Friday, September 30, 2016

Branding the American West


Brigham Young University Museum of Art Norfolk, Virginia,
Saturday, Oct. 29, 2016 through Sunday, Feb. 5, 2017

Discover a bonanza of Western paintings, films, and sculptures in the Chrysler Museum of Art's fall keynote exhibition. Branding the American West: Paintings and Films, 1900–1950 features classic images of cowboys, Native Americans, mountains and deserts. Though many of the works closely correspond to most Americans' ideas of the "Wild West," the show also includes artworks that challenge those popular views.

Headlining this stampede of more than 100 works of art are iconic images by Frederic Remington, Charles Marion Russell, and N. C. Wyeth. These master illustrators created a visual "brand" for the frontier as a land filled with adventure and rugged individualism. Turn-of-the-century city dwellers adored nostalgic fantasies of the Wild West, but as this show reveals, some artists challenged these stereotypes and acknowledged the taming and modernizing of the region.


Since the Chrysler Collection has very few works of Western art within its sweeping American art galleries, "an exhibition of this scope and scale brings something new to our audiences. It transports visitors across the country—and back in time—to a place of mystery, beauty, and sometimes danger and contradictions."

Paintings and novels about the Wild West fueled tourism and immigration to the region, particularly Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. Branding the American West explores this moment of change, considering how the arrival of railroads, automobiles, and industry shifted the character of Western art.

Painters discovered the bright sunlight and rich colors of the Southwest and responded with experimental and abstract styles of artmaking, as seen in



Maynard Dixon's Mesas in Shadow (1926) 

and other sweeping vistas. The show features more than a dozen powerful landscapes by Dixon, who described his work as capturing the West's "sense of sun and space and silence—of serenity—of strength and freedom."


Maynard Dixon, Round Dance, 1931, oil on canvasboard, 15 7/16 x 19 7/8 in., Brigham Young University Museum of Art, gift of Herald R. Clark

Some of the finest paintings in this exhibition were created in Taos, N.M., a Pueblo village that developed a vibrant colony of artists beginning in the 1910s. These artists' appreciation for both the landscape and cultural history of the West is evident in works like
\

Joseph Henry Sharp's Council Call of the Crow, 

a magnificent sunset view of an Indian camp. Other works by the Taos painters celebrate the extraordinary craftsmanship and design of Native pottery, baskets, and textiles.

Perhaps the most innovative feature of Branding the American West is its comparison of fine art with film, breaking new scholarly ground by recognizing the importance of the American West to the early history of Hollywood. Throughout the galleries video monitors will juxtapose clips from classic movies by John Ford and Cecil B. DeMille with the works of Remington, Dixon, and their colleagues. These pairings show how filmmakers translated competing "brands" of the frontier from canvas to the big screen. A series of Western-themed programs, talks, films, and family activities complement the exhibition throughout its run.

Branding the American West: Paintings and Films, 1900–1950 is organized by the Brigham Young University Museum of Art, Provo, Utah, and the Stark Museum of Art, Orange, Texas.

More Images: http://moa.byu.edu/project/branding-the-american-west-paintings-and-films-1900-1950/



Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Rafael: Image Poetry (Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow)



Sept. 13 to Dec. 16. 2016

For the first time in Russia, an exhibition dedicated solely to the works of Raphael will open in Moscow. Eight paintings and three drawings arrive from the collections of Italian museums in Florence, Bologna and Brescia. The exhibition will include:



Self-portrait (1506), Rafael. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts


Madonna of the Grand Duke (1505), Rafael. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts


Angel (1500), Rafael. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts






Paired portraits of Agnolo Doni and his wife Maddalena.

More information and Images: http://www.anothercity.ru/raphael-exhibition-en



Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Frida Kahlo at The Dali



An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.

Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.

Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.

“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”

Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”

In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.

Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City.




Frida Kahlo Self-Portrait with Small Monkey,
1945 Oil on Masonite
Collection Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City
© 2016 Banco de México Diego Rivera and
Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico City
© Photo Erik Meza/Javier Otaola



Frida Kahlo Portrait of Alicia Galant,
1927 Oil on Canvas
Collection Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City
© 2016 Banco de México Diego Rivera and
Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico City
© Photo Erik Meza/Javier Otaola -
An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.
Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.
“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”
Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”
In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City.
- See more at: http://thedali.org/press-room/frida-kahlo-dali/#sthash.MiXzUYwU.dpuf
An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.
Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.
“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”
Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”
In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City.
- See more at: http://thedali.org/press-room/frida-kahlo-dali/#sthash.MiXzUYwU.dpuf

