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Diego Giacometti 1901-1985
Diego Giacometti 1901-1985 La promenade des amis Tapis en laine, édition à 100 exemplaire, 1984 Dimensions : 240 x 175 cm Dimensions : 94.49 x 68.90 inch 32 avenue Marceau 75008 Paris | +33 (0)1 42 61 42 10 | +33 (0)6 07 88 75 84 | [email protected] | galeriearyjan.com Diego Giacometti 1901-1985 Biography Young brother of Alberto Giacometti, Diego grew up in Stampa in the family farm where his father Giovanni Giacometti - Swiss post-impressionist and Fauvism painter - used to make their daily furniture. By the way, the father introduced the young boy to art. From a solitary nature, Diego shared his childhood with animals in the village and the farm. This privileged relation with animals will always guide him during his artistic life. Diego Giacometti was resistant to studies and preferred to pose for his eldest brother instead of going to school. After mediocre studies, he lived a travelling life from 1919. He especially travelled to Egypt where the symbolism of the cat left its mark on his future works. In 1925, he settled in Paris and joined his brother Alberto who was studied sculpture with Antoine Bourdelle. The first years were especially difficult for Diego who only found sporadic jobs in factories or offices. In 1927, Alberto found a little sculptor's studio. From then on, Diego will constantly be his co-worker. Beyond his exceptional savoir-faire and his indisputable manual dexterity he also brought some ideas. He assisted his brother by creating some bases and display stands for his sculptures. This is how he turned almost naturally to furniture's making. -
L'été Giacometti À La Fondation Maeght by Michel Gathier
www.smartymagazine.com L'été Giacometti à la Fondation Maeght by Michel Gathier >> SAINT-PAUL-DE-VENCE Toujours chez Alberto Giacometti revient ce fil incandescent de la sculpture comme si celle-ci, de ses mains, se réconciliait avec son point d'origine, délivrée de sa matière, réduite à la seule vérité du nerf qui l'organise et lui donne vie. Alberto Giacometti est à la fois celui qui parle de l'origine et qui trace un autre chemin. « L'homme qui marche » est pétri de cendre et, tel le chien ou le chat de ses sculptures, il renifle des miettes de lumière pour continuer à vivre. La lumière, ce fut son père Giovanni qui, dans la peinture, la célébra. Né en 1868, il inaugura une lignée familiale d'artistes qui durant plus d'un siècle perpétua cette croyance en l'art, cette volonté folle de découvrir la vérité du monde. La Fondation Maeght nous raconte aujourd'hui cette histoire-là qui est celle du feu et de la cendre, celle des braises qui nourrissent de nouvelles flammes pour croire en la vie. Cette aventure s'incarne dans cette famille qui, dans la peinture, la sculpture, la décoration ou l’architecture, embrassa le monde de sa passion créatrice. Giovanni eut trois fils. Alberto, l'aîné, rayonne encore du bronze de ses sculptures émaciées et son œuvre s'expose aujourd'hui à Saint Paul de Vence comme au Forum Grimaldi de Monaco. Entre l'ombre et la lumière, le plein et le vide, il nous place au cœur de l'acte créateur – celui que Nietzsche évoquait dans « La naissance de la tragédie » : l'opposition fondamentale entre le principe apollinien lié à la lumière et au feu et le principe dionysiaque sous les auspices de l'obscurité et de l'effacement. -
Alberto Giacometti: a Biography Sylvie Felber
Alberto Giacometti: A Biography Sylvie Felber Alberto Giacometti is born on October 10, 1901, in the village of Borgonovo near Stampa, in the valley of Bregaglia, Switzerland. He is the eldest of four children in a family with an artistic background. His mother, Annetta Stampa, comes from a local landed family, and his father, Giovanni Giacometti, is one of the leading exponents of Swiss Post-Impressionist painting. The well-known Swiss painter Cuno Amiet becomes his godfather. In this milieu, Giacometti’s interest in art is nurtured from an early age: in 1915 he completes his first oil painting, in his father’s studio, and just a year later he models portrait busts of his brothers.1 Giacometti soon realizes that he wants to become an artist. In 1919 he leaves his Protestant boarding school