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“L.A. Raw” RADICAL CALIFORNIA by Patricia Cronin
“L.A. Raw” hris Burden Donatello, 1975 RADICAL CALIFORNIA private collection by Patricia Cronin Maverick independent curator Michael Duncan has mounted a visceral, hair-raising survey exhibition of figurative art by more than 40 Los Angeles artists in “L.A. RAW: Abject Expressionism in Los Angeles 1945-1980, from Rico LeBrun to Paul McCarthy,” Jan. 22-May 20, 2012, at the Pasadena Museum of California Art. The show is a revelatory part of the Getty Initia- Nancy Buchanan tive’s 60-exhibition extravaganza “Pacific Standard Time,” whose various Wolfwoman, 1977 events have been reviewed prolifically byArtnet Magazine’s own Hunter courtesy of the artist and Drohojowska-Philp. Cardwell Jimmerson Contemporary Art In Los Angeles, artists responded to post-war existential questions in a dramatically different fashion than their East Coast counterparts. While the New York School turned to Abstract Expressionism (simultaneously shift- ing the epicenter of the art world from Paris and Europe), artists in L.A. fashioned a much more direct and populist response to the realities of the Vietnam war, the horrors of Auschwitz and Hiroshima, and the threat of McCarthyism. The hallmark of this kind of work is the expressively distort- ed human body, constitutig a new, distinctly West Coast kind of human- ism. Of the 41 artists in the show, ten percent had fled Europe and immigrated to the U.S., and nearly half of them, including the occult performance art- Rico Lebrun The Oppressor (after de Sade, 6–8) ist Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995), served in the Armed Forces in WWII. 1962 Ben Sakoguchi was sent to a wartime internment camp when he was only courtesy of Koplin Del Rio Gallery, four years old, and Kim Jones served in Vietnam. -
Galka Scheyer: Eine Jüdische Kunsthändlerin (Braunschweig, 26-28 Nov 19)
Galka Scheyer: eine jüdische Kunsthändlerin (Braunschweig, 26-28 Nov 19) Braunschweig, 26.–28.11.2019 Eingabeschluss: 30.04.2019 Katrin Keßler, Bet Tfila - Forschungsstelle für jüdische Architektur in Europa [English below] Die Malerin, Kunsthändlerin und –sammlerin Galka Scheyer, geboren 1889 als Emilie Esther Schey- er, stammte aus einer Braunschweiger Unternehmerfamilie, der die seinerzeit größte Konservenfa- brik der Stadt gehörte. Für ein jüdisches Mädchen aus gutbürgerlichem Haus ist ihre Biographie überraschend. Ihr Weg führte sie bis in die USA, wo sie seit 1924 lebte und 1945 in Hollywood starb. Eine allgemeine Bekanntschaft erlangte sie nicht, wohl aber die „Blaue Vier“, die sie gemein- sam mit vier anerkannten Künstlern des Weimarer Bauhauses gründete: Paul Klee, Wassily Kand- insky, Lyonel Feininger und Alexej von Jawlensky. Anfangs hatte Emilie Scheyer eigene künstlerische Ambitionen. Im Alter von 16 Jahren hatte sie Deutschland verlassen, um in England, Frankreich, Belgien und der Schweiz Malerei, Bildhauerei und Musik zu studieren. In der Schweiz lernte sie 1916 Jawlensky kennen und beschloss, nicht mehr selbst künstlerisch tätig zu sein, sondern ihre Energie der Vermittlung und dem Verkauf sei- ner Werke zu widmen. Mit der Gründung der Künstlergruppe „Blaue Vier“ im Jahre 1924 wurde sie zur offiziellen Kunsthändlerin der „vier blauen Könige“, wie sie selbst „ihre“ Künstler nannte. Sie organisierte zahlreiche Ausstellungen und Lichtbildvorträge, unternahm Reisen durch Europa, die USA und Asien. Mit einer internationalen Tagung wollen die Bet Tfila – Forschungsstelle für jüdische Architektur und das Städtische Museum Braunschweig in Kooperation mit der Stadt Braunschweig diese bedeutende Tochter der Stadt in den Blickpunkt nehmen. Trotz der großen Bedeutung der von ihr vertretenen Künstler in der Kunstgeschichte des frühen 20. -
OBITUARY: Sum of His Parts: John Coplans (1920-‐2003