Frida Kahlo at The Dali December 17

August 15, 2016

Treasured Artist Frida Kahlo Coming to Florida’s Dali Museum
Frida Kahlo at The Dali – an exhibit of Paintings, Drawings & Photographs – Debuts December 17, 2016
 ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (August 15, 2015) – An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.
Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.
“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”
Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”
In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City. The exhibit also features works from the Vicente Wolf photographic collection. Frida Kahlo at The Dali is curated for The Dali by Dr. Hank Hine and Dr. William Jeffett.
DOWNLOAD HI-RES IMAGES HERE
Permission to reproduce these images is granted solely for use in conjunction with media reportage and review of Frida Kahlo at The Dali All reproductions must be accompanied by each image credit as noted below. Permission to reproduce these images is contingent upon the press’ acknowledgement and acceptance of these terms.
- See more at: http://thedali.org/press-room/frida-kahlo-dali/#sthash.MiXzUYwU.dpuf

Frida Kahlo at The Dali December 17

August 15, 2016

Treasured Artist Frida Kahlo Coming to Florida’s Dali Museum
Frida Kahlo at The Dali – an exhibit of Paintings, Drawings & Photographs – Debuts December 17, 2016
 ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (August 15, 2015) – An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.
Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.
“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”
Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”
In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City. The exhibit also features works from the Vicente Wolf photographic collection. Frida Kahlo at The Dali is curated for The Dali by Dr. Hank Hine and Dr. William Jeffett.
DOWNLOAD HI-RES IMAGES HERE
Permission to reproduce these images is granted solely for use in conjunction with media reportage and review of Frida Kahlo at The Dali All reproductions must be accompanied by each image credit as noted below. Permission to reproduce these images is contingent upon the press’ acknowledgement and acceptance of these terms.
- See more at: http://thedali.org/press-room/frida-kahlo-dali/#sthash.MiXzUYwU.dpuf

Frida Kahlo at The Dali December 17

August 15, 2016

Treasured Artist Frida Kahlo Coming to Florida’s Dali Museum
Frida Kahlo at The Dali – an exhibit of Paintings, Drawings & Photographs – Debuts December 17, 2016
 ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (August 15, 2015) – An exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s paintings and drawings, together with her personal photograph collection, will open to the public at The Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, FL on December 17, 2016 and continue through April 17, 2017. Kahlo’s works have achieved monumental importance in art and popular culture. Her dreamlike work suggests that love and suffering create a new sense of beauty. Kahlo’s art and storied life stir immense public interest.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali will be Florida’s first solo exhibition showcasing the extraordinary career and life of the acclaimed 20th century artist. The exhibit will feature a collection of more than 60 Kahlo pieces including 15 paintings, seven drawings and numerous personal photographs from the celebrated female artist and influential icon. The exhibition will extend outdoors where a special collection of flowers and plants representative of those in Kahlo’s own garden at Casa Azul, her home in Mexico, will grace the grounds of the Museum’s Avant Garden.
Co-organized by The Dali and the Museo Dolores Olmedo in Mexico City and featuring the Vicente Wolf photographic collection, the exhibition is an intriguing exploration of the life of Kahlo, her striking artwork and her fascinating psyche. Together with the exclusive photographs of family, friends and lovers, the exhibition gives a complete view of Kahlo’s world along with the joys, passions and obsessions of this remarkable artist.
“With her dreamlike images, Kahlo has stirred huge public interest beyond the traditional art audience. In a way, Kahlo created a persona that serves as a contemporary feminine ideal – both tender and fierce,” said Dali Museum Executive Director, Dr. Hank Hine. “Much like Dali, she constructed an eccentric identity through the iconography in her paintings and then dressed and carried herself as the personality she created in her art. Painting by painting, she becomes a heroic figure of struggle and perseverance.”
Kahlo and Dalí each created artistic autobiographies and their personalities loom behind their paintings, generating a presence that both shapes and overshadows their works of art. While Kahlo largely rejected the term ‘Surrealism’ and felt that her works were as real as her life, André Breton, known as the founder of Surrealism, took great interest in her work and described her painting as ‘a bomb wrapped in a ribbon.’ “It’s a natural fit for The Dali to present an exhibition of Frida Kahlo.” said Kathy Greif, Chief Marketing Officer of The Dali. “We’ve been broadening the scope of our exhibitions, presenting works from famed artists and icons like Warhol, Picasso and Walt Disney – all whom have a connection to Dali– but this is the first renowned female artist to grace our halls in some time, we are honored to share Kahlo’s incredible art and complex life story with the world.”
In conjunction with this empowering exhibition, The Dali will host a series of programs that engage visitors in journaling, Mexican cooking, and gardening – some of Kahlo’s favorite pastimes. And, this year, the Museum’s annual student exhibit will carry a corresponding theme of ‘Surreal Identity,’ based on the symbolic and autobiographical approach utilized by Kahlo and Dali. Additional programming such as films will accompany the Kahlo exhibition and a large variety of Kahlo-inspired merchandise – including jewelry, home decor, apparel and more – will be available in The Dali Museum Store.
Frida Kahlo at The Dali has been co-organized by The Salvador Dali Museum, St. Petersburg, FL and the Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City. The exhibit also features works from the Vicente Wolf photographic collection. Frida Kahlo at The Dali is curated for The Dali by Dr. Hank Hine and Dr. William Jeffett.
DOWNLOAD HI-RES IMAGES HERE
Permission to reproduce these images is granted solely for use in conjunction with media reportage and review of Frida Kahlo at The Dali All reproductions must be accompanied by each image credit as noted below. Permission to reproduce these images is contingent upon the press’ acknowledgement and acceptance of these terms.
- See more at: http://thedali.org/press-room/frida-kahlo-dali/#sthash.MiXzUYwU.dpuf

