Review of Monet in the 20Th Century, by Paul Tucker Steven Z
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936-Present
BLURRING BOUNDARIES THE WOMEN OF AMERICAN ABSTRACT ARTISTS, 1936-PRESENT TRAVELINGTRAVELING EXHIBITIONEXHIBITION SERVICESERVICE TRAVELING EXHIBITION SERVICE 1 2 BLURRING BOUNDARIES BLURRING BOUNDARIES The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936 – Present The stamp of modern art is clarity: clarity of color, clarity of forms and of composition, clarity of determined dynamic rhythm, in a determined space. Since figuration often veils, obscures or entirely negates purity of plastic expression, the destruction of the particular form for the universal one becomes a prime prerequisite. Perle Fine (1905-1988) 1. Claire Seidl, Neither Here Nor There, 2016, oil on linen. Courtesy of the Artist. 1 TRAVELING EXHIBITION SERVICE 3 erle Fine’s declaration for the hierarchy of distilled form, immaculate line, and pure color came close to P being the mantra of 1930s modern art—particularly that of American Abstract Artists (AAA), the subject of a new exhibition organized by the Ewing Gallery and the Clara M. Eagle Gallery entitled Blurring Boundaries: The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936 – Present. Founded during the upheavals of America’s Great Depression, AAA was established at a time when museums and galleries were still conservative in their exhibition offerings. With its challenging imagery and elusive meaning, abstraction was often presented as “not American,” largely because of its derivation from the European avant-garde. Consequently, American abstract artists received little attention from museum and gallery owners. Even the Museum of Modern Art, which mounted its first major exhibition of abstract art in 1936, hesitated to recognize American artists working within the vein of abstraction. (MoMA’s exhibition Cubism and Abstract Art, groundbreaking at the time for its non- representational content, filled four floors with artwork, largely by Europeans.) This lack of recognition from MoMA angered abstract artists working in New York and was the impetus behind the founding of American Abstract Artists later that year. -
Pure Psychic Chance Radio: 2016 Jim Leftwich
Pure Psychic Chance Radio: 2016 Jim Leftwich Table of Contents Pure Psychic Chance Radio: Essays 2016 1. Permission slips: Thinking and breathing among John Crouse's UNFORBIDDENS 2. ACTs (improvised moderate militiamen: "Makeshift merger provost!") 3. Applied Experimental Sdvigology / Theoretical and Historical Sdvigology 4. HOW DO YOU THINK IT FEELS: On The Memorial Edition of Frank O’Hara’s In Memory of My Feelings 5. mirror lungeyser: On Cy Twombly, Poems to the Sea XIX 6. My Own Crude Rituals 7. A Preliminary Historiography of an Imagined Ongoing: 1830, 1896, 1962, 2028... 8. In The Recombinative Syntax Zone. Two Bennett poems partially erased by Lucien Suel. In the Recombinative Grammar Zone. 9. Three In The Morning: Reading 2 Poems By Bay Kelley from LAFT 35 10. The Glue Is On The Sausage: Reading A Poem by Crag Hill in LAFT 32 11. My Wrong Notes: On Joe Maneri, Microtones, Asemic Writing, The Iskra, and The Unnecessary Neurosis of Influence 12. Noisic Elements: Micro-tours, The Stool Sample Ensemble, Speaking Zaum To Power 13. TOTAL ASSAULT ON THE CULTURE: The Fuck You APO-33, Fantasy Politics, Mis-hearing the MC5... 14. DIRTY VISPO: Da Vinci To Pollock To d.a.levy 15. WHERE DO THEY LEARN THIS STUFF? An email exchange with John Crouse 16. FURTHER SUBVERSION SEEMS IN ORDER: Reading Poems by Basinski, Ackerman and Surllama in LAFT 33 17. A Collage by Tom Cassidy, Sent With The MinneDaDa 1984 Mail Art Show Doc, Postmarked Minneapolis MN 07 Sep '16 18. DIRTY VISPO II (Henri Michaux, Christian Dotremont, derek beaulieu, Scott MacLeod, Joel Lipman on d.a.levy, Lori Emerson on the history of the term "dirty concrete poetry", Albert Ayler, Jungian mandalas) 19. -
Ben Aronson Biala, Nell Blaine, Jane Freilicher