OBITUARY: Sum of His Parts: John Coplans (1920-2003) ARTFORUM, Jan 2004 http://www.mutualart.com/OpenArticle/Sum-of-His-Parts--John-Coplans--1920- 200/6576ED6A4646BBD5 An obituary for John Coplans, an international photographer who died in Aug 2003 at the age of 83 is presented. Among other things, Coplans became an internationally successful photographer oVer the last two decades by focusing his lens on his intensely personal yet oddly alien terra incognita. To readers under a certain age (say, thirty-five), the name John Coplans probably conjures pictures of a hairy, schlumpy, climacteric bag of flesh. Turning his body into a liVing landscape tableau, Coplans became an internationally successful photographer oVer the last two decades by focusing his lens on this intensely personal yet oddly alien terra incognita. Photography was in fact the third full career Coplans, who died last August at age eighty-three, enjoyed. In his lifetime, the Britishborn, South African-raised figure neVer followed the straight trajectory. If it is rare to find an indiVidual who flourishes in a new milieu when most are tidying up the achieVements of a lifelong pursuit, "lateness" is hardly a conceit foreign to Coplans`s biography. Indeed, his record is inflected both by the notion of belatedness and by its antonymic partner, prescience. As a curator at the Pasadena Art Museum in the mid-`6os, Coplans was among the earliest champions of Pop art and a Vociferously sympathetic critic of the work of Roy Lichtenstein and especially Andy Warhol. (He organized a surVey of Pop as early as 1:963 and later was responsible for retrospectiVes of Lichtenstein and Warhol as well as the 1968 "Serial Imagery" exhibition.) But despite his reputation as a curator ahead of the curVe, Coplans largely abandoned museum work until 1978, when he became director of the Akron Art Museum. -
Caroline Huber
ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG ORAL HISTORY PROJECT The Reminiscences of Caroline Huber Columbia Center for Oral History Research Columbia University 2015 PREFACE The following oral history is the result of a recorded interview with Caroline Huber conducted by Alessandra Nicifero on May 29, 2015. This interview is part of the Robert Rauschenberg Oral History Project. The reader is asked to bear in mind that s/he is reading a transcript of the spoken word, rather than written prose. Huber – 1 – 1 Transcription: Audio Transcription Center Session #1 Interviewee: Caroline Huber Location: Pasadena, California Interviewer: Alessandra Nicifero Date: May 29, 2015 Q: Okay, so my name is Alessandra Nicifero. I’m here with Caroline Huber. It’s May 29, 2015. Thanks for agreeing to be here. Huber: You’re welcome. My pleasure. Q: So why don’t we start talking briefly about where you were born, where you grew up? Huber: I was born outside of Philadelphia. I grew up in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, which is about twenty minutes from downtown Philadelphia. I lived there until I went off to college and then lived up and down the East Coast until I moved to Houston. Now I’m out here in California. Q: So when did you discover art? What’s your first memory of it? Huber: Well actually when I was young I used to draw a lot. I took art classes in the fifth or sixth grade after school and really loved it. It was just something I really loved to do. Then I stopped doing it and then I took some more in high school. -
De Wain Valentine
DE WAIN VALENTINE Born in 1936 in Fort Collins, CO, US Lives and Works in Los Angeles, CA, US SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2019 Almine Rech Gallery, New York, US (UPcoming) 2017 Ruhrtriennale 2017, Ruhr, Germany 2015 Almine Rech Gallery, London, UK David Zwirner, New York, NY, US 2014 Almine Rech Gallery, Paris, France 2012 "DeWain Valentine : Human Scale," GMOA, Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA, US 2011 "From Start To Finish: DeWain Valentine’s Gray Column (1975-76)," Presented By The Getty Conservation Institute, Getty Center / J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA, US 2010 Ace Gallery Beverly Hills, Beverly Hills, CA, US 2009 Museum Of Design Art & Architecture. SPf: AGallery, Culver City, CA, US 2008 Scott White ContemPorary Art, San Diego, CA, US 2005 Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, CA, US 1993 Galerie Simonne Stern, New Orleans, LA, US 1991 Works Gallery, Long Beach, CA, US 1985 Honolulu Academy Of Arts, ContemPorary Arts