Dubuffet, Kandinsky Highlight Christie's November 16th Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in New Yor

Dubuffet



Christie’s will highlight its November 15th Evening Sale of Post-War and Contemporary Art with Jean Dubuffet’s Les Grandes Artères, 1961 ($15-20million). Les Grandes Artères is a masterful canvas from Dubuffet’s celebrated Paris Circus series*, a body of work which is regarded by many Dubuffet scholars as marking the pinnacle of the artist’s career. With its vibrant palette, sense of energy and the individuality that Dubuffet instills in each of his characters, Les Grandes Artères, is one of the artist’s most accomplished compositions from Paris Circus.

Many examples from this series are housed in important international collections including the Tate Gallery, London; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris. Les Grandes Artères has been in the same private American collection since 1964, and has not appeared publicly since 1973, when it was featured in the Guggenheim’s Dubuffet retrospective.

Brett Gorvy, Chairman and International Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art, remarked: “Les Grandes Artères is an extraordinarily vibrant and complex canvas that encapsulates the vitality of Paris, and the dynamism of city life. The detail with which he depicts each of his figures gives them their own individual character and the line-up of glamorous cars shows what a cosmopolitan city Paris had become—a scene which Dubuffet captures this with particular skill and spirit. We are particularly pleased to be bringing this work to auction on the heels of a pinnacle year for Dubuffet, which included a range of important international exhibitions of his work. With a retrospective at the Fondation Beyeler, a monographic show at the Acquavella Gallery in Manhattan, and an installation of his monumental sculpture, Welcome Parade, in front of New York’s historic Seagram Building, it is clear that the global interest in Dubuffet has never been stronger.”

Across its surface Dubuffet convenes a cast of characters, which expertly capture the sense of liberation enjoyed by Paris as it emerged from the darkness of the Second World War. Using his signature naïve style, Dubuffet lays out the French capital’s grand boulevards filled with bustling shops, cars and people.

In this bold and vibrant canvas, Dubuffet packs the surface with the energy and exuberance that he witnessed after his return to the French capital. Dubuffet’s breakthrough came in February 1961 when the force of this powerful revelation gave birth to the artists most illustrious and sought-after series, Paris Circus.

Returning to Paris after a six-year self-imposed hiatus in the countryside of southern France, Dubuffet’s Paris Circus paintings signal the artist’s vivacious rediscovery of city life.
Captivated by the energy coursing through the Parisian streets, Dubuffet was swept up in the whirl of the city bustling with cars and people. Infused with a high degree of shrewdness and wit, the shop lined street is flanked by businesses of the artist’s own creation. In addition to the archetypal city establishments – a bank, a cosmetics store – Dubuffet depicted storefronts with signage, which satirize the rampant consumerism that he saw pervading society.

A few examples include: Fruits et legumes du desespoir (fruits and vegetables of despair), A l’issue fatale (fatal outcome) and Societe l’indercrottable (hopeless society). Even the four cars at the bottom of the composition are specific brands: Ford, Citroën, Simca, Fiat.

