Friday, August 31, 2007

The Future Can Wait - Artists Announced

The Future Can Wait - Artists Announced

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McGinity 'Girl in Yellow Dress' Oil on canvas 165x120cm 2007.

LONDON.-Leading curators present the art stars of tomorrow – and today Tom Hackney, Tessa Farmer, Sarah McGinity, Gordon Cheung, Gavin Nolan, Stella Vine and Miho Sato are just some of the artists showing work in The Future Can Wait - the biggest ever museum-scale privately curated exhibition for breaking artists.

Curators Zavier Ellis and Simon Rumley have now announced the full list of artists set to exhibit in the Old Truman Brewery’s Atlantis Gallery, in what promises to be a seminal show in the future of art history. Ellis and Rumley have selected the best of what they describe as The New London School – artists whose work deals with the human condition in painting, video and installation, underpinned by an emphasis on technical expertise.

List of artists: Jennifer Allen, Dylan Atkins, Emma Bennett, Kiera Bennett, Louise Camrass, Juliana Cerqueira-Leite, Gordon Cheung, Simon Cunningham, Christopher Davies, Tessa Farmer, Nadine Feinson, Bettina Graf, Tom Hackney, David Hancock, Matthew Houlding, Sam Jackson, Chia En Jao, James Jessop, Kounosuke Kawakami, Cathy Lomax, Alexis Milne, Rui Matsunaga, Robin Mason, Sarah McGinity, Hugh Mendes, Richard Moon, Alex Gene Morrison, Rie Nakajima, Gavin Nolan, Tim Parr, Jaime Pitarch, Emma Puntis, Harry Pye, Miho Sato, Dominic Shepherd, John Stark, Erik Tidemann, Gavin Tremlett, Will Tuck, James Unsworth, Stella Vine, and Hannah Wooll.

Featuring the art stars of the moment, the show will bring together hundreds of future collectable works in one gallery space and all pieces will be for sale. The Future Can Wait will be bigger than anything of its kind that has gone before. It will also offer a contrast to the more limited viewing context of the art fair booth system by showing a wealth of work as it was originally intended – in a spectacular, spacious environment. Featuring these London-based artists for its inaugural year, The Future Can Wait will eventually take on global partners to become a primary showcase for international artists.

The Upper Belvedere Presents Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) and the Artists Company

The Upper Belvedere Presents Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) and the Artists Company

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Gustav Klimt, Sonja Knips, 1898, Oil on canvas, Belvedere, Vienna. © Belvedere.

VIENNA.-The Upper Belvedere presents Gustav Klimt and the Artists Company, on view through October 2, 2007. The Belvedere possesses the largest collection of paintings by Gustav Klimt (1862-1918) and the largest Gustav Klimt research archive in the world. Over 20 masterpieces have been integrated into the newly organized collection and provide a comprehensive view of the Austrian artist’s creative life. As one of the founders of the Vienna Secession and organizers of the Vienna Kunstschau (1908), Klimt played a key role in gaining international recognition for the Viennese avantgarde.

The Belvedere shows his development from the first confrontations with Impressionism and his Secessionist art (The Kiss, 1908) to his later work, which had a strong influence on the younger generation of Austrian artists, including Oskar Kokoschka and Egon Schiele.

Klimt and the Artists Company - The exhibition focuses on the development of Klimt and the Artists Company with some 50 exhibits (including canvases and works on paper), beginning with Klimt’s earliest work and extending through the modern period. As part of its permanent collection, the Belvedere has prepared a selection of works by the Company as well as unique pieces by Gustav Klimt, Ernst Klimt and Franz Matsch, within the context Historicist art. Central works include Gustav Klimt’s Fable (1883) and early portrait of Sonja Knips (1898), Franz Matsch’s depiction of his children Hilda and Franzi Matsch (1901), as well as paintings by the Company from Peles Castle in Sinaia, which are being shown outside of Romania for the first time. The research conducted in preparation for the exhibition and for a catalogue raisonné of Gustav Klimt’s paintings has for the first time been able to clearly identify the contributions of individual artists to the Company’s collective works.

The Origins of Historicism - Driven by a sense for the picturesque and partly inspired by the Neo-Baroque - under such artists as Gottfried Semper, Carl von Hasenauer and the theater architects Fellner and Helmer – late Historicism prompted the construction of public monuments in Vienna. Painting and design were strongly influenced by Hans Makart (1840-1884). His large-format paintings featured mythological and allegorical subjects. Among other works of art, this exhibition includes a design by him for a mural for the Empress Elisabeth’s bedroom in her Hermesvilla castle in Vienna.

During his studies at the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts (Kunstgewerbeschule), Klimt, together with his brother Ernst (1864-1892) and their class-mate Franz Matsch (1861-1942), founded the “Künstler-Compagnie” (Artists Company). The collaboration began with the design of a pageant, which Hans Makart created for the emperor and his wife in Vienna in 1879.

The Triumph of a Young Painters’ Collective - The young painters started to receive commissions for murals in palaces and public buildings. Their works were quickly produced and created an unusually bold and spontaneous impression. Commissions for the Viennese architects Fellner and Helmer for theaters in Austria-Hungary and in the Balkans were followed by works for the Romanian royal family’s Peles Castle. With the design of the spectacular staircases of the Burgtheater and of the Art History Museum in Vienna, the Company was able to establish itself as the “Ringstraße painters”.

After nearly 20 years, the studio collective was disbanded after the death of Ernst Klimt and prolonged discussions about paintings for the auditorium of the University of Vienna.

Art Students Become the “Ringstraße Painters” - Ferdinand Julius Laufberger (1829-1881), long-time director of the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts, worked hard to procure artistic commissions for financially challenged students. After the sudden death of their teacher in 1881, three of his students – Gustav Klimt, Ernst Klimt und Franz Matsch – established a studio collective and began applying for public mural commissions as the “Künstler-Compagnie”. In 1884, Franz Matsch, who had taken on the management of the company, put together an impressive letter of application to Rudolf Eitelberger, who at the time was the director of the Austrian Museum for Art and Industry:

Most Estimable Sir!
Only now that we have managed to set up our studio and settle down to work, please allow us to briefly introduce the program of our company. As Your Honor will remember, we completed large projects under the direction of our unforgettable master Professor Laufberger. He created the foundation for our collaboration, which we continued under the direction of Professor Berger.

Our master’s teachings were of such a robust, universal nature that we consider ourselves infinitely fortunate to have had the opportunity to benefit from them. As we were students of the very same master, and it is the highest goal of each of us to respect his invaluable wisdom, we believe that we are on the right path to putting his teachings into practice by working together and mutually criticizing each others’ work.

In the explanation of the work we desire to carry out, allow us to make reference again to our blessed master, Professor Laufberger, whose great creations in various areas of art and applied art, serve for us as great inspiration. We believe that our collaboration is a decisive advantage, as thanks to our greater creative energy the commission will be completed more rapidly and the sum of our experiences will grow.

Up until now, the majority of our work has been carried out in the province and in foreign countries. Our utmost desire is now to complete a larger work for our great home city and perhaps this will be the opportunity to do so. As the new monuments in Vienna are approaching their completion, and the interior decoration will only be assigned to the most qualified, only the most outstanding artists will be engaged. We are thus now turning to Your Honor with the most humble request to make use of your kind influence to mercifully help us achieve our goals.

In consideration of the fact that during our time as students Your Honor allowed us to benefit from your goodwill, we would like to humbly request that Your Honor continue to confer Your benevolent assistance upon us, as we are very much in need of it. In conclusion, allow us to remark that thanks to a studio the use of which we have been granted free of charge, we are now very much able to carry out the program described above.

With utmost respect we are most humbly Yours,
Franz Matsch
Gustav Klimt
Ernst Klimt
Atelier VI. B., Sandwirthgasse Nr. 8“1

The Company presented itself with this letter as a capable team, qualified to carry out large-scale commissions, as they were able to complete the required work more quickly and yet just as uniformly as a single artist. This extremely practical and pragmatic approach to creative work was impressed upon them in the School of Arts and Crafts, meeting the demands created by the intense construction activity inspired by Historicism on Vienna’s Ringstraße and beyond.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Because I’m worth it - Jack VETTRIANO

Because I’m worth it


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Jack Vettriano has no truck with artists who resent his success. He just knows how to sell his work

With the ease of a man for whom such things are now second nature, Jack Vettriano lets it be known that he’s playing hard to get. He is considering offers from “several” London art dealers, but he’s not saying which ones: only that he will choose from his suitors early in 2008.

This is an artist, we must remember, whose work now sells routinely for six figures; and whose huge fame is testimony to the value of astute marketing. Self-taught and sneered at by the art establishment, especially in his native Scotland, Vettriano has become arguably one of the best known painters in the world through the sale of reproductions of The Singing Butler — which sold for a record £744,000 in 2004.

Today, Sotheby’s will auction off Vettriano’s “Bluebird Collection” (paintings which hung in the Conran restaurant), predicted to fetch more than £1.2 million.

A gentle, essentially pragmatic man, he is irritated by those who carp at his success. “Artists say, how can I get only X for my work and Vettriano gets X thousand for his? Think, you stupid bugger. It’s not a bit about being a better painter than me, it’s about market forces.

“The art world is about personalities; it all depends which dealer you are with. Larry Gagosian is the most famous just now: he can take someone off the street and make them famous because everyone has faith in his judgment. A good dealer can place your paintings. Mine have very often gone straight from my easel into someone’s home, because the gallery has made a phone call. There’s a parallel with being a clothes designer: it’s not so much about your work, it’s about who’s selling it, and where.”

Last month Vettriano’s partnership with his last gallery, the Portland, run by Tom Hewlett, ended mysteriously amid unconfirmed rumours that Vettriano had failed to produce pictures for a promised exhibition. It was an exceedingly fruitful relationship while it lasted, however, and Vettriano talks of it almost in terms of a marriage.

“We had 15 great years together,” he says. “While I think that we both took a huge amount out of it in terms of putting each other on the map, we both felt it was time for a change and I’m afraid that’s all I’m going to say. I have been approached by several galleries but I’m not going to rush into any decisions because there’s no need to. I’ll think about it for the rest of this year, then make a decision early next year.” (Gagosian is not one of the dealers he is considering.)

Vettriano gives the impression of a man with a powerful sense of how fortunate he has been in his extraordinary rags-to-riches art career. The son of a Fife miner, he left school at 16 and prepared to become a mining engineer; when he was 21 someone gave him a set of watercolours for his birthday. If there is ego there, it is a very modest ego.

“Everything has worked out fabulously well. I get all the more pleasure because I never thought it was going to happen,” he says simply.

A book will be published next February called The Artist and the Studio, a photo-documentary of him at work. About 80 per cent photos and 20 per cent paintings, it will have a foreword by Ian Rankin, the crime writer, a fellow Fifer who favours the same noir interiors. “It’s shot in my studios in Kirkcaldy, London and the South of France. There are unposed pictures of me painting,” Vettriano says.