October 9, 2010 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Ben Aronson Risk and Reward October 21 – November 27 The Tibor de Nagy Gallery is pleased to present new paintings by Ben Aronson. The exhibition marks his third with the gallery. The paintings included in the exhibition represent the artist’s recent inquiry into the realm of finance; players such as Wall Street traders and auctioneers participate actively in the commodification of art, bringing about risks as well as rewards. Despite the apparent intimacy of the painted compositions, Mr. Aronson creates a palpable distance between subject and viewer. We look directly at traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, but they do not acknowledge us. A group of three figures huddled together in a dimly-lit restaurant seem as disengaged with one another as they are with the viewer. The works, both large and small in scale, are rigorously painted and capture the ever-changing light as it both conceals and articulates the forms of the streets and buildings, some falling into shadow. Ben Aronson received both his B.A. and M.A. degrees in painting from Boston University. He has been the recipient of four National Academy of Design awards and has also taught graduate school seminars at Harvard University. His work has been exhibited and collected widely throughout the United States, most notably the Boston Museum of Fine Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the Denver Museum of Contemporary Art, among others. Catalogue Available Biala, Nell Blaine, Jane Freilicher Selected Works October 21 – November 27 The Tibor de Nagy Gallery is pleased to present a selection of paintings by the celebrated women artists whose work has been shown actively in New York since the 1950s. -
Painters of the East End
Painters of the East End JULY 11 – AUGUST 16, 2019 297 TENTH AVENUE Kasmin is pleased to announce Painters of the East End, on view at 297 Tenth Avenue between July 11 – August 16, 2019. The exhibition explores the commonalities and distinctions of the work produced amongst the coterie culture of Long Island’s South Fork during the mid-twentieth century, including Mary Abbott, Nell Blaine, Perle Fine, Helen Frankenthaler, Jane Freilicher, Elaine de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Joan Mitchell, Charlotte Park, Betty Parsons, and Jane Wilson. Artists have historically converged on Long Island seeking inspiration from the landscape and an escape from their confined urban studios, while still retaining access to the energy of New York City. With the mass influx of the European avant-garde following the onset of World War II and the subsequent establishment of the New York School, a thriving and collaborative artist-based community was born in the East End. The Hamptons of the New York School was untamed, inexpensive, and a bastion of bohemian living. The opportunities provided by the area’s open spaces were developmental for the painters who set up there not only because of their practical advantages—larger studios, relative quiet—but for novel subject-matter that allowed for contemplations of the horizon, rural landscapes, and bodies of water, nodding to the lineage of the Romantic sublime. 509 West 27th Street New York NY 10001 + 1 212 563 4474 kasmingallery.com Perhaps most crucial for these artists was their shared inspirations which led to a new model of community, differing in both structure and character from the frenetic energy of lower Manhattan. -
Oral History Interview with William Kienbusch, 1968 Nov. 1-7
Oral history interview with William Kienbusch, 1968 Nov. 1-7 Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Preface The following oral history transcript is the result of a tape-recorded interview with William Kienbusch on November 1, 1968. The interview was conducted at William Kienbusch's studio in New York by Forrest Selvig for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Interview FORREST SELVIG: This is an interview with William Kienbusch in his studio in New York City. The date is November 1, 1968, and the interviewer is Forrest Selvig. I’d like to start out first of all by asking you about your beginning as an artist. Did this start when you were at Princeton as an undergraduate? WILLIAM KIENBUSCH: Well, no, I think it started earlier. In the first place, I grew up in a household where there was a considerable interest in art. My father is a distinguished collector of medieval arms and armor, and he was always interested in painting. For example, when I was a kid after Sunday lunch at my grandmother’s my father would take me – I must have been ten years old – to the Metropolitan Museum. So that at that age, I knew who Winslow Homer was, Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, and all these people. And perhaps I got some idea at this point of the importance of art, or, you know, that it existed and people were concerned about it. I went to boarding school; I went to Hotchkiss Preparatory School. -
