and flower ... more »

The Alana Collection Masterpieces of Italian Painting

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Musée Jacquemart-André* *From 13 September 2019 to 20 January 2020* In autumn 2019, the Musée Jacquemart-André will be focusing on the Alana Collection, one of the most precious and little-known private collections of Renaissance art in the world, which is currently located in the United States. Echoing its exceptional collection of Italian art, the Musée Jacquemart-André will hold an exhibition of more than seventy-five masterpieces by the greatest Italian masters, such as Lorenzo Monaco, Fra Angelico, Uccello, Lippi, Bellini, Carpaccio, Tintoretto, Veronese, Bronzino, and Gentile... more »

From the Douanier Rousseau to Séraphine The Great Naïve Masters

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Musée Maillol * *From 11 September 2019 to 19 January 2020* *In the autumn, the Musée Maillol is holding an exhibition of more than a hundred works from the fascinating, dreamy, unique, and rich world of the ‘Naïve’ artists. Called ‘modern primitives’ by one of their ardent supporters, the collector and art critic Wilhelm Uhde (1874–1947), these artists renewed painting in their own way, independently from the avantgarde artists and without academicism. Brought together for the first time in Paris, their brightly coloured works shed light on an inter-war period in the history of ... more »

Christie’s Old Masters sales - October 29

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Old Masters: Property from a Private Collection *| *October 29 at 10am * A single owner collection of 40 remarkable Dutch and Flemish paintings, this sale offers a broad survey of the artistic production of the 17th-century Lowlands. Marked by their exceptional quality and condition, this group presents striking examples by many of the leading artists in the period, including *David Teniers II*, *Jan Steen*, *Hendrick Goltzius* and *Jan Lievens*. Every genre is represented, with particular emphasis on landscape paintings by such luminaries as *Jan van Goyen*, *Simon de Vlieger* and... more »

Phillips Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art - Miró, Picasso, Giacometti, and Moore

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
Phillips’ New York Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art will feature an exceptional selection of modern artworks, which will be exhibited internationally prior to the November auction. Joan Miró’s *Paysan catalan inquiet par le passage d’un vol d’oiseau*, Pablo Picasso’s *Femme assise dans un fauteuil*, Alberto Giacometti’s *Portrait of G. David Thompson*, and Henry Moore’s *Family Group* will embark on a tour to London and Los Angeles, offering collectors around the globe a rare opportunity to see these extraordinary works alongside other highlights from the sale. H... more »

Concord Collects exhibits twenty remarkable works of art from four Concord private collections

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Concord Collects* exhibits twenty remarkable works of art from four Concord private collections that will be displayed together for the first time when the Concord Museum in Massachusetts reopens its updated galleries on October 11, 2019. David Wood, Curator, Concord Museum, explained, “Since these museum-quality paintings and sculptures are all privately owned, they are really being seen by the public for the first time.” *Concord Collects,* which will be showcased in the Wallace Kane Gallery, provides viewers a unique opportunity to engage with these extraordinary pieces in com... more »

Travels on Paper

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Clark Art Institute* *November 16, 2019 through February 9, 2020* From John La Farge's alluring South Seas watercolors to Roger Fenton's 'Orientalist' photographs staged in his London studio, artists fueled travel trends and wanderlust with works on paper long before social media gave rise to our armchair escapes and dream trip influencers. JOHN LA FARGE AMERICAN, 1835–1910. HUT IN MOONLIGHT, IVA, SAVAII, OCT., 1890. Watercolor, gouache and gum arabic on wove paper, Overall: 12 13/16 x 16 9/16 in. (32.5 x 42.1 cm). Gift of L. Bancel La Farge, 1966 1966.5 *The Clark Art Institute... more »

Peggy Guggenheim and London

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*ORDOVAS GALLERY, London* *24 September until 14 December 2019* Yves Tanguy, En le temps menaçant (Time of Foreboding), 1929 © ARS, NY and DACS, London Peggy Guggenheim needs little introduction for her contributions to twentieth-century art. Yet her formative years as a gallerist and her London gallery, Guggenheim Jeune, that she opened at the age of forty, have been relatively overlooked. Situated in a former pawnbroker’s shop at 30 Cork Street, Guggenheim Jeune operated for eighteen months between January 1938 and June 1939. While its lifespan may have been brief its influe... more »

Reconstructing Cezanne: Sequence and Process in Paul Cezanne’s Works on Paper

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
* Luxembourg & Dayan, London* *2 October - 7 December 2019 * Luxembourg & Dayan, London, is pleased to announce *Reconstructing Cezanne: Sequence and Process in Paul Cezanne’s Works on Paper*, opening 2 October 2019. The exhibition brings to light new, ground-breaking research into the work of one of Modernism’s greatest masters, based on close examination of the DNA makeup that constitutes the papers he used for his watercolours and drawings. *Reconstructing Cezanne *is organised in collaboration with scholar and curator Fabienne Ruppen from the University of Zurich. Ruppen’s inn... more »

Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 3 weeks ago
*Denver Art Museum * *Oct. 20, 2019 through Feb. 2, 2020* *Museum Barberini in the spring of 2020* The Denver Art Museum (DAM) will be home to the most comprehensive U.S. exhibition of Monet paintings in more than two decades when it presents *Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature *, in the fall of 2019. The exhibition will feature more than 100 paintings spanning Monet’s entire career and will focus on the celebrated French impressionist artist’s enduring relationship with nature and his response to the varied and distinct places in which he worked. Co-organized by the DAM and the Mu... more »

Max Ernst: An Invitation To Look

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 weeks ago
*M&L Fine Art, London* * OCTOBER 2 – NOVEMBER 29, 2019* M&L Fine Art presents a survey exhibition dedicated to Max Ernst (1891 – 1976), a giant of twentieth-century art and leading Surrealist artist. The show features fifteen works from an exceptional private collection, covering Ernst’s entire career from 1925 to 1971, acquired largely in the 1950s and 1960s by a prominent Italian collector and friend of the artist. Characterized by its personal, domestic and intimate character, this body of works aptly elucidates Ernst’s belief that the artist should be a diver in subterranean d... more »

Granville Redmond: The Eloquent Palette

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 weeks ago
*Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California* *January 26 — May 17, 2020* Granville Redmond (American, 1871–1935), Sand Dunes, n.d. . Oil on canvas, 30 x 40 in. Private collection. Granville Redmond (American, 1871–1935), Carmel Coast (Carmel Sand Dunes and Cypress), n.d. Oil on canvas, 30 x 40 inches. Collection of Paula & Terry Trotter. Widely considered one of California’s top early artists, Granville Redmond (1871–1935) produced a body of work that captures the state's diverse topography, vegetation, and color. His paintings range in style from contemplative, Tonalist wor... more »

From Titian to Rubens. Masterpieces from Antwerp and other Flemish Collections

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 weeks ago
From *5th September until 1st March 2020* the *Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia,* in conjunction with the City of Antwerp, VisitFlanders and the Flemish Community, presents From Titian to Rubens. Masterpieces from Antwerp and other Flemish Collections, an exhibition curated by Ben Van Beneden, director of Rubenshuis in Antwerp. The magnificent Doge’s apartments will be transformed into veritable ‘constkamers’, rooms filled with exquisite art demonstrating the riches of Flemish collections. Featuring masterpieces by artists including Titian, Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck and... more »

Manet: Three Paintings from the Norton Simon Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 4 weeks ago
*The Frick Collection* *October 16, 2019, through January 5, 2020* This fall and winter, the Frick presents three canvases by Édouard Manet (1832–1883) from the collection of the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, California, marking the first time the paintings will be exhibited together elsewhere since their acquisition. Considered the father of Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and, by some, twentieth-century abstraction, Manet was a revolutionary in his own time and a legend thereafter. Beyond his pivotal role in art history as the creator of iconic masterworks, Manet’s vision ... more »

Afrocosmologies: American Reflections

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 weeks ago
*Wadswoth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Conn.* *Oct. 19, 2019 to Jan. 20, 2020. * *Afrocosmologies: American Reflections* presents a window into a dynamic cosmos of influences that shape contemporary American art. This exhibition is a collaboration of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, The Amistad Center for Art & Culture, and the Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African-American Art. Drawing from over one hundred art objects, with the Petrucci Family Foundation contributing sixty-eight, these works of art span various media, present potent voices, and pose multiple qu... more »

Drama and Devotion in Baroque Rome

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 weeks ago
* The Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia * Saturday, Jul 27, 2019 — Sunday, May 31, 2020 ------------------------------ Rome has long been a key destination for artists. At the beginning of the 17th century, painters from across Europe flocked to the Eternal City to see the revolution caused by painter Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571 – 1610). Everyone copied his stark contrast of light and dark, powerful realism and dramatic sense of staging. The works presented in this exhibition, all from the Museum and Gallery at Bob Jones University, celebrate how Caravag... more »

Michelangelo: Mind of the Master

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 weeks ago
The Cleveland Museum of Art Sun, 09/22/2019 to Sun, 01/05/2020 Seated male nude, separate study of his right arm (recto), 1511. Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian, 1475–1564). Red chalk, heightened with white; 27.9 x 21.4 cm. Teylers Museum, Haarlem, purchased in 1790. © Teylers Museum, Haarlem. The name of the Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, and architect Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475–1564) is synonymous with creative genius and virtuosity. The exhibition *Michelangelo: Mind of the Master* presents an unprecedented opportunity for museum visitors to experience the brillia... more »

Van Gogh’s Inner Circle Friends, Family, Models

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 weeks ago
Het Noordbrabants Museum 21 September 2019 to 12 January 2020The exhibition *Van Gogh’s Inner Circle. Friends, Family, Models* will give a broad view of the people who played an important role in Van Gogh’s life and work. His complex relationships with family, friends and fellow artists, students and models from Brabant to the south of France were often strong and long-lasting, but sometimes ended in estrangement. The exhibition includes prominent pieces from the Netherlands and abroad. Drawings, letters, pictures and poetry give more insight into his relationships. A surprising ne... more »