It will be as far as he has ever gone to reveal his private life, for some time the preoccupation of the tabloid newspapers. At 55, he says he is single, but does not, you sense, ever remain so for very long. Ask his friends and they laugh. “Jack just loves women,” they say. He flits between his three homes and confesses to feeling quite nomadic. “I will probably stay in France until Christmas. It’s so cheap and accessible to fly now. What’s lovely in the summer is that Globespan do a flight between Nice and Edinburgh for ¤ euros. I’m a materialist but only with my eye on investment. I didn’t start to make money until I was in my late forties and I fully understand the value of it; and I’ve seen what new money does to people, how it makes them buy gold chains and Rolexes.

“I don’t want to go out and be looked at. I refuse to go to lots of things I’m invited to. I don’t want to appear all over the place. In a way it lessens your art. I’m just uncomfortable with it and I’d rather stay in with a book.”

He was appointed OBE in 2003. But he has also, he revealed, achieved that other very British high-watermark: one of his early paintings appeared recently on Antiques Roadshow. It was signed Jack Hoggan, the name he was born with. “I started painting at 21, in 1973, and it wasn’t until 1989 that I decided to see if I could make a living and changed my name.”

During that period, he painted dozens of Hoggans, as he calls them, taking four or five at a time down to local charity fundraising exhibitions to sell for £50 each.

The expert on Antiques Roadshow said that the painting was now worth £20,000. “I disagree with that; they were just copies. I was just teaching myself to paint,” Vettriano says. “I trained myself to paint by copying other artists. That was how I learnt, by copying. I put all these different styles in a pot and there was a certain alchemy that took place and it created my individual style. Something unique came out, and I’m very grateful for that.”

Changing his name, he says, was a wonderful marketing ploy. He adopted his mother’s maiden name, Vettriano, which came from his Italian grandfather. “I’m a quarter Italian . . . ” he pauses, grinning, his hands framing his body from mid-thigh to waist “ . . . this bit.”

In both his art and in his conversation, Jack Vettriano returns to sex: not sleazily, but in a rather matter-of-fact way. This is after all the raw material, the commodity, that fuels his art. He describes the sight of the men and women near his home on the Riviera, as “a visual feast”. “Wherever you look, it’s a pleasure. The women are amazing.”

The men are probably amazing too, I venture. “I don’t look at men,” he says. Why should he? He’s the alpha male; it’s his louche fantasy. He admits that it’s usually himself he puts into his pictures. “I love the narrative of men and women. I do find it endlessly fascinating how we behave in matters of the heart, all that lying and deceit. I have never tried to deny that sex is a major interest to me and I think the difference between me and other men is that I admit it. People say to me, are you not ready to move on, but, hand on heart, all I ever wanted to do was paint people in situations I have been in. I wouldn’t deny that the work is fairly autobiographical.”

Unsurprisingly, given the dark, erotic forces in his work, if you ask him his favourite movies he lists Blue Velvet, The Cook, the Thief, his Wife & her Lover and Perfume.

Vettriano quietly gives a lot for charity and, endearingly, retains faith in human beings, as witnessed by his recent investment in a film company, Bright Shadow Films, set up in China by Charlie Moretti, a young St Andrews University graduate. One wonders how such a mentor would have changed his life at the same age. He dismisses it. “If someone had given me a helping hand, I’d be a chef by now,” he says bluntly. “If I had gone to art school I would have had all my figurative leanings knocked out of me by lecturers who didn’t like figurative art.”

Without that academic status, though, his rejection by art circles persists. His income of £500,000 a year from reproductions alone also causes jealousy. “Other artists thought I had sold out when I first agreed to sell posters, and that was for about £2,000 a year. Ask them now whether they’d like to be in my position and I wonder what they’d say. I am in a position to give a huge number of people a huge amount of pleasure, and some artists are filling their garrets with their work which no one will ever see.

“It’s a human thing to resent people that have got there faster than you. Leonard Cohen said there’s a curious side to us that, when in the company of someone whose star is shining too brightly, we try to extinguish it. That’s what happened to me in Scotland. People have been so disparaging.”

He is angered by the attitude of the Scottish establishment. “I’m the best known Scottish artist ever. I don’t say that because I’m the best painter, but because I’m the best known. The Royal Scottish Academy should be about recognising people that make an impact.”

Things may yet change. The “people’s artist” is now being courted by the Nationalist government in Scotland, and this edgy, intriguing man may yet come to get the honour he craves in his own land. Like or loathe his work, it seems only just.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

ARTSingapore 2007 Southeast Asia's Largest Contemporary Art Fair

ARTSingapore 2007 Southeast Asia's Largest Contemporary Art Fair

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Ananta Mandal, Grand Old Dame - I, 2007, watercolour on paper, 56 x 77cm, Indian Artists Network.

SINGAPORE.- It gets bigger and better every year. Held from 4 to 8 October 2007, ARTSingapore 2007 will occupy a staggering 5,000 square metres at Level 4 Hall 404 in Suntec Singapore. The fair will feature artworks from 86 galleries from 14 countries, with over S$20 million worth of art pieces on display and for sale.

Over its seven-year run, ARTSingapore, Southeast Asia’s biggest contemporary art fair, has established a reputation as a cutting-edge contemporary Asian art fair, where galleries take the opportunity to showcase classic artworks and launch new pieces by up-and-coming artists. For instance, past ARTSingapore fairs exhibited artwork by notables such as Xu Bing, Subodh Gupta and Yayoi Kusama.

As the only major contemporary art fair in Southeast Asia, ARTSingapore also serves as a trade and networking platform where gallery owners, collectors, artists and art aficionados can gather to forge business alliances, acquire new artworks, share ideas and exchange information. ARTSingapore 2007 offers an impressive array of art pieces from galleries across the region, including Australia, India, Korea, Singapore and Taiwan, as well as art pieces owned by private collectors. Some of the big names expected this year include: Affandi, Andy Warhol, Anthony Lister, Arie Smit, Chua Ek Kay, Eric Chan, Farhad Hussain, Feng Zhengjie, Fernando Botero, Guo Jin, Justin Lee, Lee Yong Deok, Liu Ye, Ngugen Xuan Manh, Prajakta Potnis, Ruan Xiaojie, Shibu Natesan, Sigma Polke, Sobodh Gupta, Srihadi, Tang Zhigang ,Soedarsono, Yayoi Kusama, Yue Minjun, Zao Wouki, Zhang Xiaogang, Zheng Delong, and Zhou Chunya.

“The art industry in Asia is growing rapidly, due to the rising wealth in the region, as well as the increasing appreciation for the visual arts among the affluent in Asia and globally. Leveraging on this trend, ARTSingapore 2007 is our biggest show ever in terms of both size and scope. Through ARTSingapore 2007, we aim to boost the visual arts market in the region with our optimal combination of the best modern art and exciting new talents from galleries and collectors all over Asia and the world,” says Chen Shen Po, organiser of ARTSingapore 2007.

In addition, collecting and investing in art is fast becoming a lifestyle statement, given Singapore’s rapid rise as one of the most affluent countries in Asia, with many comparing it to Zurich or calling it the Switzerland of Asia. With Singapore reportedly having the highest concentration of millionaires in Asia, ARTSingapore hopes to fill this niche by providing the best variety and quality of art under one roof.

ARTSingapore is more than simply an art fair. The event also offers a series of art talks by industry experts to provide art aficionados with more opportunities to interact and network with each other. Topics such as how to invest in art, the trends to look out for, as well as dialogues with prominent artists and art collectors, will allow visitors to gain some insights into the art industry, as well as fine-tune their own art collection and investment strategies.

In line with the show’s goal to enhance Asia’s visual arts scene, one of the highlights of ARTSingapore 2007 is Singapore-based Parvathi Nayar, a visual artist from India best known for her paintings and drawings which focus on the notion of fragmentary perspectives. Nayar will be displaying her works in a specially created booth and will be present at the show to interact and answer questions from fair visitors.

ARTSingapore 2007 is recognised and supported by the National Arts Council and Singapore Tourism Board. It is also part of “A Luxe Affair”, Singapore’s premium lifestyle program consisting of a lavish lineup of exclusive events, spearheaded by the Singapore Tourism Board. Presenting sponsor of ARTSingapore 2007 is Fortis and the fair is organised by ARTREACH Pte Ltd.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Giudecca795 Presents Minjung Kim

Giudecca795 Presents Minjung Kim

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Minjung Kim.

VENICE, ITALY.- Giudecca795 is proud to present Minjung Kim on exhibit for the first time in Venice, from August 25 to September 13, 2007. Opening hours: 11am-11pm. (Opening 25 August: midday-midnight). Free adm. Actv (public transport) boat lines number 41, 42, 82 to Palanca. Born in South Korea, when she was very young she began the study of painting with the greatest masters of calligraphy. At 29 she moved to Italy and continued her studies at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts, where a knowledge of Western art fostered her artistic consciousness. Her works bear a distinctively Oriental stamp. At times they are painted on white rice paper in black ink, presenting the fluidity of motion. At other times, however, the fine surface of the paper is colored and signed with a flame, producing circular forms of varying sizes. These multicolored circles are then glued to each other in concentric sequences, from smallest to largest, forming wholes that look like delicate flowers. Arranged one beside the other, their polychrome corollas form an abstract texture, suggesting a sort of psychedelic vision with hypnotic effect - as Guido Curto suggests in the catalogue "Vuoto nel Pieno" by Electa.

But.. are they really "flowers"? - "My work has always been a visualization of Zen and Tao" -- the artist says -- In these great philosophies there is the idea of the two opposed principles of void and solid, between which there exists a continuous tension that causes reality to exist. It's a deeply philosophical vision. The two opposed principles change continuously, and this constitutes the essence, the driving force that moves the world. As a painter i have very limited materials, a sheet of paper on which to express this incessant change. What I wanted to achieve is the representation of the essence of chaos, the continuous alternation of the two opposed forces. I burnt part of the sheet, the solid, and so obtained an image that united both the solid and the void. I added another sheet of paper with a hole burnt in the middle and went on like that, superimposing voids and solids. You have to remember that fire is one of the ways of cinrcumventing time. It would take several millennia for the paper to disintegrate: I accelerate this log-term mutation. I call this superimposition of burnt sheets "Void in Fullness". Flowers have nothing to do with it, but if you call them flowers or anything else it doesn't trouble me, because the visible world is made up of the truth of all things... I let people say what they like, because in the end it all comes down to the same thing"

The Artist - Born in 1962, from the age of six she studied painting under various teachers, including the famous watercolourist Yeon gyun Kang, and then Oriental calligraphy, so that she could understand the fundamental precepts of Asiatic speculative tradition.