James S. Jaffe Rare Books Llc
JAMES S. JAFFE RARE BOOKS LLC OCCASIONAL LIST: NEW YORK ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR 2020 P. O. Box 930 Deep River, CT 06417 Tel: 212-988-8042 Email: [email protected] Website: www.jamesjaffe.com Member Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America / International League of Antiquarian Booksellers All items are offered subject to prior sale. Libraries will be billed to suit their budgets. Digital images are available upon request. WITH AN ORIGINAL PHOTOGRAPH 1. [ART – BURCKHARDT] KATZ, Vincent & Rudy BURCKHARDT. Boulevard Transportation. Tall 8vo, illustrated with photographs by Rudy Burkhardt, original pictorial wrappers. N.Y.: Tibor de Nagy Editions, 1997. First edition. One of 26 lettered copies signed by the artist and poet, and with an original photographic print by Burckhardt, signed with the title “Rain Pavement” and dated 1995 in pencil on the back, tipped in as a frontispiece. The image “Rain Pavement” is not one of the images reproduced in the book. A fine copy. $3,500.00 2. [ART – CELMINS] CELMINS, Vija. Drawings of the Night Sky. Oblong folio, illustrated, original linen, in publisher’s card slipcase. London: Anthony d’Offay, (2001). First edition. Limited to 480 copies signed by Celmins. Comprises portraits of the artist by Hendrika Sonnenberg and Leo Holub, reproductions of drawings by Celmins, and an essay entitled “Night Skies: The Distance Between Things” and an interview with the artist by Adrian Searle. Laid in is a separately printed insert with a portrait of the artist by James Lingwood and, on the verso, William Butler Yeats’s poem “The Lake Isle of Inisfree.” As new. $500.00 INSCRIBED BY KANDINSKY TO JAMES JOHNSON SWEENEY 3. -
A Furniture Comedy for Hans Hofmann," an "Environment" by Allan
THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART No. k8 11 WEST 53 STREET, NEW YORK 19, N. Y. F0R RELEASE: Thursday, April 18, I963 TILEPHONE: CIRCLE 5-8900 9 ' r ' W W NOTE: The special viewing of the exhibition Hans Hofmann and His Students including the "environment" described here will take place from k to 6 p.m., Wednesday, April 17, 19&3 at Santini's Warehouse, kkf West 1+9 Street. Mr. Hofmann, the other artists represented in the exhibition, and lenders have been invited. Members of the press and photographers are, of course, welcome to attend and participate. "Push and Pull - A Furniture Comedy for Hans Hofmann," an "environment" by Allan Kaprow, will be presented for an invited audience as part of a special one-day show ing of a new Museum of Modern Art circulating exhibition, Hans Hofmann and His Students, on Wednesday, April IT at Santini's Warehouse, khj West 1*9 Strset. The exhibition consists of six major paintings by the famous 83-year-old teacher and one work each by 50 well-known American artists who have been his students. The show will be shipped from the warehouse later this month to begin a year and one-half long tour of the United States* The great variety of media and styles in the exhibition is a testament to Hofmann1s ability to inspire individual creativity. According to William C, Seitz, Associate Curator of Painting and Sculpture Exhibitions who organized the show, "the Impact of Hofmann's teaching, especially on American art of the post-war period, has been invaluable. -
The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936-Present