Center, Honolulu, HI, US 1984 Thomas Babeor Gallery, La Jolla, CA, US 1983 Madison Art Center, Madison, WI, US 1982 Thomas Babeor Gallery, La Jolla, CA, US Missouri Botanical Garden, La Jolla, CA, US Laumeier Gallery, Laumeier International SculPture Park, St. Louis, MO, US 1981 Projects Studio One, Institute For Art And Urban Resources, New York, NY, US 1979 Los Angeles County Museum Of Art, Los Angeles, CA, US Fine Arts Gallery, University Of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, US 1975 La Jolla Museum Of Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA, US Long Beach Museum Of Art, Long Beach, CA, US Art Gallery, California State University Northridge, -
Hans Ulrich Obrist a Brief History of Curating
Hans Ulrich Obrist A Brief History of Curating JRP | RINGIER & LES PRESSES DU REEL 2 To the memory of Anne d’Harnoncourt, Walter Hopps, Pontus Hultén, Jean Leering, Franz Meyer, and Harald Szeemann 3 Christophe Cherix When Hans Ulrich Obrist asked the former director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Anne d’Harnoncourt, what advice she would give to a young curator entering the world of today’s more popular but less experimental museums, in her response she recalled with admiration Gilbert & George’s famous ode to art: “I think my advice would probably not change very much; it is to look and look and look, and then to look again, because nothing replaces looking … I am not being in Duchamp’s words ‘only retinal,’ I don’t mean that. I mean to be with art—I always thought that was a wonderful phrase of Gilbert & George’s, ‘to be with art is all we ask.’” How can one be fully with art? In other words, can art be experienced directly in a society that has produced so much discourse and built so many structures to guide the spectator? Gilbert & George’s answer is to consider art as a deity: “Oh Art where did you come from, who mothered such a strange being. For what kind of people are you: are you for the feeble-of-mind, are you for the poor-at-heart, art for those with no soul. Are you a branch of nature’s fantastic network or are you an invention of some ambitious man? Do you come from a long line of arts? For every artist is born in the usual way and we have never seen a young artist. -
Maven of Modernism: Galka Scheyer in California April 7–Sept
October 2016 Media Contacts: Leslie C. Denk | [email protected] | (626) 844-6941 Emma Jacobson-Sive | [email protected] | (323) 842-2064 Maven of Modernism: Galka Scheyer in California April 7–Sept. 25, 2017 Pasadena, CA—The Norton Simon Museum presents Maven of Modernism: Galka Scheyer in California, an exhibition that delves into the life of Galka Scheyer, the enterprising dealer responsible for the art phenomenon the “Blue Four”—Lyonel Feininger, Alexei Jawlensky, Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. In California, through the troubling decades of the Great Depression and the Second World War, German- born Scheyer (1889–1945) single-handedly cultivated a taste for their brand of European modernism by arranging exhibitions, lectures and publications on their work, and negotiating sales on their behalf. Maven of Modernism presents exceptional examples from Scheyer’s personal collection by the Blue Four artists, as well as works by artists including Alexander Archipenko, László Moholy-Nagy, Pablo Picasso Head in Profile, 1919 Emil Nolde (German, 1867-1956) and Diego Rivera, which was given to the Pasadena Art Institute in the Watercolor and India ink on tan wove paper 14-1/2 x 11-1/8 in. (36.8 x 28.3 cm) Norton Simon Museum, The Blue Four Galka Scheyer Collection early 1950s. All together, these works and related ephemera tell the © Nolde Stiftung Seebüll, Germany fascinating story of this trailblazing impresario, who helped shape California’s reputation as a burgeoning center for modern art. Galka Scheyer was born Emilie Esther Scheyer in Braunschweig, Germany, in 1889, to a middle-class Jewish family. -
Kunsthändler Und -Sammler Art Dealers and Collectors