As Giangiorgio Pasqualotto wrote, the peculiarity of Oriental writing "lies in the fact that is able to design not just the structure of each object, but also, and above all, the action, the active power and the efficacy that the object, whether material or conceptual, contains and expounds. This capacity to make visible the activity or efficacy of an objects is in perfect harmony with the way earliest Chinese culture - classical Tao - understood the universe, as it had always considered everything that is real, not as a set of objects, but as an infinite universe of processes: on the basis of this conception of the world, everything, including apparently inert objects, is invested with an active power, an energy that is not secondary to its existence".

This is what we could describe as the oriental "action painting". The study of calligraphy did not just endow Minjung Kim with this vision of the world but also taught her to communicate by means of the extremely controlled use of the brush, which "channels" the energy and directs it onto the paper.

When in 1980 she enrolled in the Hong Ik university in Seoul, Minjung had already received a very thorough artistic education which was completed through the detailed study of Oriental painting under Taejun Ha, Sunam Song and Sukhchang Hong. Once her university course had been completed in 1985, she took a Master's degree at the same university with a thesis on the four basic material in ink painting (rice paper, brush, ink pigment and the pigment grinding stone).

In 1991 she enrolled at the Brera Academy in Milan. The works of Paul Klee and Franz Kline prompted her to approach a new aesthetic direction that look her progressively away from the figurative tradition towards an investigation of the expressive value of marks and maculas, two stylistic elements that combine perfectly with the 'process-based view of the world' and the ability to 'channel the energy', both o which she learned in her study of calligraphy. During her academic studies, she learned the basics of avant-garde concepts and the expressive freedom that typifies the more recent artistic trends.

Her exploration of the interrelationship between Oriental and Western techniques and conceptions continues outside the Academy. In her pictorial work - which she always executes on the floor in keeping with Oriental tradition, because both literally and metaphorically the floor is the basic support for all painting - Minjung tends to use increasingly concentrated watercolours in order to express effectively the intensity the colours contain.

In her works made during 1998 on overlaid layers of paper, she burned sections of them to generate an effect of three-dimensionality, to provide the viewer with a chronological dimension, and to indicate layers of time symbolised by the layers of paper.

Prints Through The Ages - Old Master, Modern and Contemporary Prints at Christie's London

Prints Through The Ages - Old Master, Modern and Contemporary Prints at Christie's London

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Roy Lichtenstein, Crying Girl (Corlett II.1), offset lithograph in colours, 1963, signed in pencil. L., S. 434 x 596 mm. Estimate £20,000-30,000. © Christie's Images Ltd.




Pablo Picasso, Buste de femme au chapeau; Portrait de femme au chapeau et au corsage imprimé (Bloch 1072; Baer 1318). linocut in colours, 1962, signed in pencil, from the edition of fifty. B. 630 x 530 mm; S. 751 x 615 mm. Estimate £100,000-150,000. © Christie's Images Ltd.

LONDON.- The most varied and substantial array of Old Master, Modern and Contemporary Prints to be offered in many years at Christie’s London, will be auctioned in a two day sale on Tuesday 18 and Wednesday 19 September, 2007. A particularly broad range of Old Master Prints include works by the three leading names Albrecht Dürer, Rembrandt and Francisco de Goya, as well as an unusually large number of Italian 16th century prints .19th Century and Decorative prints are widely represented with works by John Constable, Samuel Palmer, William Blake, George Stubbs and James Abbott McNeill Whistler. The Modern section of the sale offers an extraordinarily strong selection of works by all the major names and is led by a Private Collection, Property of an American Collector. This includes Henri Matisse’s most important print Grande Odalisque à la Culotte Bayadère, 1925 (estimate: £180,000-220,000) and significant, rare works by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Further modern highlights include an important group of vibrant Picasso linocuts. The Contemporary section offers sought-after Pop art and works by American artists Donald Judd and Robert Rauschenburg. Over 600 lots will be offered, with estimates ranging from £400 through to £220,000. The sale is expected to realise in excess of £5 million.

Leading Old Master prints on Tuesday 18 September at 2pm, Durer’s A Coat of Arms with a Skull, 1503 (estimate: £50,000-80,000), exemplifies the artist’s exceptional engraving skills which capture textures and intricate details with true finesse. It is very rare that such a good impression of this print is offered at auction. Rembrandt’s Great Jewish Bride, 1635 (estimate: £12,000-18,000) is one of many works by this sought-after master to be offered. Highlights from Italian 16th century artists who add a fresh dynamic to this section include affordable and interesting works such as Parmigianino’s very rare Madonna and Child (estimate: £2,000-3,000); a chiaroscuro woodcut by Ugo da Carpi after Parmigianino, Diogenes, circa 1527, (estimate: £4,000-6,000); Annibale Carracci’s Madonna of the Swallow (with six other works), 1587 (estimate: £3,000-5,000); Domenico Campagnola’s important engraving Battle of Nude Men, 1517 (estimate: £1,200-1,800) and also Giorgio Ghisi’s Vision of Ezekeiel, 1554; with Caius Marius (estimate: £1,500-2,500).

19th Century prints include works by a splendid role call of key English artists, such as John Constable’s famous ‘English Landscape series’ (estimate: £3,000-5,000). It is rare that this series comes to auction in its entirety, complete with all 22 velvety mezzotints. Samuel Palmer’s The Bellman, 1879 (estimate: £5,000-7,000) and William Blakes’ Illustrations for the Book of Job (estimate: £10,000-15,000), will also be offered. Works by James Abbott McNeill Whistler range in theme from London scenes in Old Westminster Bridge, 1859 (estimate: £2,500-3,500) and mythology with Venus, 1859 (estimate: £5,000-7,000), to Venetian subjects with The Palaces, 1879 (estimate: £10,000-15,000) and The Two Doorways, 1879-80 (estimate: £15,000-20,000). A selection of Decorative prints includes George Stubbs’ A Horse Frightened by a Lion, 1788 (estimate: £3,000-5,000).

Modern Prints on Wednesday 19 September, include the Property of an American Collector which features notable works by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Henri de Toulouse Lautrec. Pablo Picasso’s first print, La Repas Freugal, 1904 (estimate: £50,000-70,000) will be offered, as well as seven important subjects from his Suite Vollard, 1936, ranging in estimate from £10,000 to £50,000. Works by Matisse span his early, lesser known linear etchings of 1906, his woodcuts and include a significant number of lithographs from his famous Odalisque series. The most important subject of the series is his Grand Odalisque à la Culotte Bayadère, 1925 (estimate: £180,000-220,000). an excellent impression which perfectly captures the pervasive beauty and stillness of the model. Fine early lithographs, by Toulouse-Lautrec, range from intimate theatrical scenes, through to cabaret posters. Particularly fresh colours are exemplified in his L’Anglais au Moulin Rouge, 1892 (estimate: £75,000-100,000).

Other important Modern Prints present an excellent array of works, with great depth, by major names. A group of nine unusual early prints by Joan Miro from his Série Noir et Rouge, 1938 range in estimate from £4,000-22,000. Also offered will be one of the largest groups of linocuts, by Picasso, to come to the market in recent years. The 32 prints, which are predominantly artist’s proofs, cover the dominant themes of the artist’s work in the late 1950s; bull fighting, bacanals and bold portraits. Notably, Buste de Femme d’apres Cranach, 1958 (estimate: £80,000-120,000) is Picasso’s first significant linocut, whilst Buste de Femme au Chapeau, 1962 (estimate: £100,000-150,000), is the star of the group, exemplifying unusually fresh, dynamic colours. A select group of Otto Dix’s works include the rare, first trial proof of Kriegskruppel, 1920 (estimate: £35,000-45,000) which is one of the artist’s two most important etchings depicting the ravages of World War I. Also from this Dadaist period are some very early constructivist works in black and white by El Lissitsky. Intended for an edition that was never realised, Proun 1 and Proun 2, 1919-20 (each estimated at: £15,000-20,000) are both rare proofs and unusually each is signed by the artist.

American Post-War prints by Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauchenberg, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol provide an energetic pulse to the latter portion of the sale. Works by Lichtenstein include iconic early pop images such Crying Girl, 1963 (estimate: £20,000-30,000), and mature works including Nude with Blue Hair, 1994 (estimate: £70,000-100,000). A group of six Rauchenbergs feature an x-ray of the artist’s own body, Booster, 1967 (estimate: £30,000-50,000), whilst works by Johns provide the opportunity to own one of his celebrated representations of the Flag, 1969 (estimate: £20,000-30,000), in lead relief. Some of Warhol’s earliest portraits of Elizabeth Taylor, 1964 (estimate: £4,000-6,000); Marilyn Monroe, 1967 (estimate: £40,000-60,000); James Dean, 1985 (estimate: £30,000-50,000); and Mick Jagger, 1975 (estimate: £15,000-20,000) will be offered. A unique trial proof, in gold, of Warhol’s Moon Walk, 1987 (estimate: £40,000-60,000) and a unique colour variant of Eva Mudocci, after Munch, 1984 (estimate: £70,000-100,000), are two of the most unusual works in the sale by Warhol, ‘the king’ of pop art.

Amidst the Contemporary prints, works range from Donald Judd’s minimalist portfolio Untitled, 1988 (estimate:40,000-60,000), to images by Francis Bacon, Peter Doig, Lucian Freud, Damian Hirst, David Hockney, Louise Bourgois and Chinese artist Fang Lijun with works such as No.7, 1996, (estimate: £10,000-15,000), a woodcut in three parts. Lijun utilises a traditional technique and format to create very contemporary scrolls.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Dalí Illustrates the Bible in New Exhibition at The Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg

Dalí Illustrates the Bible in New Exhibition at The Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg

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Salvador Dalí, The birth of Jesus, 1963-64 (Iesu nativitas), Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, Florida.

ST. PETERSBURG, FL.-Although he is best known for his Surrealist works, Salvador Dalí incorporated countless styles and themes into his work throughout his long and illustrious career. Many of the images he utilized in his mid and late career were religious in nature, and works featuring those themes are among the most popular of the Salvador Dalí Museum’s permanent collection. Now for the first time, the museum is presenting an exhibition of Dalí’s illustrations of selected passages from the Bible.

Commissioned by Dr. Giuseppe Albaretto, a friend of Salvador Dalí and collector of his work, as a way to encourage Dalí to re-examine his spirituality and draw him back into the Catholic Church, Dalí’s Biblia Sacra encompasses 105 paintings based on passages from the Latin Vulgate Bible. The original illustrations were completed between 1963 and 1964, with a combination of gouache, watercolor, ink and pastel and published in 1967. Verses from the Old and New Testament of the Holy Bible accompany each illustration.

Raised by a Catholic mother and an atheist father, Dalí grew up among religious and moral conflicts, exacerbated by his father’s marriage to his deceased wife’s sister, and the artist’s affair with Gala Eluard, a married woman. Although Dalí began incorporating religious and historical images into his compositions; had audiences with Popes Pius XII and John XXIII; and even renewed his marriage vows to Gala in a church ceremony, the artist’s search for faith was a life-long journey. Dali’s illustrations for the bible are among his finest illustrated works.