Monet, Renoir, Degas,and Their Circle: French Impressionism and the Northwest

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 5 weeks ago
C. C. McKim (American, 1862 – 1939) Patton Creek , 1924. Oil on canvas, 20 x 26 inches. Tacoma Art Museum, Gift of Esther and Jeff Clark, 2018.5 Photo © Tacoma Art Museum , photo by Mark Humpal Pierre - Auguste Renoir (French, 1841 - 1919) Heads of Two Young Girls , 1890. Oil on canvas, 12 ¾ x 16 ¼ inches. Tacoma Art Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. W. Hilding Lindberg, 1983.1.35 Photo © Tacoma Art Museum , photo by Terry Rishel Edgar Degas (French, 1834 – 1917) Danseuses (Dancers), 1879. Gouache, oil pastel, and oil paint on silk, 8 ½ x 23 ⅞ inches. Tacoma Art Museum, Gift of Mr.... more »

Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Mexican Modernism from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
Frida Kahlo, The Bride Who Becomes Frightened When She Sees Life Opened, 1943, oil on canvas, 24 7/8 x 32 in., The Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection of 20th-Century Mexican Art, The Vergel Foundation, Conaculta/INBA, © 2018 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Diego Rivera, Landscape with Cacti, 1931, oil on canvas, 49 3/8 x 59 in., The Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection of 20th-Century Mexican Art, The Vergel Foundation, Conaculta/INBA, © 2018 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico... more »

Beyond Midnight: Paul Revere

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
New-York Historical Society*September 6, 2019 – January 12, 2020* The patriot, silversmith, and entrepreneur Paul Revere was forever immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s 1861 poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride,” but his genuine accomplishments are often eclipsed by the legend of the midnight journey. This groundbreaking exhibition featuring more than 150 objects re-examines Revere’s life, transforming visitors’ understanding of the innovative businessman through an in-depth exploration of his accomplishments as a silversmith, printmaker, and pioneering copper manufacturer. Organiz... more »

Panoramas: The Big Picture

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*New-York Historical Society* *August 16 – December 8, 2019* *Panoramas: The Big Picture *explores the history and continued impact of panoramas from the 17th to the 21st century, as they were used to create spatial illusions, map places, and tell stories. Highlights include John Trumbull’s sweeping double vistas of Niagara Falls (1808), sections of Richard Haas’ nearly 200-foot long trompe l’oeil panorama of Manhattan (1982), and Eadweard Muybridge’s 17-foot photographic panorama of San Francisco before the city’s devastating 1906 earthquake (1878). The exhibition examines and re... more »

The Alana Collection Masterpieces of Italian Painting

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*Musée Jacquemart-André * *13 September 2019 to 20 January 2020* In autumn 2019, the Musée Jacquemart-André will be focusing on the Alana Collection, one of the most precious and little-known private collections of Renaissance art in the world, which is currently located in the United States. Echoing its exceptional collection of Italian art, the Musée Jacquemart-André will hold an exhibition of more than seventy-five masterpieces by the greatest Italian masters, such as Lorenzo Monaco, Fra Angelico, Uccello, Lippi, Bellini, Carpaccio, Tintoretto, Veronese, Bronzino, and Gentilesc... more »

From the Douanier Rousseau to Séraphine - The Great Naïve Masters

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*Musée Maillol, Paris* *11 Sep 2019 - 19 Jan 2020* The Musée Maillol is holding an exhibition of more than a hundred works from the fascinating, dreamy, unique, and rich world of the ‘Naïve’ artists. Called ‘modern primitives’ by one of their ardent supporters, the collector and art critic Wilhelm Uhde (1874–1947), these artists renewed painting in their own way, independently from the avantgarde artists and without academicism. Brought together for the first time in Paris, their brightly coloured works shed light on an inter-war period in the history of art that is often overlook... more »

Leyendecker and the Golden Age of American Illustration

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*Reynolda House Museum of American Art , Winston-Salem, N.C. * *Aug. 31 through Dec. 31, 2019* Reynolda House Museum of American Art is presenting the work of Joseph Christian (J.C.) Leyendecker, one of the most prolific and sought-after artists of the Golden Age of American Illustration, from Aug. 31 through Dec. 31, 2019. Leyendecker (1894–1951) captivated the public with his striking images and fashionable depictions of handsome men and glamorous women. This will be the museum’s first exhibition focused on illustration and its first to explore the work of an openly gay artist.... more »

Collection Rudolf Staechelin

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
Fondation Beyeler August 31 - October 29, 2019 The paintings from the celebrated collection of Rudolf Staechelin (1881–1946) are returning to Basel, after a four-year interval in which the pictures were shown (with works from the Im Obersteg Collection) in widely acclaimed exhibitions at the Museo Nacional Reina Sofia in Madrid and the Phillips Collection in Washington. Now, from the end of August 2019, nineteen outstanding examples of Impressionism, Post- Impressionism and Classic Modernism are to be seen at the Fondation Beyeler in Riehen. The paintings, by Paul Cézanne, Edgar De... more »