Throughout the 1960s, an intoxicating postwar energy swept the globe, in which every day phenomena were seen through fresh, excited eyes. In America, Pop Art was born, investigating the unique auras surrounding quotidian objects and fearlessly appropriating the daily images that flooded the collective consciousness. In France, amidst the throes of New Wave cinema and sexual revolution, Dubuffet created a new liberated language that sought to convey the unbounded joy of daily living.


Les Grandes Artères conjures a new artistic handwriting, equipped to translate sensory experience and, in doing so, to suggest new ways of comprehending our daily existence.   



 The world auction record for Jean Dubuffet is currently held by Paris Polka, 1961, which is also from Dubuffet’s Paris Circus series.  The record was achieved at Christie’s New York in May 2015, when it realized $24,805,000

Kandinksky



Christie’s has announced Wassily Kandinsky’s Rigide et courbé as a highlight of its November 16th Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in New York. Rigide et courbé (Rigid and Curved) is one of the most celebrated and dynamic compositions, of grand scale. The canvas is densely packed with lively geometric vignettes and a thoughtfully textured surface composed of sand mixed with paint, a technique Kandinsky used only in his Paris paintings of 1934-1935. The present work, first owned by Solomon R. Guggenheim who acquired it from Kandinsky in 1936, has been extensively published and highly exhibited from 1937-1949. Estimated at $18-25 million, the painting is undoubtedly the most important Paris period painting by Kandinsky to ever appear on the market. It is being offered from an important private American collection and has not been on the market since 1964. The upcoming sale preview marks the first time in over 50 years that the work will be publicly displayed.
 

Conor Jordan, Deputy Chairman of Impressionist and Modern Art, remarked: “With its dynamic sweep of upward energy, Kandinsky’s Rigide et courbé, a late masterpiece from the mid-1930s, unseen in public for over fifty years, evokes an epic paean, a rhapsodic song of thanksgiving suggesting the bright hope the artist saw in his new home in Paris following his flight from Nazi Germany. Abstract forms, runic symbols and mythic references, summoning Kandinsky's life and career, intertwine with veiled allusions to contemporary events, across the broad dimensions of this technically audacious canvas which is richly worked in oil and sand. It ranks among the greatest Kandinskys still in private hands.”

Monday, September 19, 2016

New Publication Surveys Five Millennia of Paintings at The Met



Publication Date: September 15, 2016
Written by a Met Scholar, Includes 500 Paintings with 1,100 Illustrations; Book Is the Most Extensive on the Subject to Date
 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Masterpiece Paintings is a monumental new publication, published by Skira Rizzoli, that highlights 500 iconic works from across the Museum's world-renowned collection of more than 5,000 years of visual expression. Over 1,100 lavish color illustrations present the paintings chronologically, from the ancient Near East to the present day, accompanied by engaging and informative texts written by long-time Met curator and educator Kathryn Calley Galitz. The volume's broad sweep of material makes it at once a universal history of painting and an ideal introduction to masterworks at The Met.

"This new publishing project celebrates the breadth and depth of The Met's unparalleled collection of paintings across all cultures," said Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Met. "It's the most extensive survey of the Museum's paintings ever published, with a fresh, interconnected approach that reflects today's global perspective."

Ms. Galitz added: "It was such a privilege to give voice to the Museum's collecton of masterpiece paintings. As I was writing, I was especially drawn to the many connections that emerged among works from different times and cultures. I hope this book will inspire readers to make their own connections and to approach painting in a new, more inclusive way."

The 500 works presented in The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Masterpiece Paintings encompass a wide range of surfaces where color has been applied—from clay vessels unearthed at ancient burial sites to Egyptian mummy boards, plaster walls that survived the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79, and vellum pages from medieval manuscripts. Also included are paintings on silk scrolls, palm leaves, and tree bark, as well as traditional materials such as canvas and wood. The landmark paintings chosen for the volume are distinguished by their innovative qualities or their influence, while some best embody a particular artist or culture. The creators of the works span the widest possible range, from anonymous makers to the most celebrated artists of their day. European and American artists include Duccio, El Greco, Raphael, Titian, Botticelli, Bronzino, Caravaggio, Turner, Velázquez, Goya, Rubens, Rembrandt, Bruegel, Vermeer, David, Renoir, Monet, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cézanne, Degas, Sargent, Homer, Matisse, Picasso, Pollock, Johns, and Warhol, through to contemporary artist Kerry James Marshall.

Ms. Galitz's introduction and her writings about the individual works of art address the artistic and historical contexts in which the paintings were created, their influences on other works of art, and the significance of the artists—all of which speak to what makes these works "masterpieces."