Dalí’s Biblia Sacra, on display in the Raymond James Community Room Gallery, is curated by Dirk Armstrong, Assistant Curator. Fifty-three of the 105 works, will be on display through November 18, 2007.

The museum will present a lecture by Dr. Keith White from the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of South Florida on the History of the Bible as Literature on Thursday, September 27 at 6 p.m. The lecture is free with paid admission ($5 after 5 p.m. on Thursdays). Admission is always free for members and USF students.

The 2006-2007 season is made possible by Progress Energy, whose continued support for arts in the community provides a benchmark for corporate engagement. Progress Energy has been a generous supporter of the Salvador Dalí Museum’s educational programs and exhibitions since 2002.

The Salvador Dalí Museum, which holds the pre-eminent American collection of the artist’s work and celebrates its 25th anniversary in 2007, is sponsored in part by the Pinellas County Cultural Affairs Department, the City of St. Petersburg, the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, and the Florida Arts Council. For more information about the Salvador Dalí Museum, please visit the Museum web site at www.SalvadorDaliMuseum.org or call (800) 442-3254.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

THE TROUBLE WITH YOUTH

THE TROUBLE WITH YOUTH

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"All modern art begins to appear comprehensible. . . when it is interpreted as an attempt to instill youthfulness into an ancient world," José Ortega y Gasset wrote in The Dehumanization of Art, adding that "Europe is entering upon an era of youthfulness."(1)

This was written over three-quarters of a century ago. A century before that, in the "Squibs" section of his Intimate Journals, Baudelaire wrote that "nowadays. . . youth itself is a priesthood -- at least according to the young."(2) The cult of youth, even of childhood -- what might be called the regressive search for the original freshness of being, for the innocent spontaneity and playfulness of the child -- is a constant of the avant-garde outlook.

Kandinsky called the child "the greatest imaginer."(3) When, in A Philosophy of Toys, Baudelaire wrote "I have. . . retained a lasting affection and a reasoned admiration for that strange statuary art which, with its lustrous neatness, its blinding flashes of color, its violence in gesture and decision of contour, represents so well childhood’s ideas about beauty,"(4) and when, in the manuscript Diverses Choses, 1896-1897, Gauguin writes that "man has certain moments of playfulness, and infantile things, far from being injurious to. . . serious work, endow it with grace, gaiety and naiveté," and that, in search of an image of the horse, he "go[es] back very far, even farther than the horses of the Parthenon. . . . as far as the toys of my infancy, the good wooden hobby-horse,"(5) he and Baudelaire are saying the same thing.

It is worth noting that both despised photography as a threat to imagination, for what Baudelaire called its "positivist" wish "to represent things as they are. . . supposing that [the self] did not exist."(6) Gauguin rejected Eadweard Muybridge’s rapid-sequence photographs of The Horse in Motion (1878), declaring that "when machines have come, art has fled," adding that "photography has never been beneficial" to artists.(7) Baudelaire’s and Gauguin’s hatred of mechanical photography is correlate with their love of children’s toys. Toys are the original primitive art -- more universally and fundamentally primitive than the so-called "savage" art of pre-industrial societies, such as Africa and Oceania, which inspired many avant-garde artists, and indeed, has become a cliché of avant-garde authenticity. Without African art we would not have Picasso’s Demoiselles d’Avignon and Cubism, and without Oceanic art we would not have Gauguin’s barbaric "ancient Eve," as he called her. Unlike the "civilized Eve" of Europe, she did not turn men into "misogynists," as he wrote to Strindberg.(8) Nor, for that matter, would Baudelaire have gone out of his way to prefer his "Black Venus," as Ortega suggests he did, in order to repudiate the classic white Venus of Europe.(9)

For Baudelaire and Gauguin the photograph was symptomatic of industrial society and instrumental reason, and thus of the realism of maturity, which involves the realization that the world does not revolve around one’s ego. And they wanted the world to revolve around them. But this narcissistic repudiation of it had to do with their inkling, implicit in their awareness that the photograph could be reproduced ad infinitum, that modern society was fundamentally a mass society. For them mechanical reproduction was the beginning of the end of the imaginative self. Mechanical reproduction meant stifling reduction to sameness, the impersonal homogeneity of universal standardization, an instrument of procrustean social control. To be a modern adult meant servitude and submission to a mechanical system -- to indifferent administrative authority. They did not want to submit, for submission meant living death, and sometimes actual death, as the first world war, which spawned the Dadaist avant-garde, demonstrated.

The toy seems unfettered by social controls and administration, for it invites lively, spontaneous play, reminding us of what, from the perspective of rational adulthood, seems irrational and purposeless, if emblematic of a lost freedom. When Gauguin wrote that we suffer from civilization, and barbarism is rejuvenation, barbarism clearly means a return to youth. The barbaric works of art he found in Oceania were children’s toys for him -- playthings and spontaneous inventions of the primitive or instinctive psyche, which means the uncivilized and thus immature psyche, if to be civilized means to be mature and rational rather than the victim of one’s barbaric instincts, seemingly ever young. The imaginative toy is the enemy of the positivistic photograph for Baudelaire and Gauguin, for it overturns our everyday consciousness while a photograph reinforces it. It puts us back in an infantile frame of mind, rejuvenating us by embodying our instincts. Baudelaire and Gauguin agree that the child’s toy is the model and inspiration for the avant-garde work of art, that is, the work of art that is true to modernity, which is a new age of youth, indeed, a hopeful new childhood for humanity, free of the fetters of traditional models of behavior and thought. To be modern is to be young, and to be young is to be modern, and to rejuvenate one’s youth and instincts is to be eternally modern.

All these ideas of avant-garde art as a youthful new golden age of art -- presumably signaling a youthful new golden age of humankind -- are several centuries old. That is, the idea of being young and modern is timeworn, shopworn, and perhaps senile and obsolete. But let us ask whether the avant-garde has grown up since it first announced its presence, assuming that youth is capable of growing up, even if it doesn’t want to. "It is true that the great tradition has got lost, and that the new one is not yet established," Baudelaire wrote in 1846.(10) Has the new one finally been established? Has avant-garde art finally come of age? It seems so, as Harold Rosenberg’s theory of the "tradition of the new" suggests. According to him, the seeds of avant-garde art were sown in Paris in 1914, that is, shortly before World War I; and shortly after World War II, in 1947, they came to fruition in New York. For Rosenberg as well as Clement Greenberg, the most prominent critics in New York at the time, American Abstract Expressionism was the consummate avant-garde art.

The point was hammered home by William Rubin, the chief curator of the Museum of Modern Art and Greenberg’s disciple, in a series of articles that appeared in Artforum magazine in 1967. Rubin traced the origin of American Abstract Expressionism to French Impressionism, Cubism and Surrealism, giving it a distinguished European pedigree. The point was made decisively in the old Museum of Modern Art building before it was remade into the new Museum of Modern Art building. On display, in sequence, was a Monet water lilies mural, Kandinsky’s paintings of the four seasons, arranged as though fragments of a mural, and, climactically, Pollock’s No. 1, 1948, another mural painting. The European paintings were presented as steps on the way to the American painting. The baton of avant-garde art had passed to New York, which won the race for it, that is, made avant-garde art palatable for the masses -- an exoteric rather than esoteric phenomenon.

Does this mean that the avant-garde ripened into a grand tradition in the central city of the New World -- an appropriate place for the New Art to become acceptable and widely respected -- shedding its youthful playfulness and irreverent novelty for a refined seriousness and wise maturity? I don’t think so. I think avant-garde youthfulness was prolonged by being institutionalized in America. It became peculiarly pretentious and over-objectified in the New York School. Ortega notes that in his "generation the manners of old age still enjoyed great prestige. So anxious were boys to cease being boys they imitated the stoop of their elders. Today children want to prolong their childhood, and boys and girls their youth."(11)

Thus, as T. W. Adorno writes, "avant-garde," a "label. . . for many decades monopolized by whoever happened to consider himself most progressive, begins to conjure up comical associations of aging youth"(12) -- an ingeniously decadent condition. Even as the avant-garde aged, it kept giving itself face-lifts -- or, as we say in America, "esthetic surgery" -- to keep itself looking permanently young, that is, immature if not fresh. Avant-garde art has a Dorian Gray complex: It wants to stay young forever. It wants to continue on its rebellious way without showing any signs of wear and tear. It refuses to recognize that it is impossible to be young and modern forever.

The rapid succession of avant-garde movements -- their endless number, each impatiently spawning another like myrmidons (impatience is endemic to avant-gardism) -- is an attempt to give avant-garde art eternal youth. Each movement is the equivalent of a face-lift. A face-lift is an artificial rejuvenation, a way of saving face -- ironically just when it begins to show character, that is, convey selfhood that can hold its own in the world, remain proudly independent even as it fully participates in it. We see such faces, intense with insight into reality, giving them their own noble reality, in the sculptural portraits of ancient Romans. Inner strength and outer fortitude uncannily mingle in their faces, giving them unique presence. The portraits show individuals stoically one with their destiny. They accept the inevitability of death even as they live intensely. Master of their own treacherous instincts and society’s treacherous ways, they have too much self-knowledge and worldly knowledge to be afraid and ashamed of aging. Indeed, they welcome maturity: They have no wish to remain young forever, for to be young forever is to be emotionally impotent.

Youth lacks the willpower and strength of character to unflinchingly face -- and cunningly outsmart -- time. Traditional art aims to do so, and decisively does so in classical art, the inspiration and source of most European art until avant-garde art repudiated and trashed it. What avant-garde art offers instead is a face-saving artificial paradise, which is Baudelaire’s idea of art. Paradise is a place where there is no time and death -- where one is always young and innocent, that is, does not have to face the real world, and have one’s face marked by it, because there is no real world. At least until one is expelled from paradise. But the avant-garde artist believes she will never be expelled from it as long as she keeps making young-looking art. In contrast, traditional art always discovers death in paradise, disillusioning us about youth, as Poussin’s Et in Arcadia Ego suggests. A face-lift is a fear-filled falsification of the truth of time, of transience. A face-lift is a futile attempt to deny the trauma of aging, decay and finally death. The signs of time can be eradicated on the outside, but time eats one up from the inside.

The face-lift the avant-garde gives art implies denial of death -- the inability to deal with tragedy, which is the tragedy of avant-garde art. I think the emergence of death imagery and memorabilia in post-avant-garde art -- art which uses avant-garde and traditional conventions to convey death in an unconventional and untraditional way, for example, the installations of Christian Boltanski, which use found imagery and objects in a grid construction -- portends a healthy future for art. I am always optimistic about art when it engages death, however inadequately -- and one can never adequately represent death and convey its inevitability.