“The Dean,” a fall exhibition of paintings by Frank Nelson Wilcox

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*WOLFS* in Cleveland will present “The Dean,” a fall exhibition of paintings by Frank Nelson Wilcox (1887-1964) that provides an opportunity to view fresh, perfectly preserved examples of exquisite work by one of the most highly regarded watercolorists of his generation. This comprehensive exhibition will encompass over 200 works depicting American scene, Europe, the Northeast Coast and the American West, spanning much of Wilcox’s remarkable career. “The Dean,” will be on view at WOLFS from *September 19, 2019 through November 30, 2019.* An opening reception will be held on Septemb... more »

Major Collection of Impressionist to Modernist Paintings Given to the High Museum

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
The High Museum of Art has announced that Atlanta-based philanthropists Doris and Shouky Shaheen have donated their entire impressionist, post-impressionist and modernist painting collection, totaling 24 artworks, to the Museum. The Shaheen gift is one of the most significant groups of European paintings ever to enter the Museum’s collection, rivaled only by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation donation in 1958, which established the core of the High’s European art holdings. This marks the High’s first acquisition of paintings by renowned artists such as Henri Fantin-Latour, Henri Matiss... more »

Industry, Work, Society, and Travails in the Depression Era: American Paintings and Photographs from the Shogren-Meyer Collection - Updated

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*The Hillstrom Museum of Art **September 9 through November 10 * *Tweed Museum of Art - University of Minnesota Duluth**January, 2021* *The Hillstrom Museum of Art* presents* Industry, Work, Society, and Travails in the Depression Era: American Paintings and Photographs from the Shogren-Meyer Collection, *on view beginning this *Monday, **September 9 * through* November 10*. The exhibition will travel to the Tweed Museum of Art - University of Minnesota Duluth in January, 2021. Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971), Louisville Flood, 1937, gelatin silver print (printed no later than ... more »

Glass, Darkly Allegory and Faith in Netherlandish Prints from Lucas van Leyden to Rembrandt

Jonathan KantrowitzatArt History News - 1 month ago
*Michael C. Carlos Museum *of Emory University *August 31 - December 1, 2019* Jan Sadeler (Flemish, 1550-1600), after Dirck Barendsz. (Netherlandish, 1534-1592). *The Last Judgment,* late 16th century. Engraving. Gift of Walter Melion and John Clum. [image: The Calling of Saints Andrew and Peter] Dirk Vellert (Flemish, 1480-1547). *The Calling of Saints Andrew and Peter, *1523. Engraving. John Howett Fund and museum purchase in honor of Margaret Shufeldt. © Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University. Photo by Bruce M. White, 2011. [image: Hell] Jan Sadeler (Flemish, 1550-... more »

Bonnard to Vuillard: The Intimate Poetry of Everyday Life – The Nabi Collection of Vicki and Roger Sant

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The Phillips Collection

October 26, 2019 – January 26, 2020

The Phillips Collection has opened Bonnard to Vuillard: The Intimate Poetry of Everyday Life – The Nabi Collection of Vicki and Roger Sant. This presentation, planned in conjunction with a major promised gift of art from Vicki and Roger Sant, features over 40 rarely - seen paintings and works on paper as well as two major print portfolios from one of the finest private collections of Nabi art in the United States.


Bonnard to Vuillard: The Intimate Poetry of Everyday Life sheds new light on the decade of the 1890s that gave rise to the vanguard inventions of a leading group of European artists who became known as the “Nabis” ( Hebrew word for prophet). 

On view October 26, 2019 – January 26, 2020 , this exhibition will showcase paintings, prints, and works of decorative art by eight visionary artists, all from the holdings of Vicki and Roger Sant, dedicated collectors with a keen eye for exquisite examples of the Nabi aesthetic. By juxtaposing works by Pierre Bonnard,  Edouard Vuillard, Maurice Denis, and Ker - Xavier Roussel, among others, across a range of media, including stained glass, ceramics, needlepoint, printmaking , and painting, the exhibition will reveal the various ways in which the Nabis translated their artistic methods across the fine and decorative arts. Inspired by Paul Gauguin in the last decade of the 19 th century, the Nabi painters rejected naturalism and embraced the a bstract power of color as a vehicle for personal expression.

Stylistically diverse, its members included Pierre Bonnard and Édouard Vuillard as well as Maurice Denis, Félix Vallotton, Aristide Maillol, Ker - X avier Roussel, and Paul Ranson . They experimented with painting, ceramics, stained glass, textiles, theatrical sets and costumes, and more , blurring the lines between the fine and decorative arts. The Nabis were also prolific printmakers, and their lithographs, poster designs, book illustrations, theater programs, and contributions to the literary journals, or “little reviews,” that proliferate.