In many ways, the publication is a tribute to the collecting acumen of The Met staff and the generosity of its donors, who, over the nearly 150 years since The Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded, have built the collection into one of the largest and most comprehensive in the world. The credit line for each painting tells an essential part of its story: how it came to enter the Museum's holdings. In most instances, the works were gifts, attesting to the extraordinary legacy of patronage that has sustained The Met throughout its history. Names such as Morgan, Rogers, Altman, Bache, Havemeyer, Clark, Lehman, Dillon, Wrightsman, and Annenberg resonate as both remarkable collectors and symbols of historic generosity.

The Museum's collection of masterpiece paintings continues to grow: 65 of the works included in this volume were acquired in the year 2000 or later, and four of them just within the past year. Among the most recent additions are important works from the Mary Griggs Burke collection of Japanese art and Leonard A. Lauder's transformative gift of 78 seminal Cubist paintings.

Monday, September 12, 2016

American Mosaic: Picturing Modern Art through the Eye of Duncan Phillips


 Orange County Museum of Art
August 6 - December 4, 2016

On August 6th the Orange County Museum of Art opens American  Mosaic: Picturing Modern Art through the Eye of Duncan Phillips. A collection of American art  from the late 1800s through the mid 1900s, the exhibition reveals the nature of art during the  formation and heyday of modern art in the United States and reflects a culture of independence,  diversity, and experimentation. Included are important works by Richard Diebenkorn, Arthur  Dove, Thomas Eakins, Helen Frankenthaler, Marsden Hartley, Winslow Homer, Edward  Hopper, Georgia O’Keeffe, Horace Pippin, and Clyfford Still. (A complete list is below.) 

The Phillips Collection, America’s first museum dedicated to modern art, was opened in 1921 in  the nation’s capital by Duncan Phillips (1886–1966), who was determined to lift the work of  American artists out of obscurity at a time when museums and collectors were primarily  interested in European old masters. With an emphasis on the work of living artists, he  assembled a collection of American painting when there were no roadmaps for what would  stand the test of time. Phillips’s collecting interests were broad-ranging. He promoted diversity—  as seen in the works by self-taught artists, artists of color, foreign-born artists, and recently  naturalized Americans—resulting in a rich assembly of independent-minded artists. 

He also  believed his collection needed to reflect the continuity of art across time. He reached back into  the 19th century to collect artists that he considered America’s first modern masters, particularly  Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, and Albert Pinkham Ryder, in order to demonstrate the  connections between past and present in American modernism.  

 Phillips dedicated his life to finding, fostering, and celebrating the very best of American art,  particularly the work of America’s living artists and especially those guided by their  independence and individualism, rather than popular trends. He collected his favorite artists in  depth, committed to purchasing “many examples of the work of artists he admired, instead of  having one example of each of the standardized celebrities.” 

He also adopted a practice  associated with commercial galleries and unprecedented in the museum setting: Phillips gave  living artists solo exhibitions. He believed that these were an important source of  encouragement for artists, especially at the beginning of their careers.   

American Mosaic: Picturing Modern Art through the Eye of Duncan Phillips, presented in six  thematic sections, demonstrates not only the changes in American art from the late nineteenth  through the mid-twentieth centuries, it also celebrates Phillips’s lifetime commitment to an  extraordinary vision and how this focus created one of the finest collections of American  art.


ARTISTS AND ARTWORKS HIGHLIGHTED IN THE EXHIBITION   

ROMANTICISM AND REALISM

  By the second half of the 19th century, young American  painters were seeking alternatives to the sentimentality of  American genre painting and with the work of independent- minded artists such as George Inness, Winslow Homer,  Thomas Eakins, and Albert Pinkham Ryder (all represented in  this exhibition), American art came of age. Considered  America’s ‘modern’ old masters by Duncan Phillips, these  artists relied more on an artistic inner vision and an exploration  of the emerging interest in psychology.   