The avant-garde wish and struggle to stay young -- which means not to change -- involves the fear of growing old and becoming traditional. It is an anxious response to the trauma of time, more subtly, the trauma of becoming obsolete, which often takes the insidious form of becoming merely of "historical interest," another period art rather than the ultimate truth of art, which is a dubious way of having one’s existence perceived and remembered, let alone validated. The avant-garde’s anxiety about growing old is a new kind of anxiety, different in kind from the anxiety in which its rebellious originality is rooted, and which haunts its creativity.

Yet the subtle anxiety about aging is reminiscent of the less subtle anxiety catalyzing avant-garde rebellion. That seminal anxiety was aroused by the intimidating impersonality of industrial mass society and the intimidating prestige of Old Master art. Both appeared to be fated -- inescapable. Both were of historical consequence, indeed, grandly significant. And both were indifferent to the individual -- to the difference an individual can make, the serious difference the avant-garde artist struggled to make, the urgently needed difference that would give her the identity and mastery she felt modern society and traditional art could never give her, for she could not identify with and inhabit them. They were too existentially alien to satisfy her need for a sense of self that could stand up to them and even survive without them. (One should note that the revolutionary look of authentic avant-garde art is the look of extreme anxiety, as Picasso suggested when he praised Cézanne for his anxiety. Such anxiety is indicative of alienation from industrial mass society -- Cézanne paints nature, which was more existentially friendly to him, and also more differentiated than industrial mass society, at least in his highly nuanced representation of it -- and the Old Masters, whom he claimed to admire but could not emulate, for they lacked the modern anxiety he wanted to convey through his so-called vibrating sensations. They vibrate not simply optically but emotionally, which is their secret.)

Endgame anxiety -- anxiety about losing the avant-garde spirit of rebellion and becoming commonplace, becoming a part of the artistic and social status quo (banality is the only artistic sin, a sign of creative failure, as Baudelaire insisted, for the commonplace signals stasis and stultification, the ultimate catastrophes of life as well as art) -- and game-initiating anxiety are equally adolescent. But endgame anxiety is a consequence of "adolescence prolonged beyond its normal end," to use André Green’s words,(13) while game-initiating anxiety is typical of precocious -- and provocative -- adolescence. The anxiety that the game will end -- implying unconscious recognition that it has in fact ended in redundancy, defensively turned in on itself because it no longer has existential purpose, because it has been welcomed by the society it rebelled against, because its abnormality has become normal, because its anti-sociality has been socialized, assimilated to the point of overfamiliarity, because while it continues to bark it has no bite, because its creativity has been exhausted, forcing it to rest on its laurels, primp itself for posterity because it has lost inner necessity -- is the emotional sign of avant-garde decadence, that is, the banalization of the avant-garde.

In contrast, the anxiety that initiates the avant-garde game is charged with creative potential as well as destructive perversity. Prolonged adolescence -- youth clinging to itself, absolutizing itself, refusing to go beyond itself and grow up -- involves what Green calls a "kind of disorganized trauma" accompanied by "disruptive anxiety states," that is, states that disrupt "the provisional ego" of the adolescent. Sometimes the anxiety leads to "psychosomatic regression" -- obsession with the body or any of its aspects -- sometimes to "perversion and character disorder," and sometimes even psychosis, often signaled by "precocious mental development. . . that impairs the development of. . . secondary-process thinking."(14) The disruptiveness of endgame avant-garde anxiety is a form of disintegration. So completely arrested that it has nowhere to advance to -- so immature that it has become indifferent to secondary-process thinking, incapable of transforming provocation and precociousness into the critical consciousness of a mature mind -- the avant-garde rots in place. It becomes institutionalized immaturity, embalming itself in the myth of itself.

Adolescence is inherently unstable and precarious (the two traits converge in adolescent impatience) and endgame anxiety, with its accompanying symptoms and disorders -- its disruption of development, completely stopping it in its tracks -- suggests that the avant-garde attempt to disrupt society and destabilize art was never more than an externalization of adolescent discomfort with itself, that is, adolescence’s way of projecting its unstable, precarious, impatient self -- for a provisional self is by definition unstable, precarious, impatient -- into the world, as though the world had deprived it of the foundation that would make it feel stable and safe, indeed, as though the world was no foundation for a self, no place that would protect one from the youthful follies of one’s impatient self. I suggest that Picasso’s 1915 turn to Classicism is less an artistic regression than a maturation into a balanced self -- a self that finds its balance and foundation in tradition.

Prolonged, adolescent malaise -- the youthful unhappiness, with its precious moments of artistic glory, fetishized by the romantics -- casts doubt on avant-garde creativity and originality. They were all along unstable and precarious, and as such flawed and uncertain, especially compared to the foundational creativity and originality of the Old Masters. As Eric Hobsbawm writes, "This uncertainty gives the history of the avant-gardes an air of particular desperation. They were constantly torn between the conviction that there could be no future to the art of the past -- even to yesterday’s past, or even to any kind of art in the old definition -- and the conviction that what they were doing in the old social role of ‘artists’ and ‘geniuses’ was important, and rooted in the great tradition of the past."(15) The latter conviction consciously defends against the avant-garde’s unconscious anxiety that it is creatively inadequate. Such catastrophic anxiety no doubt fuels its creativity.

These signs of prolonged adolescence are self-evident in the key avant-garde figures of Rimbaud, Jarry and Lautréamont -- role models for the Surrealists, as André Breton said. All were adolescent in spirit -- Rimbaud was literally an adolescent when he wrote his poems -- and none lived long beyond chronological adolescence. I will argue that the emergence of the avant-garde is correlate with and inseparable from the emergence of "adolescence" as a concept -- invented by the American psychologist G. Stanley Hall in 1898 -- and that to be avant-garde means to be an extremely anxious adolescent. Adolescence and avant-gardism are correlates, as the historical facts suggest. Avant-garde artists were literally adolescents, and adolescents had avant-garde spirit, that is, they were as irreverent and rebellious as avant-garde artists. Avant-gardism is the acting out, through art, of contempt for authority and established tradition, in an attempt to discredit and replace it. The rebellion is usually carried out in the name of a new order, but there is no clear conception of it, and in fact it is unrealistic and naive. Like the French and Russian Revolutions, the avant-garde revolution becomes a totalitarian reign of adolescent terror -- a more brutal tyranny than the tyranny it replaced, just as the Communist tyranny was more brutal than the Czarist tyranny.

Perhaps the first event that signaled the privileging of adolescence was the publication of Rousseau’s Emile in 1762. It introduced the scandalous idea that puberty was "a second birth." Its characteristics were "a change of temper, frequent outbursts of anger, a perpetual stirring of the mind." Shortly afterwards, in 1774, Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther appeared. Its adolescent hero became a romantic role model. Werther had the "sacred and inspiring ability to create new worlds," but, as Jon Savage writes, he was subject to "extreme mood swings . . . sensitivity to social slights . . . and self-pitying rhetoric."(16) Finding no way out of this emotional trap -- unable to resolve his conflicts -- he committed suicide. Unable to grow beyond his adolescent way of feeling and thinking, with its unrealistic expectations from the world and himself, he dead-ended in premature death, in effect confirming his arrested development.

Werther was a fictional character, although somewhat autobiographical -- the novel was Goethe’s attempt to work through his own adolescent attitudes and frustrations (including a love affair gone bad) -- but Thomas Chatterton, who committed suicide in 1770, at the age of 17, by poisoning himself with arsenic, was a real person. In effect the first avant-garde poet, he was idolized as a misunderstood genius by Coleridge, Keats, Shelley and Wordsworth. But they were more interested in his youth than his poetry: as Savage writes, "made permanent by death," his youth "would never fade." Like Werther, Chatterton made suicide á la mode for adolescents -- a fashionable way out of one’s youthful problems.

Perhaps more important than Emile, Werther, Chatterton and all the pathologically romantic adolescents in the world, was Article 28 of the National Council of [Revolutionary] France. It was one of 18 codicils added to the Declaration of the Rights of Man in August 1789. It stated: "one generation cannot subject to its laws the future generation." Thus the generation gap began, as scholars have noted. In the 1840s, Henri Murger’s Scènes de la vie Bohème appeared. Dealing with impoverished struggling artists and the lower-class working girls who were their mistresses -- suggesting the artists’ identification with the proletariat underclass, which lasted only until the artists became economically successful and, with that, bourgeois, whatever their lifestyle -- Murger’s bohemian artist became the model for the avant-garde artist, who maintained a bohemian lifestyle. More importantly, bohemia artistically legitimated Article 28, that is, it was an artistic celebration of the revolutionary rights of youth, more particularly, the right of youth to revolt against the older generation and change the world, implying that as long as one kept rebelling one would never change and grow old oneself. In other words, adolescent revolt became an "artistic" way of remaining eternally young, at least in spirit if not in the letter of one’s body.

At the same time that the adolescent bohemian artist made his appearance, the juvenile delinquent appeared on the social scene. Mary Carpenter’s 1853 book Juvenile Delinquents: Their Confinement and Treatment defined juvenile delinquents as youths with "diminished responsibility." Carpenter’s influential book argued that there should be separate prisons for adolescent juvenile delinquents and hardened criminals in their 20s. It was too late to psychologically treat and socially rehabilitate hardened criminals, that is, to change them for the better, personally and socially, but juvenile delinquents could still be emotionally and morally saved. That is, they could learn responsibility, and thus not become lifelong criminals -- permanently incapacitated, irresponsible, uncivilized human beings, that is, social barbarians and emotional primitives.

Carpenter’s ideas remain in effect today. The term "juvenile delinquent" first came into use in 1824, when it was defined by the New York State legislature as a person under 21. This became the common-law line of psychosocial as well as chronological differentiation between childhood and adulthood. In other words, the adolescent juvenile delinquent was regarded as a child in attitude and behavior, however much he also showed his precocity -- a sort of ironical adulthood -- by committing crimes against society. It is worth noting that just a year later, in 1825, Saint-Simon, who introduced the concept of artists as the avant-garde of society, died, two years after unsuccessfully attempting suicide. In 1845, the Fourieriste Gabriel-Désiré Laverdant, in his essay "On The Mission of Art and the Role of Artists," said that "the artist who is truly of the avant-garde. . . must know where Humanity is going." How can the adolescent avant-garde artist know where Humanity is going when he doesn’t know where he himself is going? Indeed, when he wants to remain young forever, make juvenile and delinquent art forever, which is to go nowhere in art and life -- now there’s a serious revolution against nature and society.

