Joan Mitchell Born 1925 in Chicago
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Oral History Interview with Ann Wilson, 2009 April 19-2010 July 12
Oral history interview with Ann Wilson, 2009 April 19-2010 July 12 Funding for this interview was provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art. Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. 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 recorded interview with Ann Wilson on 2009 April 19-2010 July 12. The interview took place at Wilson's home in Valatie, New York, and was conducted by Jonathan Katz for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. This transcript has been lightly edited for readability by the Archives of American Art. The reader should bear in mind that they are reading a transcript of spoken, rather than written, prose. Interview ANN WILSON: [In progress] "—happened as if it didn't come out of himself and his fixation but merged. It came to itself and is for this moment without him or her, not brought about by him or her but is itself and in this sudden seeing of itself, we make the final choice. What if it has come to be without external to us and what we read it to be then and heighten it toward that reading? If we were to leave it alone at this point of itself, our eyes aging would no longer be able to see it. External and forget the internal ordering that brought it about and without the final decision of what that ordering was about and our emphasis of it, other eyes would miss the chosen point and feel the lack of emphasis. -
Oral History Interview with Edward Dugmore, 1994 May 13-June 9
Oral history interview with Edward Dugmore, 1994 May 13-June 9 Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. 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 Edward Dugmore on May 13, 1993. The interview was conducted at Edward Dugmore's home in New York by Tram Combs for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Interview ED: EDWARD DUGMORE MD: EDIE DUGMORE [MRS. DUGMORE] TC: TRAM COMBS Tape 1, Side A (45-minute tape sides) TC: This is an interview for the Archives of American Art, conducted by Tram Combs for the Archives with Edward Dugmore. There will be three voices on the tape. This is Tram Combs speaking. ED: This is Edward Dugmore. MD: And this is Edie Dugmore. TC: Edie is Mrs. Dugmore. She is sitting in on the interview for information that doesn’t come immediately to mind, and any disagreements about [our accuracy]. [all chuckle] Ed, tell us about your background, your family. ED: Okay, I was born in 1915. I have two brothers, approximately four years apart. Older brother and a younger brother. TC: Their names? ED: There’s Leonard, and then myself, and then Stanley is the youngest. My father came over from England, and my mother, and he was a photographer. TC: With your mother? MD: No. ED: No, he didn’t do that; that’s right. -
Palm Beach Modern + Contemporary Kicks Off 2019 with World-Class International Art Fair for Third Edition
PALM BEACH MODERN + CONTEMPORARY KICKS OFF 2019 WITH WORLD-CLASS INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR FOR THIRD EDITION The Palm Beach Modern + Contemporary Art Fair (PBM+C), presented by Art Miami and hosted by the City of West Palm Beach, will return for its third edition in West Palm Beach City’s Tent Site (825 S Dixie th th Hwy at Okeechobee Blvd) on Thursday, January 10 through Sunday, January 13 , 2019. PBM+C is the most important fair to take place in Palm Beach during the winter season as it brings a world-class, internationally respected group of art dealers and their artists to one of the most culturally savvy and discerning collecting audiences in the world. The fair will open on Thursday evening at 5:00pm, with an exclusive VIP Preview benefiting the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens and Joe Namath Foundation. Palm Beach Modern + Contemporary, an integral part of the prestigious Art Miami Group, which just celebrated its 29th edition of Art Miami, presents a world-class art fair in Palm Beach, which curates and offers the best investment quality works from the 20th and 21st centuries. The Fair will take place in the intimate and modern setting of a temperature controlled clear span pavilion, conveniently located behind Restoration Hardware, between CityPlace and the luxurious Hilton West Palm Beach. Collectors, art connoisseurs and art world luminaries alike will have the opportunity to acquire investment quality blue chip, modern and contemporary, and post-war works from nearly 70 top international galleries over the four days of the fair. These premier galleries come from as far as Austria, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Canada, Columbia, Venezuela and throughout the United States. -