Romanticism and Realism


 1. Albert Pinkham Ryder (1847-1917)

Moonlit Cove, early to mid-1880s

Oil on canvas

14 1/8 x 17 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1924



2. Winslow Homer (1836-1910)

To the Rescue, 1886

Oil on canvas

24 x 30 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1926



3. Thomas Eakins (1844-1916)

Miss Amelia Van Buren, c. 1891

Oil on canvas

45 x 32 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1927


4. George Inness (1825-1894)

Lake Albano, 1869

Oil on canvas

30 3/8 x 45 3/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920



5. Arthur B. Davies (1862-1928)

Along the Erie Canal, 1890

Oil on canvas

18 1/8 x 40 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920

6. Louis Michel Eilshemius (1864-1941)

Adirondacks: Bridge for Fishing, 1897

Oil on canvas

18 x 34 7/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1933


In 1886, work by the French impressionists made it to New York and transformed American  painters who took to painting outdoors, adopting a brighter palette and applying pure unmixed  color on the canvas in dabs and broken brushstrokes to create a sense—an impression—of  reflected light, air, and atmosphere. American Mosaic includes artworks by  Childe Hassam, Theodore Robinson, John Henry Twachtman, and Julian  Alden Weir, who were among the first American painters to assimilate these   principals.

Impressionism 



7. Theodore Robinson (1852-1896)

Giverny, c. 1889

Oil on canvas

16 x 22 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920



8. John Henry Twachtman (1853-1902)

The Emerald Pool, c. 1895

Oil on canvas

25 x 25 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1921


9. Julian Alden Weir (1852-1919)

The High Pasture, 1899–1902

Oil on canvas

24 1/8 x 33 1/2 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920



10. Childe Hassam (1859-1935)

Washington Arch, Spring, c. 1893 (inscribed 1890)

Oil on canvas

26 1/8 x 21 5/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1921



11. Ernest Lawson (1873-1939)

Spring Night, Harlem River, 1913

Oil on canvas, mounted on panel

25 1/8 x 30 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920



12. Theodore Robinson (1852-1896)

Two in a Boat, 1891

Oil on canvas adhered to cardboard

9 3/8 x 13 3/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1920



13. Maurice Prendergast (1858-1924)

Fantasy, c. 1917

Oil on canvas

22 5/8 x 31 5/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1921

At the turn of the 20th century, a new generation of artists including Rockwell  Kent, Marsden Hartley, and John Marin—who were dissatisfied with  impressionism’s emphasis on domesticated landscape views rendered in soft, atmospheric  light—sought to reinterpret nature in a bold, expressive manner. In 1928 Phillips wrote of Kent  that his painting captured “The dramatic, the elemental...and the cosmic,” and later referred to  Hartley as “powerful and personal and wholly American.”   

NATURE AND ABSTRACTION   

After World War I when American artists struggled to define the country’s modern identity,  Phillips was among the most adventurous collectors and museum directors, embracing bold,  original works that signaled a uniquely American style. Through the circle of artists championed  by photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz, Phillips met and collected works by Arthur Dove,  John Marin, and Georgia O’Keeffe, who believed the experience of the natural world was a  spiritual one in which nature’s essence could be made visible in abstract elements—color, form,  and line—divorced from representation.  

Forces in Nature




14. John Henry Twachtman (1853-1902)

My Summer Studio, c. 1900

Oil on canvas

30 1/8 x 30 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1919






15. Paul Dougherty (1877-1947)

Storm Voices, 1912

Oil on canvas

36 x 48 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1912






16. Rockwell Kent (1882-1971)

The Road Roller, 1909

Oil on canvas

34 1/8 x 44 1/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1918





17. Marsden Hartley (1877-1943)

Mountain Lake—Autumn, c. 1910

Oil on academy board

12 x 12 inches

Collection of The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Rockwell Kent, 1926





18. Harold Weston (1894-1972)

Winds, Upper Ausable Lake, 1922

Oil on canvas

16 x 22 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Mrs. Harold Weston, 1981





19. John Marin (1870-1953)

The Sea, Cape Split, Maine, 1939

Oil on canvas

24 1/4 x 29 1/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1940


Nature and Abstraction



20. Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986)

Large Dark Red Leaves on White, 1925

Oil on canvas

32 x 21 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1943




21. Arthur Dove (1880-1946)

Sun Drawing Water, 1933

Oil on canvas

24 3/8 x 33 5/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1933

22. Augustus V. Tack (1870-1949)

Canyon, c. 1923-24

Oil on canvas on plywood panel

29 x 40 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1924

23. Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986)