 


PierreBonnard, Le marabout et les quatre grenouilles (The Stork andthe Four Frogs), 1889,Three-panel screen; distemper on canvas, 62 3/4x 21 1/2 in.,The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant



Pierre Bonnard, Après-midi au jardin (Afternoon in the Garden), 1891, Oil and pen and ink on canvas, 14 3/4 x 17 3/4 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant



Pierre Bonnard, Scène de famille (Family Scene), From L’Estampe originale, no. 1, 1893, Lithograph printed in four colors, 22 3/4 x 16 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant.




Maurice Denis, Mère et enfant (Mother and Child), 1898, Oil on canvas, 18 x 15 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant.




Maurice Denis, Les Musiciennes (Musicians), 1895, Oil on cardboard, 9 5/8 x 13 5/8 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant
https://uc60562db467150360aa22acb4ec.previews.dropboxusercontent.com/p/thumb/AAn6OQqtW-6TbL-BiGptTrVjxj_tcr-cKZ57UqrkTLRlkJcWMs1PeiFI9SEPJ1PDiv8Xs2_xsmrPtGTXaC8NFp_uUnqgcSOlkzL4EyL0xjQJjPBqcDXz9TVVXWwuSf6EaZHkFRUpwHHf1nmd85YNMRO_kM8UB8LHlkBvXzdpo1xBww52k-7rj7UukGgubtVZXSXB3J40Tgycrtmz6X2JGb9uQIXVyVxLfqhyEDLdPX_fUqgk2ZnQ6bVjdk4N51v5rYNXNut32UbGyl6jaUu75ttR1PhwuPG4hReSV4AoI_6SZYkTDv6Jk64tKADIvk7jIP00_kIPn8rZ_LPRt9EucTAY/p.jpeg?fv_content=true&size_mode=5



Aristide Maillol, La Ramasseuse d’herbes (Herb Picker), 1925, Bronze, 6 x 4 x 7 1/4 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant.





Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Cover for L'Estampe originale, Album I, publiée par les Journal des Artistes, 1893, Lithograph printed in six colors on folded wove paper, 23 × 32 5/8 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant


 

Félix Vallotton, Scène de rue(Street Scene), 1895, Oil on cardboard, 10 1/4 x 13 3/8 in.,The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant

 

Félix Vallotton, Le passante(The Passage), 1897, Oil on cardboard, 7 7/8 x 11 in.,The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant

 

Édouard Vuillard,Intérieur au lit rouge ou La chambre nuptiale (Interiorwith Red Bed or The Bridal Chamber), 1893, Oil on board mounted on cradled panel, 12 3/4 x 20 7/8 in.,  The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant

 


Édouard Vuillard, Mère et enfant(Mother and Child), 1901, Oil on cardboard, mounted on cradled panel, 20 1/8 x 19 3/4 in.,The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant

 

Édouard Vuillard, The Pastry Shop (La Pâtisserie)From Landscapes and Interiors(Paysages et intérieurs), 1899, Lithograph printed in seven colors on China paper, 15 3/4x 12 3/8 in., The Phillips Collection, promised gift of Vicki and Roger Sant




d in Paris at the fin de siècle , were a major part of their practice.

CATALOGUE

A catalogue of the same title  published by Rizzoli Electa in association with The Phillips Collection, accompanies the exhibition. E dited by Elsa Smithgall , it includes contributions by Sarah Bertalan , Isabelle Cahn, Clément Dessy, Dorothy Kosinski, and Katherine M. Kuenzli . The richly - illustrated book features a conversation between the collectors and Dorothy Kosinski , as well as essays exploring the role of the Nabi in the early histories of modern art, the influence of Symbolist poetry and literature, and the innovative techniques of Nabi printmaking.

Raphael & the Pope's Librarian

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Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
October 31, 2019 - January 30, 2020

Nearly five centuries after his death, Raphael’s fame remains undiminished. In 1898, Isabella Stewart Gardner brought the first Raphael to America, a portrait of the pope’s librarian Tommaso Inghirami. Celebrated by Erasmus as “the Cicero of our era,” Inghirami was a high Renaissance celebrity esteemed for his profound erudition, theatrical abilities, and powerful friends, including Raphael himself.

Commemorating the 500th anniversary of the painter’s death in 1520, this exhibition brings together for the first time

 
Raphael, “Ex-voto of Tommaso Inghirami Fallen under an Ox-Cart in Rome”
Raphael, “Ex-voto of Tommaso Inghirami Fallen under an Ox-Cart in Rome,” about 1508, oil on panel, 64 x 88 cm (25 3/16 x 34 5/8 in.), Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano, Vatican Museums, Vatican City


 a painting of an episode from Inghirami’s life (Musei Vaticani, Vatican City) with the Gardner’s own portrait, as well as a special selection of sculpture, drawings and archival materials to tell the fascinating story of the man with the red cap and the collector who brought him to America.