Museum Alliance Reciprocal Membership
Museum Alliance Reciprocal Membership 2015–2016 Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth Art Gallery of Ontario The Baltimore Museum of Art Brooklyn Museum The Bruce Museum Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk Cincinnati Art Museum Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Currier Museum of Art, Manchester Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York High Museum of Art, Atlanta The Indianapolis Museum of Art Knoxville Museum of Art Milwaukee Art Museum Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth Montclair Art Museum The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston New Orleans Museum of Art The Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach Pérez Art Museum Miami Phoenix Art Museum Portland Museum of Art, ME The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art Royal Ontario Museum San Francisco Museum of Modern Art San Jose Museum of Art Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles The Vancouver Art Gallery Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art Walker Art Center, Minneapolis Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus Worcester Art Museum HBP-BMA Museum Listing_rev4.indd 1 1/9/15 10:17 PM Table of Contents Arizona Phoenix Art Museum . 4 California The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles . 4 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art ....................... 5 San Jose Museum of Art ................................... 6 Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles ........................ 6 Colorado Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center . 7 Connecticut The Bruce Museum ....................................... 7 Florida The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota ....... 8 The Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach ............... -
Reciprocal Sites Membership Program
2015–2016 Frank Lloyd Wright National Reciprocal Sites Membership Program The Frank Lloyd Wright National Reciprocal Sites Program includes 30 historic sites across the United States. FLWR on your membership card indicates that you enjoy the National Reciprocal sites benefit. Benefits vary from site to site. Please check websites listed in this brochure for detailed information on each site. ALABAMA ARIZONA CALIFORNIA FLORIDA 1 Rosenbaum House 2 Taliesin West 3 Hollyhock House 4 Florida Southern College 601 RIVERVIEW DRIVE 12621 N. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT BLVD BARNSDALL PARK 750 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT WAY FLORENCE, AL 35630 SCOTTSDALE, AZ 85261-4430 4800 HOLLYWOOD BLVD LAKELAND, FL 33801 256.718.5050 480.860.2700 LOS ANGELES, CA 90027 863.680.4597 ROSENBAUMHOUSE.COM FRANKLLOYDWRIGHT.ORG 323.644.6269 FLSOUTHERN.EDU/FLW WRIGHTINALABAMA.COM FOR UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION BARNSDALL.ORG FOR UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION FOR UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION TOUR HOURS: 9AM–4PM FOR UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION TOUR HOURS: TOUR HOURS: BOOKSHOP HOURS: 8:30AM–6PM TOUR HOURS: THURS–SUN, 11AM–4PM OPEN ALL YEAR, EXCEPT OPEN ALL YEAR, EXCEPT TOUR TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE THANKSGIVING, CHRISTMAS AND NEW Experience firsthand Frank Lloyd MAJOR HOLIDAYS. HOLLYHOCK HOUSE VISITOR’S CENTER YEAR’S DAY. 10AM–4PM Wright’s brilliant ability to integrate TUES–SAT, 10AM–4PM IN BARNSDALL PARK. VISITOR CENTER & GIFT SHOP HOURS: SUN, 1PM–4PM indoor and outdoor spaces at Taliesin Hollyhock House is Wright’s first 9:30AM–4:30PM West—Wright’s winter home, school The Rosenbaum House is the only Los Angeles project. Built between and studio from 1937-1959, located Discover the largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright-designed 1919 and 1923, it represents his on 600 acres of dramatic desert. -