Avant-garde art is not only self-defeating, suggesting its built-in obsolescence -- Renato Poggioli has demonstrated as much -- but its insistence on youthful newness as proof of originality degrades art. Art is an invitation to change oneself. As Rilke suggested in his poem Archaic Torso of Apollo, this means to change from being an immature youth to a mature adult. Avant-garde art is immature art, however much avant-garde art has matured into establishment art. I propose that what I have called New Old Master art -- art that returns to tradition even as it assimilates modern insights into color and form, enriching sensation and complicating structure -- is a new adult art. That is, it is an art for reflective and self-possessed adults rather than anxious and impulsive youth, which means that it is an art that wants to consecrate life -- without denying its problems -- rather than "desecrate everything in its path," as Jacques Vaché, one of Breton’s arrested adolescent heroes, said art should do, as Breton noted. Vaché had "a sense. . . of the theatrical and joyless pointlessness of everything," he wrote to Breton in 1917,(17) shortly before dying from a drug overdose, together with his male lover.

New Old Masterism is an attempt to fight Vaché’s kind of nihilism, which is a direct result of adolescence prolonged by any means. It is worth noting that Breton compared the delirious effect of automatic writing to that afforded by taking drugs, suggesting that he recognized that Surrealism was also adolescent. Such adolescent nihilism expresses the refusal or inability or failure to grow up, to mature into a purposeful adult with character -- a civilized person under the sway of the reality principle.

Avant-garde nihilism, whatever its creative fruits, is a sign of the adolescent’s lack of realism. It is worth noting that avant-gardism has been called "creative destruction," which happens to be Schumpter’s definition of capitalism. This suggests, as Adorno ironically does, that the avant-garde’s so-called permanent revolution -- which means staying young forever, which is what the revolutionary face-lift attempts to accomplish -- is the capitalist motto, as Fortune magazine suggested. Thus avant-garde art is an unconscious endorsement of the capitalism that supposedly is its bourgeois enemy, a view confirmed by the bourgeoisification and commodification of avant-garde art. Such adolescent nihilism, with its regressive rebelliousness and scatological insults -- neither any longer shocking nor sensational, for profanity has become commonplace in public, even in the hallowed halls of Congress -- is still strongly in evidence in today’s self-styled avant-garde artists, for example, Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, the American Sensationalist cousins of the British Sensationalists.

I want to use Alfred Jarry as my case history to make my point about the adolescent fatalism of avant-garde art, before moving on to an examination of the ambitions of the New Old Masterism. I will argue that Jarry perfectly exemplifies the psychoanalytic idea of the destructive and self-destructive avant-garde artist -- and of an avant-garde artist who has run out of creative steam once his destructiveness has spent itself. I will then argue that New Old Masterism is an attempt to reverse course from art invested in the subject to art invested in the object. The New Old Masters find fresh purpose in the human object and in the traditional symbols of its states of being and existential interests. Reminiscing about The Magnetic Fields, which he wrote with Philippe Soupault in 1920 -- officially the first work of automatic writing and the first Surrealist work -- in 1930 Breton wrote: "Perhaps no one will ever more concretely, more dramatically seize the passage of the subject to the object, which is at the origin of the whole modern artistic preoccupation."(18) If the psychoanalysts are correct in thinking that this is a regressive preoccupation, then it is time to return to the object, that is, to emphasize the passage of the object into the subject.

Jarry (1873-1907) is the exemplary avant-garde adolescent. His work is scatological and violent, a sadistic attack on sublimation and adulthood. Its negativity gives it an air of precocity, but is in fact a sign of anxiety, both annihilative anxiety and castration anxiety, which often converge in adolescence, all but completely blocking development. In Ubu Roi, the notorious drama he wrote when he was 23, we see him relieving himself of this messy anxiety -- expelling it in the form of language -- and dumping it on the bourgeois adults who supposedly caused it. He literally attempts to drown the audience in the shit of his anxiety. Ubu Roi opens with "the customized word ‘merdre’," as Elizabeth Menon calls it in her essay "The Excrement of Power," perhaps the most thorough analysis of Jarry and Ubu Roi ever made.(19) This provocative "mot magique" is repeated 33 times. As Menon writes, "the plot of Ubu Roi was simple," as simple as that offensive word.

Ubu was "a grotesquely obese mounted guard" -- "a monstrous, pompous, puppet-like character," as has been noted -- who cruelly "butchers the royal family in Poland," with the encouragement and prompting of his wife, and becomes the King of Poland. He proceeds to murder everyone he meets for their money. Thus the familiar unconscious equation of money and shit: the proliferation of the word "merdre" magically accompanies Ubu’s accumulation of money. Ubu then attacks Russia in an attempt to overthrow the Czar, but is defeated, and flees to France with his wife.

If the wife is a symbol of Jarry’s money-grubbing mother, as has been suggested -- Jarry, a homosexual, never had a wife, and was known to have worn woman’s shoes to the funeral of Mallarmé -- then Ubu represents Jarry in the role of omnipotent oedipal winner. But Ubu’s failure to extend his murderous reign of terror and satisfy his insatiable money-hunger in Russia suggests that Jarry realized that even omnivorous adolescent omnipotence has its limits. The imperial infant will lose his magic power when he confronts adult social power -- will collapse into ridiculous absurdity when he has to deal with a legitimate Emperor. Ubu Roi is usually regarded as the first work in what became the Theater of the Absurd, but I remind you that its "absurdity, incoherence, and defiance . . . of authority" are typically adolescent. Also, Ubu’s delusion of grandeur catastrophically broke down when it overreached itself. The play’s end suggests Jarry’s rude awakening to reality: His money was in fact running out, leaving him to perish in his own shit.

Ubu Roi began as "a dramatic sketch first conceived by Jarry at 15, with some schoolmates, to caricature a schoolmaster." Caricature is a form of character assassination. It subverts what it represents, often trivializing it by distorting it. A schoolmaster symbolizes the superego, that is, social authority and responsibility, and with them civilized behavior. We all resist the power of the superego even as we seek its approval. But the adolescent Jarry mocked it, an act of defiant rebellion intended to undermine its authority, and finally destroy it. And also to avoid social responsibility and decency.

What began as irreverent satire ends with nihilistic violence in Ubu Roi. Ubu is a failed superego -- an absurd puppet set in motion by his wife. More subtly, Ubu is a synthesis of out-of-control adolescent -- namely the rebellious Jarry -- and all-controlling superego -- that is, an authoritarian ruler. Ubu is rapaciously rebellious adolescent and tyrannically brutal adult in one. Thus his much noted grotesqueness, at once intimidating and repulsive.

His obese body is repulsive. His obesity implies that he is trapped in his body, that is, is more body than mind. Immersed in unhealthy baby fat -- Ubu is a picture of physical as well as emotional pathology -- Ubu’s self is unable to emerge and mature. Busily feeding on money -- an infantile dependence -- he becomes emotionally flabbier, suggesting that he will never grow up enough to gain control of his greed. His fat flesh confirms that he lacks the adult’s ability to contain himself. Ubu is a transparent case of completely arrested adolescent development. He is a juvenile delinquent run amuck.

Jarry was born into a bourgeois family and lived off his family’s money. His hatred found a target in the bourgeois, but it was ultimately self-hatred -- hatred of his dependence on his family. And of the fact that he himself was bourgeois. Is his hatred of his origins responsible for the originality of his art? It is a negative originality, that is, an originality premised on negation, and as such it is more destructive than creative. Ubi Roi is what Clement Greenberg called Novelty Art. It is in fact an artistic failure, and was recognized as such, but its provocative character gave it creative cachet. Innovative through destruction, perhaps, but destruction is not innovative.

Jarry was a rebel whose only cause was his destructive hatred. In the end it destroyed him. He died at the age of 34, after "spiral[ling] into an anarchical existence, ending his life in utter destitution and alcoholism." Thus life followed the lead of art: artistic nihilism dead-ended in personal nihilism. "Liv[ing] on a small inheritance" after coming to Paris, he never earned money of his own. "He cut a bizarre and eccentric figure around town, mounted on his bicycle, carrying and often exhibiting revolvers" -- Breton’s idea that firing a revolver into a crowd is the ultimate surrealist, not to say anti-social act, was supposedly inspired by Jarry -- but "his fortune was soon dissipated," and he along with it.

Ubu Roi perfectly exemplifies Michael Balint’s view that "modern art" is the result of "narcissistic withdrawal" leading to "degrading the dignity of the [human] object into that of a mere stimulus."(20) The "attitude towards" the object is no longer "on the mature level; it assumes more and more immature ‘pre-genital’ forms. . . . The treatment of the object, or the artist’s attitude to it" is "conspicuously on what psychoanalysis would describe as the anal-sadistic level. The objects are dismembered, split, cruelly twisted, deformed, messed about." Think of Picasso’s Cubist and Surrealist figures. Ma Jolie has been regarded as an ironic allusion to the French expression "faire de jolie," which means to mess about or make a mess of things, in effect destroying them, confirming Picasso’s idea of his Cubism as a "sum of destructions." He also remarked that he wanted to completely destroy the person pictured in his Cubist portraits. Instead, he stopped short of doing so by caricaturing the person, a form of character assassination, as noted, and, more tellingly, of what Freud called "soul murder."

Balint adds that "some forms and methods of representation in ‘modern art’ are highly reminiscent of primitive ‘anal’ messing." One wonders what he thought about Pollock’s all-over painting. This brings to mind Manzoni’s fetishization of artist’s shit, and Duchamp’s idea of putting excrement in a navel, one of Duchamp’s last proposals for a work of art, according to Dalí. "Less and less regard is paid to the object’s feelings, interests and sensitivities" in modern art, Balint remarks. "Kind consideration for, and ‘idealization’ of, the object becomes less and less important." All that matters is conveying the artist’s "narcissistic states," however perverse.

Interestingly, Balint gives us a clue as to why avant-garde movements quickly replace one another. If "the tension" in a narcissistic state is "so great" that it "tends to break down, disintegrate spontaneously even without any forceful attack from outside," as Balint writes, then narcissistic avant-gardism cannot help but repeatedly break down, suggesting its creative inadequacy. Clearly this is connected to its failure to respect the human object, even address it, as pure art’s indifference to the human object -- it is not altogether clear that pure art’s transcendence can be distinguished from indifference -- indicates.

Every feature of New Old Masterism is opposed to avant-gardism. They stand to one another as a mature adult stands to an immature adolescent. Perhaps the most salient trait of New Old Masterism is that it arises from a psychic position of reverie, in contrast to adolescent avant-gardism, which arises from a psychic position of anxiety. What I call reverie has been called contemplation, but I think reverie is a more accurate sense of what psychically occurs in contemplation. Reverie is akin to what Wordsworth called "memory recollected in tranquility." The problem with adolescent avant-garde art is that there is no tranquility or reverie in it, confirming its creative and human failing. And also its inability to remember -- to mentalize an experience so that it can endure in the unconscious and be retrieved in consciousness -- for unless one is in a state of reverie one has nothing to remember. It is only in reverie that memory can be constructed, which leaves adolescent avant-garde art stuck in the immediacy of the moment.