Raphael (Italian, 1483-1520), Tommaso Inghirami, about 1510
 

Raphael, “Tommaso Inghirami,” about 1510, oil on panel, 90 x 62.5 cm (35 7/16 x 24 5/8 in.), 114.1 x 86.7 cm (44 15/16 x 34 1/8 in.) framed, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, P16e4

Exhibition Catalog




Cover of the exhibition catalog for Close Up: Raphael & the Pope's Librarian

Published in commemoration of the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death, this engrossing book accompanies this exhibition. Read about this iconic painting, and Raphael's work, which writer Henry James called "semi-sacred."

Pre-Raphaelite Sisters

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detail, Night and Sleep by Evelyn De Morgan. Photograph: National Portrait Gallery
Fanny Eaton by Joanna Wells. Photograph: Richard Caspole/National Portrait Gallery
170 years after the first pictures were exhibited by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1849, "Pre-Raphaelite Sisters" at London's National Portrait Gallery, explores the overlooked contribution of twelve women to this iconic artistic movement. Featuring new discoveries and unseen works from public and private collections across the world, this show reveals the women behind the pictures and their creative roles in Pre-Raphaelite’s successive phases between 1850 and 1900.

Pre-Raphaelite Sisters, through January 26, reveals the lives and works of British women who have long been overlooked or relegated as only muses of their male counterparts in the pioneering 19th century art movement.
Ophelia by John Everett Millais, circa 1851
Tate, London
One such model was Elizabeth Siddal, who married Pre-Raphaelite painter, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and posed for hours a day over months in a tepid bathtub for John Everett Millais’s celebrated painting Ophelia. Siddal infamously caught a severe chill while thus posing as Shakespeare’s tragic heroine in Hamlet; she was literally suffering for the artist's image of a woman suffering. In 1862, she overdosed on the narcotic laudanum after the stillbirth of her daughter with Rossetti. Her husband poured himself into then publishing his own written masterpiece, Poems. Siddal subsequently became known as the "tragic muse of brilliant men," writes Helen Lewis in The Atlantic.

The current exhibition brings to light Siddal's own skilled artistry in works like the figural sketch Lovers Listening to Music. Also of note, writes Kathryn Hughes in the GuardianIn Evelyn De Morgan’s "earlier pieces, such as the luscious Night and Sleep (1878) made when she was just 23, you sense the painterly confidence and feeling for colour that might make any established grandmaster look to his laurels." Their artwork is shown along with fine art and crafts by Joanna Wells, Fanny Cornforth, Marie Spartali Stillman, Christina Rossetti, Georgiana Burne-Jones, Effie Millais, Maria Zambaco, Jane Morris, Annie Miller, and Fanny Eaton.

An exhibition catalogue outlines the critical engagement of these women, as models, artists, makers, partners and poets, in the renown of the Pre-Raphaelite movement.

Rubens, Rembrandt, and Drawing in the Golden Age

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Image result for Peter Paul Rubens. A Sheet of Anatomical Studies, 1600/10. The Art Institute of Chicago, Regenstein Acquisition Fund.

Peter Paul Rubens. A Sheet of Anatomical Studies, 1600/10. The Art Institute of Chicago, Regenstein Acquisition Fund.
The Art Institute of Chicago presents Rubens, Rembrandt, and Drawing in the Golden Age, on view from September 28, 2019 to January 5, 2020. This exhibition reflects a unique and comprehensive effort by the Art Institute to study and interpret its holdings of Dutch and Flemish drawings. The project is a culmination of a multi-year collaborative interdisciplinary initiative between conservation and curatorial departments within the museum. The exhibition will have approximately 120 works on view and will include several new acquisitions that enhance a collection which was developed over nearly one hundred years.

Image result for Godfried Maes. Head of Medusa, 1680. The Art Institute of Chicago, Prints and Drawings Purchase Fun

Godfried Maes. Head of Medusa, 1680. The Art Institute of Chicago, Prints and Drawings Purchase Fund.
 
Drawing reached one of its pinnacles in the Netherlands during the 17th century—a period commonly known as the Golden Age. While early modern Dutch and Flemish art typically focus on the paintings created during this time, this exhibition constructs an alternative narrative, casting drawings not in supporting roles but as the main characters. Featuring works by Rembrandt van Rijn, Peter Paul Rubens, Hendrick Goltzius, Gerrit von Honthorst, Jacques de Gheyn II, and many others, the show traces the development of drawing in this period, exploring its many roles in artistic training, its preparatory function for works in other media, and its eventual emergence as a medium in its own right.

Image result for Godfried Maes. Head of Medusa, 1680. The Art Institute of Chicago, Prints and Drawings Purchase Fun


The 17th century brought change to the northern and southern Netherlands, including political upheaval and scientific innovation. The effects of these changes had a great impact on art—what kind of art was in demand, who could and did produce art, and where and how art was made. Most artists in 17th-century Netherlands chose their career through family connections, training with a relative who worked in an artistic trade, although there are significant exceptions to this trajectory—Rubens was the son of a lawyer and Rembrandt the son of a miller.