Art in America
MAGAZINE NOV. 01, 2013 THE PARSONS EFFECT by Judith E. Stein, Helène Aylon Betty Bierne Pierson, the rebellious, selfassured offspring of an old New York family, was 13 when she visited the historic Armory Show in 1913 and set her course on becoming an artist. Her conservative parents acquiesced to art lessons but drew the line at higher education for women. At 20, she married Schuyler Livingston Parsons, a man of wealth and social standing. He proved to be as captivated by men Betty Parsons, 1963. as she was by women, and a gambler and an alcoholic to boot. The Photo Alexander Liberman. The Getty couple divorced amicably in Paris, where she spent the 1920s in Research Institute, Los comfort, sharing her life with Adge Baker, a British art student, and Angeles. © J. Paul Getty Trust. taking classes with Ossip Zadkine and Antoine Bourdelle, among others. Her friends included expatriate Americans Hart Crane, Man Ray, Alexander Calder, and Gerald and Sara Murphy, as well as lesbian literati Gertrude Stein, Natalie Barney and Janet Flanner. Disinherited after her divorce, Parsons also lost her alimony support when the stock market crashed. Generous girlhood friends aided her return to the U.S. in 1933, first to Hollywood, where her acquaintances numbered Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Tallulah Bankhead, Dorothy Parker and Robert Benchley. She then lived in Santa Barbara, teaching art, painting portraits and consulting on French wines at a liquor store. In 1935, she funded a move to New York by selling her engagement ring. Parsons's loyal circle supplemented the slender income she earned from sales of her own art and from commissions by dealers such as Mrs. -
Poetics of Color Natvar Bhavsar
Poetics of Color Natvar Bhavsar Sundaram Tagore Gallery Poetics of Color Natvar Bhavsar Acknowledgements Ajay Bhavsar Janet Bhavsar Rajeev Bhavsar Janice Bouley First published in the United States of America in 2006 Rebecca Costanzo by Sundaram Tagore Gallery 547 West 27th Street Devika Daulet-Singh New York, New York 10001 Rukminee Guha Thakurta Tel 212 677 4520 Fax 212 677 4521 Barbara Eagle Email [email protected] Faina Goldstein www.sundaramtagore.com Gina Im Text © Sundaram Tagore Gallery Aranka Israni Photographs © Natvar Bhavsar Susan McCaffrey All rights reserved under international copyright conventions. Carter Ratcliff No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted Naomi Rivas in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, George Schmidt including photocopy, recording, or any other information Emily Steiger storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. Kelly Tagore Sundaram Tagore Design Rukminee Guha Thakurta/Photoink Gad Zehavi Printer Pragati Offset Pvt. Ltd. Gallery Statement Since our inception in 2000, we have devoted ourselves to bringing together artists of various disciplines who are exploring the confluence of Western and non-Western cultures. In addition to showing the work of our international roster of visual artists, we have been privileged to host numerous nonprofit cultural events. We strongly believe in the inseparable nature of art and will continue to stimulate the exchange of ideas and push intellectual, artistic and cultural boundaries by helping artists of all kinds exhibit, perform, and produce their work. Sundaram Tagore Executive Director 7 Natvar Bhavsar To say how Natvar Bhavsar’s paintings look, you have to say what his colors do. -
Paul Robeson Galleries