in Schiers, near Chur, and moves to Geneva to study fine art. In 1922 he goes to Paris, then the center of the art world, where he studies life drawing, as well as sculpture under Antoine Bourdelle, at the renowned Académie de la Grande Chaumière. He also pays frequent visits to the Louvre to sketch. In 1925 Giacometti has his first exhibition, at the Salon des Tuileries, with two works: a torso and a head of his brother Diego. In the same year, Diego follows his elder brother to Paris. He will model for Alberto for the rest of his life, and from 1929 on also acts as his assistant. In December 1926, Giacometti moves into a new studio at 46, rue Hippolyte-Maindron. The studio is cramped and humble, but he will work there to the last. -
German Expressionism: the Second Generation (Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1988): 10-37
Stephanie Barron, “Introduction” to Barron (ed.), German Expressionism: The Second Generation (Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1988): 10-37. The notion that all the significant achievements of German Expressionism occurred before 1914 is a familiar one. Until recently most scholars and almost all exhibitions of German Expressionist work have drawn the line with the 1913 dissolution of Die Brücke (The Bridge) in Berlin or the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Peter Selz’s pioneering study German Expressionist Painting, published in 1957, favored 1914 as a terminus as did Wolf-Dieter Dube’s Expressionism, which appeared in 1977. It is true that by 1914 personal differences had led the Brücke artists to dissolve their association, and Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) had disintegrated when Wassily Kandinsky returned from Munich to Russia and Franz Marc volunteered for war service. Other artists’ associations also broke up when their members were drafted. Thus, the outbreak of the war has provided a convenient endpoint for many historians, who see the postwar artistic activities of Ernst Barlach, Max Beckmann, Oskar Kokoschka, Kathe Kollwitz, and others as individual, not group responses and describe the 1920s as the period of developments at the Bauhaus in Weimar or of the growing popularity of Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity). The years 1915-25 have been lost, or certainly not adequately defined, as a coherent and potent, albeit brief, idealistic period in the evolution of German Expressionism. More recent scholarship, including Dube’s Expressionists and Expressionism (1983) and Donald E. Gordon’s Expressionism- Art and Idea (1987), sees the movement as surviving into the 1920s. -
Moments in Time: Lithographs from the HWS Art Collection
IN TIME LITHOGRAPHS FROM THE HWS ART COLLECTION PATRICIA MATHEWS KATHRYN VAUGHN ESSAYS BY: SARA GREENLEAF TIMOTHY STARR ‘08 DIANA HAYDOCK ‘09 ANNA WAGER ‘09 BARRY SAMAHA ‘10 EMILY SAROKIN ‘10 GRAPHIC DESIGN BY: ANNE WAKEMAN ‘09 PHOTOGRAPHY BY: LAUREN LONG HOBART & WILLIAM SMITH COLLEGES 2009 MOMENTS IN TIME: LITHOGRAPHS FROM THE HWS ART COLLECTION HIS EXHIBITION IS THE FIRST IN A SERIES INTENDED TO HIGHLIGHT THE HOBART AND WILLIAM SMITH COLLEGES ART COLLECTION. THE ART COLLECTION OF HOBART TAND WILLIAM SMITH COLLEGES IS FOUNDED ON THE BELIEF THAT THE STUDY AND APPRECIATION OF ORIGINAL WORKS OF ART IS AN INDISPENSABLE PART OF A LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION. IN LIGHT OF THIS EDUCATIONAL MISSION, WE OFFERED AN INTERNSHIP FOR ONE-HALF CREDIT TO STUDENTS OF HIGH STANDING TO RESEARCH AND WRITE THE CATALOGUE ENTRIES, UNDER OUR SUPERVISION, FOR EACH OBJECT IN THE EXHIBITION. THIS GAVE STUDENTS THE OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN MUSEUM PRACTICE AS WELL AS TO ADD A PUBLICATION FOR THEIR RÉSUMÉ. FOR THIS FIRST EXHIBITION, WE HAVE CHOSEN TO HIGHLIGHT SOME OF THE MORE IMPORTANT ARTISTS IN OUR LARGE COLLECTION OF LITHOGRAPHS AS WELL AS TO HIGHLIGHT A PRINT MEDIUM THAT PLAYED AN INFLUENTIAL ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND DISSEMINATION OF MODERN ART. OUR PRINT COLLECTION IS THE RICHEST AREA OF THE HWS COLLECTION, AND THIS EXHIBITION GIVES US THE OPPORTUNITY TO HIGHLIGHT SOME OF OUR MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS. ROBERT NORTH HAS BEEN ESPECIALLY GENER- OUS. IN THIS SMALL EXHIBITION ALONE, HE HAS DONATED, AMONG OTHERS, WORKS OF THE WELL-KNOWN ARTISTS ROMARE BEARDEN, GEORGE BELLOWS OF WHICH WE HAVE TWELVE, AND THOMAS HART BENTON – THE GREAT REGIONALIST ARTIST AND TEACHER OF JACKSON POLLOCK. -
Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 A
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Hollow Man: Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Art History by Joanna Marie Fiduccia 2017 Ó Copyright by Joanna Marie Fiduccia 2017 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Hollow Man: Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 by Joanna Marie Fiduccia Doctor of Philosophy in Art History University of California, Los Angeles, 2017 Professor George Thomas Baker, Chair This dissertation presents the first extended analysis of Alberto Giacometti’s sculpture between 1935 and 1945. In 1935, Giacometti renounced his abstract Surrealist objects and began producing portrait busts and miniature figures, many no larger than an almond. Although they are conventionally dismissed as symptoms of a personal crisis, these works unfold a series of significant interventions into the conventions of figurative sculpture whose consequences persisted in Giacometti’s iconic postwar work. Those interventions — disrupting the harmonious relationship of surface to interior, the stable scale relations between the work and its viewer, and the unity and integrity of the sculptural body — developed from Giacometti’s Surrealist experiments in which the production of a form paradoxically entailed its aggressive unmaking. By thus bridging Giacometti’s pre- and postwar oeuvres, this decade-long interval merges two ii distinct accounts of twentieth-century sculpture, each of which claims its own version of Giacometti: a Surrealist artist probing sculpture’s ambivalent relationship to the everyday object, and an Existentialist sculptor invested in phenomenological experience. This project theorizes Giacometti’s artistic crisis as the collision of these two models, concentrated in his modest portrait busts and tiny figures. -
Maler Der Frühen Moderne 8. September 2017 Bis 28. Januar 2018
FERDINAND HODLER Maler der frhen Moderne 8. September 2017 bis 28. Januar 2018 Medienkonferenz: Donnerstag, 7. September 2017, 11 Uhr Inhalt 1. Allgemeine Informationen Seite 2 2. Informationen zur Ausstellung Seite 4 3. Biografie Ferdinand Hodler Seite 6 4. Wandtexte Seite 10 5. Publikation Seite 15 6. Rahmenprogramm zur Ausstellung (Auswahl) Seite 16 7. Laufende und kommende Ausstellungen Seite 23 Leiter Unternehmenskommunikation / Pressesprecher Sven Bergmann T +49 228 9171–204 F +49 228 9171–211 [email protected] Allgemeine Informationen Dauer 8. September 2017 bis 28. Januar 2018 Intendant Rein Wolfs Kaufmnnischer Geschftsfhrer Dr. Bernhard Spies Kuratorin Dr. Monika Brunner Ausstellungskuratorin Dr. Angelica Francke Leiter Unternehmenskommunikation / Sven Bergmann Pressesprecher Publikation / Presseexemplar 35 € / 17 € ffnungszeiten Dienstag und Mittwoch: 10 bis 21 Uhr Donnerstag bis Sonntag: 10 bis 19 Uhr Feiertags: 10 bis 19 Uhr Freitags fr angemeldete Gruppen und Schulklassen ab 9 Uhr geffnet Montags geschlossen Eintritt regulr / ermigt / Familienkarte 10 € / 6,50 € / 16 € Happy-Hour-Ticket 7 € fr alle Ausstellungen Dienstag und Mittwoch: 19 bis 21 Uhr Donnerstag bis Sonntag: 17 bis 19 Uhr (nur für Individualbesucher) ffentliche Turnusfhrungen Mittwochs: 18 Uhr Sonn- und feiertags: 14 Uhr 3 € / ermigt 1,50 €, zzgl. Eintritt Kinderfhrungen Sonn- und feiertags, 14 Uhr Teilnahme frei mit Eintrittskarte Audioguide 4 € / ermßigt 3 € Deutsch und Englisch Audiodeskription fr Blinde: 2 € Mediaguide in Gebrdensprache: 2 € Knstlerische Konzeption und Produktion des Audioguides durch Linon Verkehrsverbindungen U-Bahn-Linien 16, 63, 66 und Bus- Linien 610, 611 und 630 bis Heussallee / Museumsmeile Parkmglichkeiten Parkhaus Emil-Nolde-Strae Navigation: Emil-Nolde-Strae 11, 53113 Bonn Presseinformation (dt. / engl.) www.bundeskunsthalle.de/presse Informationen zum Programm T +49 228 9171–243 und Anmeldung zu F +49 228 9171–244 Gruppenfhrungen [email protected] Allgemeine Informationen (dt. -