Kunsthändler und -sammler Art dealers and collectors Die Eigentümergeschichte der Kunstwerke aus dem Bestand des Museum Berggruen bildet das Leitmotiv der Ausstellung. Die Namen derer, die mit e history of ownership of the artworks from the collection of the Museum den Werken in Berührung kamen oder deren Eigentum sie waren, lesen sich Berggruen is the leitmotif of the exhibition. e names of those who came wie ein „Who is Who“ der Kunstwelt der ersten Häle des 20. Jahrhunderts: into contact with the works or who owned them read like a "Who's Who" of Kunsthändler wie Alfred Flechtheim, Paul Rosenberg, Daniel-Henry Kahn- the art world of the rst half of the 20th century: Art dealers such as Alfred weiler oder Karl Buchholz, die Klee-Enthusiastin Galka Scheyer sowie die Flechtheim, Paul Rosenberg, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler or Karl Buchholz, Sammler Alphonse Kann, Douglas Cooper und Marie-Laure Comtesse the Klee-enthusiast Galka Scheyer as well as the art collectors Alphonse de Noailles. Kann, Douglas Cooper and Marie-Laure Comtesse de Noailles. Die Kunstwerke rufen damit nicht nur ihre Besitzer und Eigentümer in e artworks do not only remind us of their owners and proprietors, whose Erinnerung, deren Lebensgeschichte in historische Ereignisse eingebettet biographies is embedded in historical events. eir provenances also express ist. Ihre Provenienzen drücken auch die Vielfalt der emen aus, welche die the variety of themes that shape the history of 20th century art: the popula- Geschichte von Kunst im 20. Jahrhunderts prägen: die Popularisierung der risation of Modernism, the development of the international art market, the Moderne, die Entwicklung des internationalen Kunstmarktes, die Emigra- emigration of art dealers and collectors and the translocation of artworks, tion von Kunsthändlern und Sammlern und die Translokation von Kunst- the art policy and the art looting of the National Socialists between 1933 werken, die Kunstpolitik und der Kunstraub der Nationalsozialisten and 1945. -
Paul Klee, 1879-1940 : a Retrospective Exhibition
-— ' 1" I F" -pr,- jpp«_p —^ i / P 1^ j 1 11 111 1 I f^^^r J M • •^^ | Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library and Archives http://www.archive.org/details/paulklee1879klee PAUL KLEE 1879 1940 A RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION ORGANIZED BY THE SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM IN COLLABORATION WITH THE IMSADENA ART MUSEUM 67-19740 © 1967, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number: Printed in the United States of America PARTICIPATING IIVSTITITIOWS PASADENA ART MUSEUM SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF ART COLUMBUS GALLERY OF FINE ARTS CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART WILLIAM ROCKHILL NELSON GALLERY OF ART, KANSAS CITY BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, GALLERY OF ART. ST. LOUIS PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART Paul Klee stated in 1902: "I want to do something very modest, to work out by myself a tiny formal motif, one that my pencil will be able to encompass without any technique..."'. Gradually he intensified his formal and expressive range, proceeding from the tested to the experimental, toward an ever deepening human awareness. Because of his intensive concentration upon each new beginning, categories fall by the wayside and efforts to divide Klee's work into stable groupings remain unconvincing. Even styl- istic continuities are elusive and not easily discernible. There is nothing in the develop- ment of his art that resembles, for example. Kandinsky's or Mondrian s evolution from a representational toward a non-objective mode. Nor is it possible to speak of "periods" in the sense in which this term has assumed validity with Picasso. -
'Pacific Standard Time' Art Exhibitions in L.A. — Review