BLURRING BOUNDARIES THE WOMEN OF AMERICAN ABSTRACT ARTISTS, 1936-PRESENT TRAVELINGTRAVELING EXHIBITIONEXHIBITION SERVICESERVICE TRAVELING EXHIBITION SERVICE 1 BLURRING BOUNDARIES The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936 – Present The stamp of modern art is clarity: clarity of color, clarity of forms and of composition, clarity of determined dynamic rhythm, in a determined space. Since figuration often veils, obscures or entirely negates purity of plastic expression, the destruction of the particular form for the universal one becomes a prime prerequisite. Perle Fine (1905-1988) 1. Claire Seidl, Neither Here Nor There, 2016, oil on linen. Courtesy of the Artist. 1 2 BLURRING BOUNDARIES TRAVELING EXHIBITION SERVICE 3 erle Fine’s declaration for the hierarchy of distilled form, immaculate line, and pure color came close to P being the mantra of 1930s modern art—particularly that of American Abstract Artists (AAA), the subject of a new exhibition organized by the Ewing Gallery and the Clara M. Eagle Gallery entitled Blurring Boundaries: The Women of American Abstract Artists, 1936 – Present. Founded during the upheavals of America’s Great Depression, AAA was established at a time when museums and galleries were still conservative in their exhibition offerings. With its challenging imagery and elusive meaning, abstraction was often presented as “not American,” largely because of its derivation from the European avant-garde. Consequently, American abstract artists received little attention from museum and gallery owners. Even the Museum of Modern Art, which mounted its first major exhibition of abstract art in 1936, hesitated to recognize American artists working within the vein of abstraction. (MoMA’s exhibition Cubism and Abstract Art, groundbreaking at the time for its non- representational content, filled four floors with artwork, largely by Europeans.) This lack of recognition from MoMA angered abstract artists working in New York and was the impetus behind the founding of American Abstract Artists later that year. -
Painterly Representation in New York: 1945-1975
PAINTERLY REPRESENTATION IN NEW YORK, 1945-1975 by JENNIFER SACHS SAMET A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Art History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2010 © 2010 JENNIFER SACHS SAMET All Rights Reserved ii This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Art History in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Date Dr. Patricia Mainardi Chair of the Examining Committee Date Dr. Patricia Mainardi Acting Executive Officer Dr. Katherine Manthorne Dr. Rose-Carol Washton Long Ms. Martica Sawin Supervision Committee THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract PAINTERLY REPRESENTATION IN NEW YORK, 1945-1975 by JENNIFER SACHS SAMET Advisor: Professor Patricia Mainardi Although the myth persists that figurative painting in New York did not exist after the age of Abstract Expressionism, many artists in fact worked with a painterly, representational vocabulary during this period and throughout the 1960s and 1970s. This dissertation is the first survey of a group of painters working in this mode, all born around the 1920s and living in New York. Several, though not all, were students of Hans Hofmann; most knew one another; some were close friends or colleagues as art teachers. I highlight nine artists: Rosemarie Beck (1923-2003), Leland Bell (1922-1991), Nell Blaine (1922-1996), Robert De Niro (1922-1993), Paul Georges (1923-2002), Albert Kresch (b. 1922), Mercedes Matter (1913-2001), Louisa Matthiasdottir (1917-2000), and Paul Resika (b. 1928). This group of artists has been marginalized in standard art historical surveys and accounts of the period. -
Selected Bibliograph | Writings on Art and Limited Editions
JOHN ASHBERY BIBLIOGRAPHY [2] John Ashbery was born in Rochester, New York, in 1927, he is well known as an art critic and poet. He is perhaps one of the best known Poets of the “New York School”. Ashbery graduated from Har- vard in 1947 where he wrote a study on his favourite poet Wallace Stevens. The poetry of Stevens has influenced Ashbery’s own poetry, however his poetry is characterized by originality in both his form of poems and their content. Ashbery received his B.A. degree in literature from Harvard in 1949 and moved to New York City where he was affiliated with poets Frank O’Hara, James Schuyler, Barbara Guest, Kenneth Koch, and painters Jane Freilicher, Larry Rivers, Nell Blaine, and Fairfield Porter.Ash- bery’s writings also include several plays, novels