Paul Robeson Galleries Exhibitions 1979 Green Magic April 9 – June 29, 1979 An exhibition consisting of two parts: Green Magic I and Green Magic II. Green Magic I displayed useful plants of northern New Jersey, including history, properties, and myths. Green Magic II displayed plant forms in art of the ‘70’s. Includes the work of Carolyn Brady, Brad Davis, Jim Dine, Tina Girouard, George Green, Hanna Kay, Bob Kushner, Ree Morton, Joseph Raffael, Ned Smyth, Pat Steir, George Sugarman, Fumio Yoshimura, and Barbara Zucker. Senior Thesis Exhibition May 7 – June 1, 1979 An annual exhibition of work by graduating Fine Arts seniors from Rutgers – Newark. Includes the work of Hugo Bastidas, Connie Bower, K. Stacey Clarke, Joseph Clarke, Stephen Delceg, Rose Mary Gonnella, Jean Hom, John Johnstone, Mathilda Munier, Susan Rothauser, Michael Rizzo, Ulana Salewycz, Carol Somers Kathryn M. Walsh. Jazz Images June 19 – September 14, 1979 An exhibition displaying the work of black photographers photographing jazz. The show focused on the Institute of Jazz Studies of Rutgers University and contemporary black photographers who use jazz musicians and their environment as subject matter. The aim of the exhibition was to emphasize the importance of jazz as a serious art form and to familiarize the general public with the Jazz Institute. The black photographers whose work was exhibited were chosen because their compositions specifically reflect personal interpretations of the jazz idiom. Includes the work of Anthony Barboza, Rahman Batin, Leroy Henderson, Milt Hinton, and Chuck Stewart. Paul Robeson Campus Center Rutgers – The State University of New Jersey 350 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. -
Emuseum of Modernart, 11 West 53 Street, Newyork, N, Y
..~ Museum of Modern Art No.4; 53 Street, NewYork, N.Y. 10019 Circle 5·8900 Cable, Modernart FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, May 11, 1965 PRESS PREVIEW: Monday,Mey 10, 1965 11 a.m, - 4 p.m. ICANCOLLAGES,anexhibition from The Museumof Modern Art's special program of traveling exhibitions, will interrupt its current tour end be shCMnat the Museum from May11 through July 25. Twice as manyexhibitions are circulated in the United States and Canada by the Museum'SDapartment of Circulating Exhibitions as are shown yearly at the Museum in NewYork. Last year the exhibitions "lere seen in 139 com- MoMAExh_0766_MasterChecklist munities. The same department, in charge of the Kuseum's foreign program of Circu- lating Exhibitions sponsored by the International Council of the Museum, has prepared 75 exhibitions secu in 65 countries. I The<lOrksin the collage sbow, dating from 1950 to the present, deal with a I i The term I mediumwhich has grown in importance only during the last fifty years. "collage," from the French for pasting or paper-hanging, has been broad ly interpreted I as a technique of cutting and pasting various materials which are aometimes combined with drawing, watercoloor or oil. The exhibition includes the work of someof the foremost makers of collage in I li I this country __ Robert Motherwell, Esteban Vicente, Conred Marca-Rel and Joseph Cornell _ as well as other artists who have broadened the medium. Kynaston McShine, whodirected the exhibition, writes, "[Collage] has been a means of creative liberation, leading us to recogGize not only the beauty of ephemera but also that of texture and spatial effects different from those of painting and sculpture. -
Decolonial Aesthetics
8.50 CAD / USD ART / CULTURE / POLITICS / States of Coloniality Kency Cornejo p.24 / Leah Decter and Carla Taunton p.32/Sakahàn p.40 / Decter andCarlaTaunton Cornejop.24/Leah Kency Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa p.11 /DavidGarneaup.14 p.11 /JulieNagamp.22 Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa Berlin Reed p.4 / Miguel Rojas-Sotelo p.5 / Gordon Brent Ingramp.7/ Brent Berlin Reedp.4/MiguelRojas-Sotelop.5 /Gordon Heidi McKenzie p.8/DecolonialAestheticsManifesto p.10 HeidiMcKenzie / Jacqueline HoangNguyenp.49 isDayani Cristal? /Who p.50 Read-in p.43 / Time Lapsed p.46 / Border Cultures p.47 / p.47 Lapsedp.46 Cultures Read-in p.43 /Time /Border DECOLONIAL AESTHETICS Taghavi and Tannis andTannis Taghavi Hashemi, Maryam BONUS! Poster byGitaPoster Nielsen Artist’s FUSE MAGAZINE 36 – 4 FALL 2013 EDITORIAL EXPERIENCE STATES OF POST TORONTO COLONIALITY/ TRANSFORMED DECOLONIAL BY ARTISTS AESTHETICS OCTOBER 5 A i W 11 eiw 20 ei, les, SUNSET TO Forever Bicyc SUNRISE C This issue of FUSE was produced col- Decoloniality is cast, by Walter Mignolo and other h 1 r members of the Transnational Decolonial Institute, as the radical i 1 laboratively with the e-fagia organization. Based s 0 t other of modernity-coloniality. Throughout a diffuse and influential in 2 , in Toronto, e-fagia was founded in 2004 with the body of work, they write of a decoloniality of knowledge, being and e e One night only. I n r i v h mandate of promoting digital art, focusing on Latin aesthetics. Within this framework, decolonial aesthetics acknowl- in c g a edges and subverts the presence of colonial power and control in & M American and Canadian artists. -