Much has been written about the avant-garde’s obsession with the moment, the sense of here and now immediacy that is the source of the so-called sensation and shock of the new, but the exciting moment is always transient and finite, even when it is what Bergson called a duration -- personally experienced time, and thus seemingly flexible time, time that organically grows, that seems innate to one’s individual existence -- rather than a universal instant in a mechanical sequence, a minor detail in an infinite series of anonymous moments. Adolescent avant-garde art has a flash in the pan look to it, and however hypnotically intense the sensations it initially conveys, it has little lasting effect on the self, offers little beyond its glittering surface -- offers little to remember and reflect on, and thus has no transformative effect, suggesting that it is a kind of infatuating fool’s gold. Like Stendhal’s branch of love, adolescent avant-garde art magically glitters when it first appears, seemingly fresh from the artist’s unconscious, but in the light of consciousness it quickly loses its novel glitter, becoming a passing fancy. One easily falls in love with avant-garde art, or becomes infatuated with it, but one just as easily falls out of love. Disillusion quickly follows illusion, for avant-garde art offers little food for thought, however instantly "impressive" it is.

In contrast, New Old Master art is imbued with memory -- founded on memory, and thus adulthood. Intensely immediate sensation is implicated in it, but never overwhelms the narrating of the memorable object, but rather convinces us of its uncanny presence, indeed, gives what would be an ordinary appearance esthetic reality, implying that it is inherently extraordinary, that the object has a subjective life of its own independently of its perceiver. The best New Old Masters have assimilated the important truth that seemed like a revelation when abstraction first appeared: sensation has a certain autonomy, it can exist as pure form, what Kandinsky and Malevich called non-objective sensation, sensation that owns itself rather than is owned by the object, sensation that does not need representational purpose to have meaning.

Pure abstraction shows that sensation exists independently, opening a realm of feeling that has nothing to do with the object, a self-validating realm of subjective feeling with a subtle life of its own. The integration of this pure or essentialist subjectivity, the climactic discovery of sensationalist abstraction -- the terra incognita of sensation that modernism stumbled upon in Impressionism, conquered in pure painting, and has been colonizing and apotheosizing ever since -- with object representation, the mimetic concern of traditional art, deepened by the astonishing feat of the Old Masters, who invented ways of conveying the object’s subjective life and with that its existential uniqueness and wholeness, that is, the simultaneity of its objective and subjective reality, is the ambitious task the New Old Masters have set themselves.

Reverie is the term Wilfred Bion uses to describe the "state of calm reflectiveness" the mother needs "to take in the infant’s own feelings and give them meaning. The idea is that the infant will, through projective identification, insert into the mother’s mind a state of anxiety and terror which he is unable to make sense of and which is felt to be intolerable (especially the fear of death)."(21) Reflective reverie is clearly something we all need to deal with our anxiety, especially the deep anxiety that our lives will come to nothing, end in meaninglessness, often accompanied by the feeling that we are not taken seriously by others, not given enough special attention -- a common enough adolescent feeling of futility that exhibitionistic avant-garde art intends to remedy by attracting a great deal of attention.

"Mother’s reverie is a process of making some sense of it for the infant, a function known as ‘alpha function.’ Through introjection of a receptive, understanding mother the infant can begin to develop his own capacity for reflection on his own states of mind." The alpha function is a "containing function." Without it -- without learning self-containment, which involves gaining and organizing a mind and structuring a self -- meaning seems to be stripped from life, "resulting in a terrifying sense of the ghastly unknown" or "nameless dread," that is, living death. In other words, without the capacity of "reverie for reflective meaning" we are unable to symbolize and name our feelings, only be attacked and destroyed by them.

Bion calls such raw, unprocessed feelings "beta elements." They are experienced as ugly, and expelled as fast as they occur, and thus unremembered. Thus one is unable to reflect on them and understand the workings of one’s psyche, a necessary step in constructing an authentic self and gaining self-knowledge, and experiencing beauty. The transformation of beta elements into alpha elements -- units of memory, which is perhaps the first form of mind (the first act of mind is to store feelings, the second is to see the connection between them, the third is to understand its nature, which is to recognize their commonality without denying their difference) -- is the imaginative core of creativity.

I am suggesting that the adolescent avant-garde lacks imagination in this sense, indicating that it is creatively incomplete. It does not so much offer us symbols of anxiety as the sensation of it -- which quickly fades, because it cannot be remembered, since it lacks symbolic form, or else its symbolic forms do not perform the alpha function, inviting one to reflect on them rather than mindlessly experience them. Adolescent avant-garde art is a beta art, and a beta art is always a revenge on life, while New Old Master art is a new alpha art, involving the restoration of beauty and maturity, and with that sanity, to art. Mauricio Lazansky, an important printmaker, once said that "Throughout history there have always been two kinds of artists: those who work for beauty and those who use art as a means of revenge for life." The Cubist Picasso used art as a revenge for life, that is, in a nihilistic beta way -- his raw planes are in effect beta particles expelled by the infantilized figure and used to bombard the spectator with their meaninglessness -- while the Classical Picasso attempted to give beauty new credibility and meaning, which means to give eternal meaning to the human object, thus overcoming the fear of death. But it lingers in the emptiness of the space Picasso’s Classical figures inhabit, which sometimes invades and informs them, reducing them to ghosts. Their contours give them presence, but otherwise they are pure myth, which is perhaps all that beauty is in modernity.

I am suggesting that New Old Masterism involves containing, storing, linking and finally unifying the variety of anxious sensations of narcissistic modernism in memorable representational modes to effect a sense of self that is neither traditional nor modern, but a stable compound of both. Such traditional modes are symbolically adequate, and thus able to contain anxious sensations without denying their presentational immediacy.

I am arguing, along with theorists who view creativity in terms of evolution, that there is no significant creativity without a foundation in tradition, which symbolizes all that is memorable, mature, and of demonstrable value in a society, implying that tradition can never lose meaning and will always reward reflection; and iconoclasm that questions the finality and values of tradition and challenges traditional modes of understanding, but that remains valueless unless it achieves its own finality by becoming part of and holding its own in tradition, thus gaining lasting meaning and proving its continuing value to society.

I happen to think that avant-garde art has not unequivocally done so, however representative it is of modern society, with its cult of youth, indeed, its fetishization of youth, and can never convincingly do so, because to be avant-garde means to be incorrigibly adolescent in attitude and thus unable to relate to and respect tradition, which does not mean to blindly conform to it. Adolescence can express itself but not reflect on itself, which is why avant-garde art cannot become seriously traditional, that is, a civilizing force.

Picasso: Fired with Passion Featured at The National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh

Picasso: Fired with Passion Featured at The National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh

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Pablo Picasso, Nude Woman with Necklace, 1962 Tate, London © Succession Picasso/DACS 2007.

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND.- This summer National Museums Scotland presents Picasso: Fired with Passion, a newly-created major exhibition which gives a fascinating insight into the extraordinary life and work of one of the most renowned artists of the twentieth century.

The exhibition, only showing at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, will offer visitors a new and intimate perspective on Picasso the man, the artist and the icon.

Drawing from the collections of international organisations and private owners, Picasso: Fired with Passion is one of two in-depth exhibitions that will bring Picasso to Edinburgh, showcasing the different aspects of this world-famous artist. The National Galleries of Scotland’s Picasso on Paper will feature prints, drawings and illustrated books dating from the early 1900s to the 1950s.

The Museums’ exhibition reveals the artist’s work from 1947 to 1961, a significant period of his life when he was working at Vallauris and Cannes in southern France. Over 100 objects, including outstanding examples of ceramics, metalwork, painting and lithography, will be on display, and it is the first significant showing of his ceramics in the UK for over a decade.

Picasso: Fired with Passion offers an intimate glimpse into Picasso’s family life, and his friendships with contemporaries, such as the French artists Jean Cocteau and Georges Braque as well as acclaimed photographer Lee Miller and surrealist painter, poet, and historian Roland Penrose. There are personal objects and photographs, revealing the connections between his private life and his artistic career, which capture the joie-de-vivre of post-war Europe and an important time in the artist’s family life.

Rose Watban, Curator of Applied Art and Design at National Museums Scotland, said: “We are excited to be creating and presenting this major Picasso exhibition in the capital during the Edinburgh Festival. Our exhibition is a fresh celebration of the man behind the art, and the diversity of his work across different media including ceramics and metalwork. Visitors will be surprised to discover this aspect of his creativity, illustrated by over 100 objects drawn from world-class collections.”

Born in Málaga in Spain in 1881, Pablo Picasso spent much of his life in France. He is widely acknowledged as one of the most important artists of the 20th century, and became commercially successful and internationally recognised in his own lifetime. By 1946 his reputation as a painter was established, having produced influential works throughout the early 1900s and, along with Georges Braque, led the creation of the Cubist movement. Picasso then set out to explore new and diverse media, devoting himself to mastering ceramics and experimenting with other applied arts.

The exhibition draws on world-class collections including the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, Musée Picasso in Antibes, Tate in London and Museo Picasso Málaga. Objects on loan include bullfighting posters and tiles, a jug moulded and decorated into the female form, a plate decorated with Picasso’s famous dove of peace, a silver platter, and Lee Miller photographs of the artist.

Legal, financial and property specialists Pagan Osborne are sponsoring the exhibition. Alistair Morris, Chief Executive, Pagan Osborne, said:

“We are delighted to play a part in staging this exhibition. For us, the appeal of Picasso transcends generations and he has a charisma that touches many different people. Therefore, we want our sponsorship to be a catalyst for our staff, their families and our clients to come and enjoy his paintings and to learn about the man himself.”

Picasso: Fired with Passion is accompanied by a publication by the same name from NMS Enterprises Ltd. The book will be on sale in the National Museum of Scotland shop at £14.99.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Keith Haring - L´espace public comme laboratoire

Keith Haring - L´espace public comme laboratoire


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A l´aube des années 80, Keith Haring choisit un mode d´expression direct et alternatif, au cœur du tissu urbain. Entre 1980 et 1985, il a réalisé des centaines de dessins dans les rues et les métros new-yorkais, un rythme effréné qui le conduit à créer plus de 40 dessins en l´espace d´une seule journée. Soucieux de toucher un public large, Haring développe un graphisme synthétique, énergique et rythmé nourri de pictogrammes, inspiré de graffitis, de cartoons et de bandes dessinées. Le « style » Haring est rapidement devenu l´un des langages visuels les plus populaires du XXème siècle.

Sa popularité s´étend dans le monde entier et son marché est totalement international. Si près de la moitié de ses œuvres sont adjugées aux Etats-Unis, l´Allemagne, la France, le Royaume-Uni, la Suède, les Pays-Bas, l´Italie et la Belgique se partagent 47% du volume de transactions. La cote de Keith HARING est au plus haut avec un indice en progression de plus de 120% depuis 2003, année à partir de laquelle les adjudications à plus de 100 000 dollars se sont accélérées. Tandis que 12 œuvres étaient adjugées pour plus de 100 000 dollars entre 2000 et 2003, on compte pas moins de 30 enchères au-delà de ce seuil les trois années suivantes. L´année 2007 s´annonce faste pour ses œuvres avec la première adjudication millionnaire de l´artiste, pour une grande toile de 1982 (365,8x365,8 cm) qui s´envolait à hauteur de 2,5 millions de dollars chez Christie´s NY.