Image result for Rubens, Rembrandt, and Drawing in the Golden Age



Hendrick Avercamp, “Two Old Men beside a Sled Bearing the Coats of Arms of Amsterdam and Utrecht”, ca. 1620-1633

Abraham Bloemaert, Rubens, and Rembrandt supervised the three most important workshops of the period, overseeing the development of dozens, if not hundreds, of students. In these workshops, learning to draw was essential. The ability to accurately depict the human face and body was critical to an artist’s success and was especially important for those who aspired to create history paintings—the genre considered most prestigious because it relied on literary sources and often required portraying multiple figures in complex and dramatic scenes.

Rembrandt, more than other artists of this period, embraced life drawing. Most notably, he pioneered the collective study of the female nude—a commonplace practice today, but one that challenged the bounds of decency in the 17th century. Studying the live figure increasingly became standard practice in the Netherlands during this period, but it was generally restricted to drawing male models, since prevailing cultural norms made it difficult for artists to find women to pose for them, especially in the nude. Among the most celebrated of all Rembrandt’s drawings is a rare study of a female nude, which is featured in this exhibition. An emotive and striking work, it highlights the importance for artists of the period to learn to draw the female figure.

Although drawings in the 17th century served many purposes—as reference materials, studies for future paintings, preparatory designs for prints—they also emerged as independent works of art, bought, commissioned, and collected by wealthy merchants. Produced in a broad range of media, including chalk, ink, and watercolor, the drawings in this exhibition are captivating examples of artistic skill and imagination. Together they provide a new view of the creativity and working process of Netherlandish artists in the 17th century and reveal how drawings came to be the celebrated works of art we know them to be today.

The Art Institute’s collection of Dutch and Flemish drawings - one of the museum’s best kept secrets - has never been exhibited together before or understood and interpreted as a coherent group. This exhibition and its beautiful accompanying catalogue reveal, for the first time, the remarkable strength and importance of our holdings in this area.

Catalogue



356 pages, 8 x 10 1/2
218 color + 43 b/w illus.
ISBN: 9780300247077
PB-with Flaps

Distributed for the Art Institute of Chicago

Image result for Rubens, Rembrandt, and Drawing in the Golden Age


Rubens, Rembrandt, and Drawing in the Golden Age

Victoria Sancho Lobis; With an essay by Antoinette Owen, and contributions by Francesca Casadio and Emily Vokt Ziemba


An extraordinary history of Netherlandish drawing, focused on the training and skill of artists during the long 17th century

With a lively narrative thread and thematic chapters, this book offers an exceptional introduction to Dutch and Flemish drawing during the long 17th century. Victoria Sancho Lobis discusses the many roles of drawing in artistic training, its function in the production of works in other media, and its emergence as a medium in its own right. Beautifully illustrated with some 120 drawings by artists including Rembrandt van Rijn, Peter Paul Rubens, Hendrick Goltzius, Gerrit von Honthorst, and Jacob De Gheyn, this book surveys current methodologies of studying these works and features a brief history of Dutch papermaking and watermarks as well as a glossary. Paying careful attention to materials and techniques, and informed by recent conservation treatments, Lobis explains how to look at these drawings as records of experimentation and skill, true windows into the artist’s mind.
 
Victoria Sancho Lobis served as curator in the Department of Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago from 2013 to 2017 and is guest curator of this exhibition. She is also currently a lecturer in the History Department at Claremont McKenna College.

Jean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern Art

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Van Gogh Museum
4 October 2019 – 12 January 2020

Millet and Modern Art: From Van Gogh to Dalí

Saint Louis Art Museum
February 16–May 17, 2020


The exhibition Jean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern Art illustrates just how progressive the work of Jean-François Millet (1814-1875) was for his time. With his radical painting technique, modern style and inspirational portrayal of peasant life, Millet undoubtedly sowed the seeds of modern art.



This is the first exhibition to explore how Millet’s work inspired the art of numerous well-known artists, such as Vincent van Gogh, Camille Pissarro, Georges Seurat, Claude Monet, Giovanni Segantini, Winslow Homer, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Edvard Munch, Kazimir Malevich and Salvador Dalí.

Van Gogh and Millet


National hero

Millet had an animated and successful career. During his life, his paintings were often criticised, due to his radical painting technique and the social criticism thought to be manifested in his depiction of peasant life. Shortly after his death, the French government embraced Millet as a national hero, who had captured rural France in all its glory.

Collaboration with Saint Louis Art Museum

 Image result for Jean-François Millet, French, 1814–1875; The Knitting Lesson, 1869; oil on canvas; 39 7/8 x 32 3/4 inches; Saint Louis Art Museum, Museum Purchase 106:1939

Jean-François Millet, French, 1814–1875; The Knitting Lesson, 1869; oil on canvas; 39 7/8 x 32 3/4 inches; Saint Louis Art Museum, Museum Purchase 106:1939

The exhibition is the result of collaboration between the Saint Louis Art Museum and the Van Gogh Museum. Jean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern Art will be on display at the Van Gogh Museum from 4 October 2019 until 12 January 2020.