Ernest Briggs' Three Decades of Abstract Expressionist Painting
Ernest Briggs' Three Decades its help in allowing artists of the period to go to school. They were set of Abstract Expressionist Painting free economically, and were allowed to live comfortably with tuition and supplies paid for. The Fine Arts School would last about 3 years Ernest Briggs, a second generation Abstract Expressionist painter under McAgy. The program took off due to the presence of Clyfford known for his strong, lyrical, expressive brushstrokes, use of color and Still, Ad Reinhardt, along with David Park, Richard Diebenkorn, Elmer sometimes geometric composition, first came to New York in late 1953. Bischoff and others. Most of the students at the school, about 40-50 He had been a student of Clyfford Still at the California School of Fine taking painting, such luminaries as Dugmore, Hultberg, Schueler and Arts. Frank O’Hara first experienced the mystery in the way Ernest Crehan, had had some exposure to art through university or art school. Briggs’ splendid paintings transform, and the inability to see the shape But there had been no exposure to what was going on in New York or in as a shape apart from interpretation. Early in 1954, viewing Briggs’ first Europe in the art world, and Briggs and the others were little prepared one man show at the Stable Gallery in New York, O’Hara said in Art for the onslaught that was to come. in America “From the contrast between the surface bravura and the half-seen abstract shapes, a surprising intimacy arises which is like The California Years seeing a public statue, thinking itself unobserved, move.” With the entry of Still, the art program would “blow apart”. -
Jake Berthot
Jake Berthot 1939 Born in Niagara Falls, NY 1941 Family moves to Clearfield, PA 1959 Moves to New York, NY 1960-61 Studies at New York School for Social Research, New York, NY 1960-62 Studies at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York, NY Teaches at Cooper Union, New York, NY 1976 Venice Biennial, Venice, Italy 1981 Receives Guggenheim Fellowship 1982 Resident Artist, Skowhegan School, Skowhegan, ME Teaches at Yale University, New Haven, CT 1983 National Endowment for the Arts Grant 1992 Teaches at the School of Visual Arts, New York, NY Present Lives and works in Accord, NY One Person-Exhibitions 2006 “Ink Drawings: The Artist and Model,” Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild, Woodstock, NY 2005 Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY 2004 "Jake Berthot: 1968 - Present," Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA 2002 “The Dark Paintings,” Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA 2001 “Jake Berthot, New Paintings,” McKee Gallery, New York, NY 2002 "Landscape Paintings & Drawings," Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA 1999 "Trees: Drawings and Texts," Humanities Gallery, The Cooper Union, New York, NY 1998 “Paintings and Drawings,” Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA 1997 “New Paintings and Drawings,” McKee Gallery, New York, NY 1996 “Drawings,” McKee Gallery, New York, NY “Enamel Drawings," Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA 1995 “Jake Berthot: The Red Paintings,” Nielsen Gallery, Boston, MA “Jake Berthot,” Jaffe-Friede and Strauss Galleries, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 1994 “Jake Berthot: The Kristin Paintings and Works on Paper,” David McKee Gallery, New York, NY “Jake Berthot : Paintings and Works on Paper,” David McKee Gallery, New York, NY 1992 “Jake Berthot - Paintings,” Toni Oliver Gallery, Sydney, Australia.