250 Years Later: Swiss Art Takes Center Stage on the Day Christie’S Turns 250 5 December 2016
PRESS RELEASE | ZURICH FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | 8 NOVEMBER 2016 250 YEARS LATER: SWISS ART TAKES CENTER STAGE ON THE DAY CHRISTIE’S TURNS 250 5 DECEMBER 2016 Zurich – Christie’s Zurich has the privilege to be one of the company’s two salerooms to stage an auction on the actual day that Christie’s turns 250. On 5 December 1766 James Christie, the founder of today’s world leading art business, held his first auction in London, offering an array of objects – from 4 irons to 4 Indian glass panels. Within a couple of months James Christie revolutionised the auction business by staging the first ever stand-alone painting auction on 20 March 1767. This tradition will continue on 5 December 2016, when Christie’s will present 80 works of Swiss Art – a category which has held stand-alone auctions for 25 years in Zurich. After setting a new world auction record for Le Corbusier (1887-1965) when selling the sculpture La Femme, for over CHF 3 million in Zurich two years ago, Hans-Peter Keller and his Swiss Art team are delighted to present Le Corbusier’s Ozon, Opus I, realized in 1947. Ozon, was the small village in the French Pyrenees, Le Corbusier and his wife moved to, when the Germans marched into Paris in 1940. Here, he continued to develop the form and lines of the female body and integrated the findings into his work – not only in his sculptures but also into his drawings, paintings and his architecture projects. Opus I is a clear reference to the organ Le Corbusier was most fascinated by, the human ear, which developed its own dynamism throughout the artist’s oeuvre (estimate: CHF 400,000- 600,000). -
Annual Report 1995
19 9 5 ANNUAL REPORT 1995 Annual Report Copyright © 1996, Board of Trustees, Photographic credits: Details illustrated at section openings: National Gallery of Art. All rights p. 16: photo courtesy of PaceWildenstein p. 5: Alexander Archipenko, Woman Combing Her reserved. Works of art in the National Gallery of Art's collec- Hair, 1915, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund, 1971.66.10 tions have been photographed by the department p. 7: Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, Punchinello's This publication was produced by the of imaging and visual services. Other photographs Farewell to Venice, 1797/1804, Gift of Robert H. and Editors Office, National Gallery of Art, are by: Robert Shelley (pp. 12, 26, 27, 34, 37), Clarice Smith, 1979.76.4 Editor-in-chief, Frances P. Smyth Philip Charles (p. 30), Andrew Krieger (pp. 33, 59, p. 9: Jacques-Louis David, Napoleon in His Study, Editors, Tarn L. Curry, Julie Warnement 107), and William D. Wilson (p. 64). 1812, Samuel H. Kress Collection, 1961.9.15 Editorial assistance, Mariah Seagle Cover: Paul Cezanne, Boy in a Red Waistcoat (detail), p. 13: Giovanni Paolo Pannini, The Interior of the 1888-1890, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon Pantheon, c. 1740, Samuel H. Kress Collection, Designed by Susan Lehmann, in Honor of the 50th Anniversary of the National 1939.1.24 Washington, DC Gallery of Art, 1995.47.5 p. 53: Jacob Jordaens, Design for a Wall Decoration (recto), 1640-1645, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund, Printed by Schneidereith & Sons, Title page: Jean Dubuffet, Le temps presse (Time Is 1875.13.1.a Baltimore, Maryland Running Out), 1950, The Stephen Hahn Family p. -
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973) Hibou 1953 Ed. 18/25 pcs Terre de faïence blanche à engobes polychromes rouge et noir H. 32.5 cm Numéroté et tamponné au dessous : Edition Picasso 18 Madoura Picasso, Catalogue de l'oeuvre céramique édité 1947-1971, par Alain Ramié, Editions Madoura, Vallauris, 1988, illustré en couleur p.147 sous le no.224. Provenance : Collection privée, Perpignan (cadeau de l'artiste) Exposition : Collection permanente, Musée national Picasso, Paris, autre numéro de la même série. Littérature : Ceramica de Picasso, par Georges Ramié, Ediciones Poligrafa, S.A, 1974, Barcelone, illustré en noir et blanc p.291 sous le no.705, et référence p.291 sous le même numéro. Picasso, Catalogue de l'oeuvre céramique édité 1947-1971, par Alain Ramié, Editions