The exhibition will subsequently travel to Saint Louis, where it will be on display from 16 February to 17 May 2020 with the alternative title of Millet and Modern Art.

Jean-François Millet and the Hague School

This exhibition runs almost concurrently with the exhibition Jean-François Millet and the Hague School at The Mesdag Collection in The Hague (13 September 2019 to 5 January 2020), which explores Millet’s influence on the Hague School artists.

Christie’s American Art Sale November 20

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Christie’s has announced its the fall sale of American Art. The sale is highlighted by several distinguished private collections that offer rare and fresh to the market works, including Andrew Wyeth’s Oliver’s Cap (estimate: $3,000,000 – 5,000,000) from the Collection of Ron and Diane Disney Miller, Norman Rockwell’s Harvest Moon (estimate: $1,000,000-1,500,000) from The Collection of Richard L. Weisman, and Georgia O'Keeffe's Pink Spotted Lillies (estimate: $1,200,000-1,800,000) from The James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection.

The American Art sale on November 20 is comprised of 94 lots and the American Art online auction, comprised of 128 lots, is open for bidding November 14-20. All lots will be on view in Christie’s Rockefeller Center galleries from Saturday, November 16-19.




Leading the sales is Andrew Wyeth’s Oliver’s Cap (estimate: $3,000,000 – 5,000,000), characteristic of Wyeth’s distinct, delicate balance between complex intensity and private intimacy. Painted in 1981, Oliver’s Cap transforms a view from the artist’s community in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, with a modern sense of design to create the quintessential, quiet tension of Wyeth’s best work. The artist himself wrote of the work, “I want you to know the egg tempera painting you have, titled ‘Oliver’s Cap’ I consider one of my very richest and most personal pictures.”




 Image result for N.C. "Oh, Morgan's men are out for you; and Blackbeard--buccaneer!..."

Newell Convers Wyeth, 1882-1945. "Oh, Morgan's men are out for you; and Blackbeard--buccaneer!...", oil on canvas, painted in 1917. Estimate: $2,000,000-3,000,000

Additional works from the Wyeth family include a striking N.C. Wyeth painting of the infamous pirate Blackbeard titled "Oh, Morgan's men are out for you; and Blackbeard--buccaneer!..." which first appeared in Scribner's Magazine in August 1917 (estimate: $2,000,000-3,000,000). N.C. Wyeth, along with his mentor

Howard Pyle, helped establish the classic imagery of pirates in American popular culture through illustrations like this work. After being acquired directly from the artist, the painting has passed through the family by descent and appears at auction for the first time. The work was included in this summer’s N.C. Wyeth retrospective at the Brandywine River Museum.

A strong group of 19th century works features

Image result for Sounding Reveille by Winslow Homer

a rare Civil War oil painting Sounding Reveille by Winslow Homer from 1871, which has recently been on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (estimate: $1,200,000-1,800,000).

From the Ron and Disney Miller Collection a grouping of the 19th century landscapes includes 

Winslow Homer’s Boats Alongside a Schooner (estimate: $300,000-500,000),

Thomas Hill’s Picnic by the Sea, a 7 ½-foot-wide 1873 painting of San Francisco Bay (estimate: $70,000-100,000),

and William Keith’s The Headwaters of the Owens River (estimate: $100,000-150,000).

From The Collection of Richard L. Weisman and headlining the selection of American Illustration is

Image result for Norman Rockwell’s Harvest Moon

Norman Rockwell’s Harvest Moon, a cover illustration epitomizing the artist’s quintessential nostalgia through the subject of young love (estimate: $1,000,000-1,500,000).

Other paintings by Rockwell in the sale from this collection include the large-scale oil painting

Image result for Norman Rockwell Red Head

Red Head (estimate: $600,000-800,000)

Image result for Norman Rockwell Laughing Boy

and Laughing Boy (estimate $150,000-250,000).

Modernist works are highlighted by

Image result for Georgia O'Keeffe Pink Spotted Lilies, 1936

 Georgia O'Keeffe's Pink Spotted Lillies, 1936, a beautiful example of the artist’s ingenious manipulation of color, form and composition to depict her favorite subject of the flower (estimate: $1,200,000-1,800,000) from the Collection of James and Marilynn Alsdorf.

A rare New York City watercolor by Edward Hopper, a Marsden Hartley oil painting exploring the connection between visual art and music, and a vibrant example by Stuart Davis round out the Modernist section.

https://media.mutualart.com/Images/2019_10/26/11/111734080/9f0fe8ed-60b1-4888-884e-f0380f954535_570.Jpeg

Western works are led by Albert Bierstadt’s After Glow: The Glory of the Heavens (estimate: $600,000-800,000);



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