Ranchos Church, No. II, NM, 1929

Oil on canvas

24 1/8 x 36 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1930




24. Arthur Dove (1880-1946)

Red Sun, 1935

Oil on canvas

20 1/4 x 28 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1935


 MODERN LIFE   

Moving away from its roots as an agrarian culture, America at the turn  of the 20th century grew fascinated by the emergence of the city and  its newly developing energy. The first wave of American painters  interested in the grit and grim of the city became known as the  Ashcan School while a second wave of artists were more interested in  the effects of the city on the American psyche. Phillips found these  artists, such as John Sloan and later Edward Hopper, to embody all of  the complexity and contradictions of the new urban scene. Drawn to  the work of John Sloan, Phillips noted that the artist “points out not  only the crowd but the lonely individual caught in the maelstrom;” and  similarly, after acquiring Hopper’s Sunday (1926) in 1926, Phillips  described how Hopper balanced the abstraction of architectural  spaces against the psychological isolation of modern life.  The renewed sense of nationalism that settled over the country at the end of World War I  coupled with engineering advances found expression in the new ways to express pictorially the  structures of the city. 

Modern Life

 

25. John Sloan (1871-1951)

Clown Making Up, 1910

Oil on canvas

32 1/8 x 26 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1919



26. George Bellows (1882-1925)

Emma at a Window, 1920

Oil on canvas

41 1/4 x 34 3/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1924




27. Walt Kuhn (1877-1949)

Girl with Mirror, 1928

Oil on canvas

24 x 20 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1929

 



28. Guy Pène du Bois (1884-1958)

Blue Armchair, 1923

Oil on plywood panel

25 x 20 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1927

 



29. Edward Hopper (1882-1967)

Sunday, 1926

Oil on canvas

29 x 34 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1926



The City




30. John Sloan (1871-1951)

Six O’Clock, Winter, 1912

Oil on canvas

26 1/8 x 32 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1922

 


31. Stefan Hirsch (1899-1964)

New York, Lower Manhattan, 1921

Oil on canvas

29 x 34 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1925



32. Charles Sheeler (1883-1965)

Skyscrapers, 1922

Oil on canvas

20 x 13 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1926

 



33. Ralston Crawford (1906-1978)

Boat and Grain Elevators, No. 2, 1942

Oil on hardboard

20 1/8 x 16 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1943



34. Stefan Hirsch (1899-1964)

Mill Town, c. 1925

Oil on canvas

30 x 40 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1925

 



35. Edward Bruce (1879-1943)

Power, c. 1933

Oil on canvas

30 x 45 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Mrs. Edward Bruce, 1957





36. Edward Hopper (1882-1967)

Approaching a City, 1946

Oil on canvas

27 1/8 x 36 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1947


An early supporter of Charles Sheeler and his interpretations of the city  with abstract patterns of light and dark, Phillips believed his pictures expressed the impersonal  character of the time with dreamlike precision.  Millions of immigrants from Europe, Latin American, and Asia began arriving in the United  States in the late 19th century. African Americans from the rural South moved to the cities of the  North seeking freedom from oppression between 1910 and 1940. 

Phillips—who believed a  diversity of voices was an essential part of American life—was particularly attracted to work by  artists of color, including Jacob Lawrence and Horace Pippin; and the self-taught Grandma  Moses, who painted the rural life in upstate New York that she knew intimately.   

Memory and Identity

 



37. Yasuo Kuniyoshi (1893-1953)

Maine Family, c. 1922-23

Oil on canvas

30 1/4 x 24 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1940

 




38. John Kane (1860-1934)

Across the Strip, 1929

Oil on canvas

32 1/4 x 34 1/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1930

 



39. Allan Rohan Crite (1910-2007)

Parade on Hammond Street, 1935

Oil on canvas board

18 x 24 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1942



40. Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000)

Toussaint L'Ouverture series, No. 17: The Capture, 1987

Silkscreen

28 x 18 1/2 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Amistad Research Center, 1987

 



41. Jacob Lawrence(1917-2000)

Toussaint L'Ouverture series: Contemplation, 1993

Silkscreen on two ply rag paper

32 1/8 x 22 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Jacob Lawrence, 1993

 



42. Horace Pippin (1888-1946)

Domino Players, 1943

Oil on composition board

12 3/4 x 22 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1943

 



43. Grandma Moses (1860-1961)

Hoosick Falls in Winter, 1944

Oil on hardboard

19 3/4 x 23 3/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1949

 



44. Doris Lee (1905-1983)

Illinois River Town, c. 1938

Oil on canvas

32 x 50 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1939


LEGACY OF CUBISM   

Cubism, which developed in France around 1907, burst onto the American  scene in 1913. In the 1920s and 1930s, some American modernists tried to  Americanize cubism, both in style and subject matter. Russian-born Ilya  Bolotowsky, co-founder of the American Abstract Artists advocated for  order and balance through pure geometric abstraction. Karl Knaths  developed what critic Ralph Flint called a “very American, very masculine”  cubist style. Working independently, Knaths developed a highly original  style that used expressive line and planar arrangements of color to  interpret his environment, which Phillips valued for its ‘humanizing  abstraction.’   