Reprints This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. You can order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers here or use the "Reprints" tool that appears next to any article. Visit www.nytreprints.com for samples and additional information. Order a reprint of this article now. November 10, 2011 A New Pin on the Art Map By ROBERTA SMITH LOS ANGELES — The postwar art of Southern California is a house with many mansions, a great number of which are now open for viewing. I refer of course to the cacophonous, synergistic, sometimes bizarre colossus of exhibitions known as “Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945- 1980,” which is rampant throughout the Los Angeles region. It sharply divides our knowledge of postwar art — not just Californian but American — into two periods: before and after “Pacific Standard Time.” Before, we knew a lot, and that lot tended to greatly favor New York. A few Los Angeles artists were highly visible and unanimously revered, namely Ed Ruscha and other denizens of the Ferus Gallery, that supercool locus of the Los Angeles art scene in the 1960s, plus Bruce Nauman and Chris Burden, but that was about it. After, we know a whole lot more, and the balance is much more even. One of the many messages delivered by this profusion of what will eventually be nearly 70 museum exhibitions is that New York did not act alone in the postwar era. And neither did those fabulous Ferus boys. Los Angeles may have entered the postwar years with little to speak of in the way of a contemporary art world, but within a decade it was more than making up for lost time. -
Hans Burkhardt (1904-1994)
237 East Palace Avenue Santa Fe, NM 87501 800 879-8898 505 989-9888 505 989-9889 Fax [email protected] Hans Burkhardt (1904-1994) An extremely prolific artist, Hans Burkhardt remained relatively silent in the Los Angeles art world, choosing to let his artworks express his feelings and thoughts. A forerunner of abstracted, expressionist painting, particularly amid the more conservative Los Angeles figurative painters in the late 1930s, Burkhardt nonetheless based his experimentation on a solid artistic foundation. The order and balance in Burkhardt’s compositions derive from his training as a draughtsman and his belief in the importance of underpinning painting with strong drawing skills. Following the advice of his mentor, Arshile Gorky, who had often directed the young artist, “painting is not more than drawing with paint,” Burkhardt always created sketches in pencil, pastel, or ink before beginning a canvas in oil. As a result, his compositions exhibit a strong sense of structure and design, even in their abstraction. Burkhardt drew motifs from nature, internalizing them and creating a highly personal, abstract realization of the scene or event. In a 1974 interview for the Archives of American Art, the artist explained that for him paintings evolve out of emotions and ideas—a process not unlike the Surrealist’s conception of the genesis of creative thought. Burkhardt recognized associations to things and people in nature. In his canvases, objects became symbols (for example, two nails transformed into lovers under a moonlit sky.) The symbolic and expressive content of these motifs derives from the artist’s deeply felt humanism and compassion. -
Oral History Interview with June Wayne, 1970 August 4-6
Oral history interview with June Wayne, 1970 August 4-6 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 June Wayne on August 4, 1970. The interview took place in Los Angeles, CA, and was conducted by Paul Cummings for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Interview Tape 1, Side 1 PAUL CUMMINGS: It's August 4 - Paul Cummings talking to June Wayne in her studio. Well, how about some background. You were born in Chicago? JUNE WAYNE: Yes, I was. I understand I was born at the Lying-In Hospital on the Midway in Chicago. Right in the shadow of the University of Chicago. PAUL CUMMINGS: And then you went to Gary, Indiana? JUNE WAYNE: I went to Gary when I was an infant. I don't know whether I was a year old or two years old. I do know that I was back in Chicago by the time I was four or five. So my stay in Gary was very brief. Incidentally, I have memories of Gary, of the steel mills at night, those giant candles with the flutes of fire coming out of the stacks. I also remember very vividly picking black-eyed Susans along the railroad tracks of the Illinois Central in Gary. I must have lived somewhere nearby. My grandmother used to take me for walks along there. I can remember that very significantly. I have lots of memories of Gary.