and distinguished works of literary criticism, as well as numerous English translations of French literature. He has also enjoyed a distinguished career as an art critic for the Paris edition of the New York Herald Tribune and Newsweek, and as editor of Art News. He is an authority, in particular, on the work of the late American realist painter Fairfield Porter. In addition to all regular editions, there have been many privately printed, small press and fine art edi- tions, as well as volumes combining several titles. Hanns Schimansky, one of the proof etchings for the Recital, with a prose poem by John Ashbery SELECTED WRITINGS ON ART AND OTHER WRITINGS Nouveau dictionnaire de la peinture moderne, published with the collaboration of John Ashbery. Paris : F. -
Abstract Art Utah Museum of Fine Arts Evening for Educators September 29, 2004, 5:30 P.M
The Most Difficult Journey: Abstract Art Utah Museum of Fine Arts Evening for Educators September 29, 2004, 5:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Table of Contents Page Contents 2 List of Postcards 3 Devil at the Keyboard, de Kooning Written by Mary Francey 4 lesson plans for Devil at the Keyboard Written by Tiya Karaus 12 Untitled, #39, Diebenkorn Written by Cori Swisher 13 lesson plan for Untitled, #39 Written by Karey Rawitscher 21 Jasmine Sidewinder, #91, Davis Written by Cori Swisher 22 lesson plan for Jasmine Sidewinder #91 Written by Andrea Heidinger 25 Three Fish, Blaine Written by Cori Swisher 26 lesson plan for Three Fish Written by Pam Thompson 42 One Cent Life, Francis Written by Cori Swisher 43 lesson plan for One Cent Life Written by Jennifer Opton 48 Gold Stone, Primary Series, Krasner Written by Cori Swisher 49 lesson plan for Gold Stone, Primary Series Written by Megan Hallett Special Thanks to Elizabeth Firmage for the digital photography in this packet. Evening for Educators is funded in part by the The Richard K. and Shirley S. Hemingway Foundation and the StateWide Art Partnership. 1 The Most Difficult Journey: Abstract Art Utah Museum of Fine Arts Evening for Educators September 29, 2004, 5:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. List of Postcards 1. Willem de Kooning (1904-1997), American Devil at the Keyboard , 1972, edition 74/75 Color lithograph on paper Purchased with funds from Friends of the Art Museum Museum # 1980.078 © 2004 The Willem de Kooning Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York 2. -
Everyday Enchantments a Collection of Artist Nell Blaine Introduction Jed Perl
Everyday Enchantments A Collection of Artist Nell Blaine Introduction Jed Perl 790 Madison Ave., Suite 604 New York, NY 10065 By Appointment Only (212) 861–1055 [email protected] sanctuaryrarebooks.com Everyday Enchantments A Collection of Artist Nell Blaine Introduction Jed Perl All inquiries: Sanctuary Books (212) 861–1055 [email protected] Table of Contents Introduction by Jed Perl 4 Biographical Scrapbooks 12 Documents of a Professional Artist 20 Artist Sketchbooks & Artist Books 30 Graphic & Commercial Design 46 School Coursework & Assignments 58 Travel Scrapbooks 68 Collection Related to Howard Griffin 74 Nell Blaine’s Library 84 Books Inscribed to Nell Blaine 90 Printing, Typography & Design Ephemera 94 2 3 Everyday Enchantments Jed Perl Nell Blaine could easily be the name of a character in an old-fashioned novel. But the painter who bore this name was altogether modern. From the joyously incisive abstractions with which she first gained a following in the 1940s to the still lifes and landscapes that preoccupied her in later years, her work was exacting and voluptuous. Blaine, who was born in Richmond, Virginia in 1922 and died in New York City in 1996, was unconventional, spirited, and inspired. The material gathered here sheds new light on Blaine’s art and life, and in doing so deepens our understanding of the forces that shaped art in mid-twentieth-century America. The beautifully organized scrapbooks, notebooks, and sketchbooks that Blaine kept document everything from the writings and drawings she produced as a child in Virginia through the career she pursued as a graphic designer in her early years in New York and her ever-grow- ing success as a painter in the 1940s, ‘50s, and ‘60s.