Legacy of Cubism
 


46. Karl Knaths (1891-1971)

Maritime, 1931

Oil on canvas

40 x 32 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1931

 



47. John D. Graham (1887-1961)

Rue Brea, c. 1928

Oil on canvas

25 x 20 1/2 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Judith H. Miller, 1990
 



DEGREES OF ABSTRACTION   

By the end of the 1930s, artists in America were putting increasing emphasis on abstraction as  a universal visual language of pure form and color, whether divorced from nature or derived  from it. Moreover, many American abstract painters looked to philosophy, mathematics,  science, psychology, religion, and music to stimulate their visual reality and propel their art into  new directions; appealing to Phillips’s open mindedness in American art.  Morris Graves, steeped in Zen Buddhism and Taoism, believed in the subconscious as the  locus of creativity. Arthur Dove, while still looking to his surroundings for inspiration, eliminated  descriptive detail to concentrate exclusively on spatial, geometric, and color relationships.   

Degrees of Abstraction
 
 



51. Marsden Hartley (1877-1943)

Wild Roses, 1942, 1942

Oil on hardboard

22 x 28 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1943

 



52. Karl Knaths (1891-1971)

Deer in Sunset, 1946

Oil on canvas

36 x 42 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1948

 



53. Arthur Dove (1880-1946)

Rose and Locust Stump, 1943

Wax emulsion on canvas

24 x 32 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1944

 



54. Theodoros Stamos (1922-1997)

World Tablet, 1948

Oil on hardboard

48 x 36 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1949

 



55. Morris Graves (1910-2001)

August Still Life. 1952

Oil on canvas mounted on hardboard

48 x 40 3/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1954

ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM   

In the 1940s and 1950s, with the emergence of abstract expressionism,  the first truly international style to emerge in the United States, New York  City became the heart of avant-garde creativity and the art capital of the  world. Abstract expressionism turned American art into a global force.  The artists favored the ’authenticity’ of the individual gesture and although  they shared certain intellectual concerns and social connections, each of  the artists painted in his or her own style. Clyfford Still purged his  paintings of emblematic imagery, making dark canvases that expressed  his philosophical concerns. Younger artists Sam Francis and Richard  Diebenkorn favored expressive use of color. Helen Frankenthaler, Morris  Louis, and Kenneth Noland eliminated the use of thick pigment for a  soaking and staining technique.  

Abstract Expressionism

 



57. Clyfford Still (1904-1980)

1950 B, 1950

Oil on canvas

84 x 67 1/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1969





58. Richard Diebenkorn (1922-1993)

Berkeley No. 12, 1955

Oil on canvas 53 1/4 x 43 1/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Judith H. Miller, 1990





59. Richard Diebenkorn (1922-1993)

Interior with View of the Ocean, 1957

Oil on canvas

49 1⁄4 x 57 7/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1958





60. Philip Guston (1912-1980)

Native’s Return, 1957

Oil on canvas

64 7/8 x 75 7/8 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1958




61. Sam Francis (1923-1994)

Blue, 1958

Oil on canvas

48 1/4 x 34 3/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1958






62. Kenneth Noland (1924-2010)

April, 1960

Acrylic on canvas

16 x 16 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1960








63. Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011)

Canyon, 1965

Acrylic on canvas

44 x 52 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

The Dreier Fund for acquisitions and funds given by Gifford

Phillips, 2001





64. Milton Avery (1885-1965)

Black Sea, 1959

Oil on canvas

50 x 67 3/4 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Acquired 1965






65. Morris
Louis

Approach, 1962

Acrylic on canvas

83 1/4 x 28 inches

The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

Gift of Judith H. Miller, 1990


American Mosaic: Picturing Modern Art through the Eye of Duncan Phillips showcases  extraordinary examples from these American art movements by some of the nation’s most  important artists. The 65 paintings and one sculpture, created between the 1860s and 1960s,  offer a thematic journey that reveals the breadth of America’s modernist vision. For more than  40 years, Duncan Phillips was a major force in promoting American modernism, through  acquisitions, exhibitions, and the presentation of American art in his museum, The Phillips.    

American Mosaic: Picturing Modern Art through the Eye of Duncan Phillips has been organized  by The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.  The exhibition is presented by Visionaries.