Madoura, Vallauris, 1988, illustré en couleur p.147 sous le no.285. Picasso : Editions céramique, Galerie Madoura, 1988, affiche de l'exposition avec modèle similaire illustré. Picasso : Les années Vallauris, par Anne Dopffer et Johanne Lindskog, Ed. RMN, 2018, illustré en couleur p.239 sous le no.III.186 Description : Serait-il possible que l'inspiration tombe du ciel ? L'improbable histoire de Pablo Picasso et sa rencontre avec un jeune hibou, alors nommé Ubu, témoigne que, parfois, l'influence peut littéralement tomber du ciel. L'année 1946 marque le début d'une camaraderie entre l'artiste et un hibou blessé. CBA S.A. 10 rue de l'Hôtel de Ville CH-1204 Genève Tel +41 22 827 24 24 [email protected] Bailly Gallery 114, rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, 75008, Paris Tel +33 1 42 66 22 72 baillygallery.com "Chaque fois que le hibou reniflait Picasso, il criait, Cochon, Merde et d'autres obscénités, juste pour montrer que lui-même était encore plus mal élevé que l'animal, mais les doigts de Picasso pensés petits, étaient robuste ainsi le hibou ne lui faisait aucun mal. -
Alberto Giacometti
ALBERTO GIACOMETTI ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Genius manifest in art Texts by Beat Stutzer, Franco Monteforte, Casimiro Di Crescenzo, Christian Dettwiler Genius manifest in art ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Alberto Giacometti, 1901–1966 by Beat Stutzer* Page I: Alberto Giacometti in the courtyard to his atelier in Paris, ca. 1958. This portrait is featured on Switzerland’s 100-franc banknote. On this page: Alberto Giacometti in his atelier in Paris, ca. 1952. Left: Alberto Giacometti’s Self-portrait , ca. 1923. Oil on canvas, on wood: 55 x 32 cm. Kunsthaus Zürich, Alberto Giacometti Foundation. Alberto Giacometti ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Virtually every book or article on Alberto bathed in sunlight. Its bare landscape and Giacometti includes some element of tough climate had a great influence on the biography. Some publications illuminate rural population here. The people of Bergell Giacometti’s life through the use of a spe - were used to hardship and deprivation, as cial literary treatment, -
GÜNTER KONRAD Visual Artist Contents
GÜNTER KONRAD visual artist contents CURRICULUM VITAE 4 milestones FRAGMENTS GET A NEW CODE 7 artist statement EDITIONS 8 collector‘s edition market edition commissioned artwork GENERAL CATALOG 14 covert and discovered history 01 - 197 2011 - 2017 All content and pictures by © Günter Konrad 2017. Except photographs page 5 by Arne Müseler, 80,81 by Jacob Pritchard. All art historical pictures are under public domain. 2 3 curriculum vitae BORN: 1976 in Leoben, Austria EDUCATION: 2001 - 2005 Multi Media Art, FH Salzburg DEGREE: Magister (FH) for artistic and creative professions CURRENT: Lives and works in Salzburg as a freelance artist milestones 1999 First exhibition in Leoben (Schwammerlturm) 2001 Experiments with décollages and spray paintings 2002 Cut-outs and rip-it-ups (Décollage) of billboards 2005 Photographic documentation of décollages 2006 Overpaintings of décollages 2007 Photographic documentation of urban fragments 2008 Décollage on furniture and lighting 2009 Photographic documentation of tags and urban inscriptions 2010 Combining décollages and art historical paintings 2011 First exhibition "covert and discovert history" in Graz (exhibition hall) 2012 And ongoing exhibitions and pop-ups in Vienna, Munich, Stuttgart, | Pörtschach, Wels, Mondsee, Leoben, Augsburg, Nürnberg, 2015 Purchase collection Spallart 2016 And ongoing commissioned artworks in Graz, Munich, New York City, Salzburg, Serfaus, Singapore, Vienna, Zirl 2017 Stuttgart, Innsbruck, Linz, Vienna, Klagenfurt, Graz, Salzburg commissioned artworks in Berlin, Vienna, Tyrol, Obertauern, Wels 2018 Augsburg, Friedrichshafen, Innsbruck, Linz, Vienna, Klagenfurt, Graz, Salzburg, Obertauern, commissioned artworks in Linz, Graz, Vienna, Tyrol, OTHERS: Exhibition at MAK Vienna Digital stage design, Schauspielhaus Salzburg Videoscreenings in Leipzig, Vienna, Salzburg, Graz, Cologne, Feldkirch Interactive Theater Performances, Vienna (Brut) and Salzburg (Schauspielhaus), organizer of Punk/Garage/Wave concerts..