Cette envolée incite quelques collectionneurs à se défaire de leurs œuvres… avec quelques belles plus-values à la clef. Citons par exemple la revente de la toile Sneeze (Via Picasso) : acquise en mai 2000 pour 40 000 dollars chez Christie´s NY, elle déclenchait une belle bataille d´enchères en octobre 2005 pour un coup de marteau final à 155 000 livres sterling, soit près de 275 000 dollars chez Sotheby´s Londres! Citons encore la toile Barcelona de 1989 acquise une première fois en 2002 pour 68 000 livres sterling chez Christie´s Londres puis revendue pour 105 000 livres sterling en février 2007 chez le même auctioneer. On note un engouement similaire pour les dessins : en 1990, au plus fort de la bulle spéculative, un travail monumental à l´encre (plus de 4 mètres) signait une adjudication équivalente à plus de 160 000 dollars chez Loudmer, Paris. Après 14 années sans renouer avec ce sommet, 10 dessins ont dépassé ce seuil entre mai 2004 et mai 2007, dont une enchère spectaculaire en novembre 2006 pour un travail à l´encre sur papier de 1982 qui décrochait 620 000 dollars à New-York! Face à la pléthore de dessins proposés sur le marché, de telles enchères demeurent exceptionnelles : seul le quart de ce travail est adjugé au-delà de 10 000 dollars.

Pour un budget avoisinant les 10 000 dollars, l´amateur peut donc acquérir quelques dessins. Certains, réalisés sur des supports « pauvres » comme la page d´un livre, une affiche ou une boite d´allumettes s´échangent entre 1 000 et 5 000 euros en moyenne, à l´instar d´un dessin à l´encre en guise de dédicace sur un ouvrage qui était accessible pour 1 000 euros en mars 2007 en Belgique (De Vuyst)… Une somme des plus raisonnables pour un travail unique de la main de Haring, sachant que quelques sérigraphies éditées à des dizaines d´exemplaires s´échangent entre 10 000 et 40 000 euros, comme ce fut le cas ces derniers mois pour Growing: One Plate, Andy Mouse ou Statue of Liberty.

Cincinnati Art Museum Announces Gift of Art 400 Contemporary, Folk and Funk Works

Cincinnati Art Museum Announces Gift of Art 400 Contemporary, Folk and Funk Works

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Roy De Forest, Triumph of the Round Heads, 1982. L1.2007:226. Future Bequest of Robert Alan Lewis. Image courtesy of the Cincinnati Art Museum.

CINCINNATI.- Chicago native Robert A. Lewis has promised a major bequest of more than 400 paintings, sculptures and works on paper to the Cincinnati Art Museum. This collection includes a wide range of styles and formats, spanning from the 1960s to the present, and features works by a diverse group of American artists, many of them African American. The Art Museum will host a major exhibition featuring selected works from this collection in winter 2009.

For over 60 years, Lewis explored art museums and galleries near his home in Chicago and introduced himself to the city’s vibrant arts community. He began collecting in the late 1960s, right when a group of artists known as the Chicago Imagists first gained notoriety. As a result, his collection features work by a number of these artists and the artists who influenced them. His enthusiasm for art outside the mainstream also drew him to contemporary folk art, represented in depth in this promised bequest.

At the forefront of this collection are the Chicago Imagists, a loosely affiliated group of figurative artists whose work emerged in an era dominated by abstraction. Looking for inspiration from cartoons, comic books, and the work of untrained artists, they offered an alternative to the New York art world, which they deemed stuffy and pretentious.

Among these artists whose work is featured in the Lewis bequest is Roger Brown. His work titled Dzibilchaltun is a schematic painting of a Mayan settlement sparsely populated by tiny ant-like people, isolated in an alien world. The funky work of Karl Wirsum is seen through a profile head in painted wood with typewriter erasers for eyes and brows. The collection also includes works by Suellen Rocca and Ray Yoshida, as well as by Christina Ramberg, whose paintings of women’s bodies gave a feminist twist to the movement.

When Mr. Lewis began collecting in the 1960s, a renewed enthusiasm emerged for indigenous folk traditions and an engagement with the work of contemporary folk artists. The personal quality of this art and its spirit of rebellion had broad appeal to those seeking to escape conventional ways of life. Featured in the Lewis Collection are works by numerous folk artists from the 1960s to the present, most of whom worked in the South, including well known figures such as William Dawson, the Reverend Howard Finster and Minnie Evans. Visitors will appreciate the range of expression presented by each artist through the presence of their multiple works.

The collection also includes other significant holdings by contemporary artists, such as Donald Lipski and Roy De Forest. De Forest’s wildly imaginative paintings associated with the Funk art movement in California are represented in the collection with his large, boldly colorful work Triumph of the Round Heads.

“The Lewis Collection will greatly deepen our collection of contemporary art beyond the expected and expand our representation of folk art and African American art,” said Julie Aronson, curator of American painting and sculpture. “We look forward to sharing these compelling works with our visitors.”

Saturday, August 18, 2007

HOW HE PAINTS HIS MASTERPIECE - Bob DYLAN



HOW HE PAINTS HIS MASTERPIECE
Bob DYLAN

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The news that Bob Dylan will exhibit a show of 200 recent paintings at Berlin’s Chenmitz Museum, opening Oct. 29, 2007, recalls the significant role of art and the act of painting in Dylan’s worldview. Dylan made these paintings after looking again into a book of his sketches, Drawn Blank, which Random House published in 1994.

In 1974, after living in Woodstock with his young family for seven years, Dylan moved back to MacDougal Street and began taking intense painting classes with a mystic Abstract Expressionist named Norman Rabin in a studio above Carnegie Hall. Dylan enjoyed the camaraderie of his fellow art students, whom he described as "cops and housewives," and learned from Rabin a mysterious world lesson, which Dylan characterized as "the past, present and future being in the same room" simultaneously, presumably without the reverse dialectic of T.S. Eliot’s Burnt Norton.

This essential realization, experienced through the act of intensive painting, inspired Dylan’s great disc, Blood on the Tracks, especially the color-drenched series of snapshots, Tangled Up in Blue. Stylistically, Dylan’s painterly output has stuck close to his two most famous paintings, the album covers of Self-Portrait and the Band’s Music from Big Pink. The first is stark yet droll stripping away of the musical icon Bob into a fleshy, pink blob; the second a raucous party scene, complete with vaulting piano player and laughing elephant reflecting the genius of Basement Tapes party tunes such as Million Dollar Bash and Yea Heavy and a Bottle of Bread.

Like many primitives, Dylan has always felt more liberated by color than form: In this, his work is kin to the watercolors of Henry Miller, who exulted in gathering his "mistakes" from his Big Sur studio floor and selling them to friends for a couple of greenbacks. Musicians such as John Lennon and David Bowie have zealously pursued visual art as a zone of freedom from their tuneful callings. With Dylan, it has been more a matter of his Gemini personality wrestling with the physical world in a Johnsian sense, grabbing something and doing something to it, again and again.

The most notorious example of this is Dylan’s "editing" of his revolutionary 1966 World Tour, in which Bob and his pal Howard Alk supposedly took D.A. Pennebaker’s only film footage of the tour and cut it up with scissors for the film Eat the Document (and its outtakes), tossing huge chunks in the waste basket. Fans, who waited 40 years to see this stuff, were frustratingly tantalized by sections of 1966 performances in Martin Scorsese’s No Direction Home. Were these sections all there was or did someone retrieve the sliced footage from Bobby’s garbage?

The Chenmitz curators are guarding images of Dylan’s new paintings until the opening. Based on Bob’s career actions, the work should be disappointing in toto and exhilarating in specific points, like tokes on a joint on a rainy day. It will be the task of future generations to crawl out from under Dylan’s opus, in all its manifestations, and try to figure it out.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Museum of Art Lucerne Presents Vis-a-vis. Bacon & Picasso - A Direct Confrontation

Museum of Art Lucerne Presents Vis-a-vis. Bacon & Picasso - A Direct Confrontation

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Pablo Picasso, le déjeuner sur l’herbe, 1960. Oil on canvas, 130 x 195 cm. Private collection. © 2007, ProLitteris, Zürich.

LUCERNE.- This year the Museum of Art Lucerne is holding – astonishingly, for the very first time with such range and ambition – a direct confrontation of the late phases of the work of Pablo Picasso and Francis Bacon. Nine important paintings by Bacon made between 1955 and 1986 face a larger number of works of all genres by Picasso: four sculptures, 13 paintings and five drawings, with one exception all painted after 1960, and – installed in a special cabinet – a large selection from Picasso’s series of 156 etchings made between 1968 and 1972. This Suite 156 can be seen as Picasso’s last creative flourish before his death and, along with Suite 347, as his final legacy within the field of printing.

The exhibits include such well-known masterpieces as Picasso’s largest and also most stripped-down version of the Déjeuner sur l’herbe (1960) or the first painting from an intense phase of engagement with the theme ‘Painter and model’, 25.20.1964. Typically, Picasso painted it on his 83rd birthday. Both of these works have been shown in many of the artist’s major exhibitions. Similarly, such works as Bacon’s large triptych Studies of the Human Body (1970), the threefold Portrait of Henrietta Moraes and his self-portrait from 1972 were shown in his major exhibitions. In this exhibition, however, visitors will be able to discover many works which have not been shown for a long time, or are only seen very rarely.

Forty years after its production, Picasso’s late work continues to celebrate fresh triumphs. Though Picasso was convinced that ten or twenty years would have to pass before his late paintings were valued, today’s interest would probably far exceed his expectations. His violent figurative painting may in fact occupy a logical space within the development of Picasso’s work and personality, but many of his contemporaries saw it as a rare lapse. Only a retrospective eye can recognise the doors that Picasso’s late work opened up for (figurative) art.

Both formally and stylistically, and in terms of its potential to throw up fundamental questions of art and of human existence. It may be for similar reasons that the already considerable esteem in which the work of Francis Bacon is held has also continued to flourish. The evidence for this lies not only in its recognition in the form of one solo exhibition after another (last this winter in K20 in Dusseldorf or a US tour that closes end of July at Albright Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY), but also in the seemingly incredible rise in the value of his works on the market, taking Bacon into strata hitherto reserved solely for the major Impressionists, Picasso or the heroes of Abstract Expressionism.

Such successes aside, there are so many parallels between the two artists that it is surprising how rarely they are brought together. Of course we know that Picasso was the trigger for Bacon’s artistic career. Bacon’s statements on the subject are constantly quoted. But there are few direct references in the work itself, they can at most be seen in individual instances when Bacon resorts to Picasso’s Surrealist motifs, hence chiefly in his early work from the 1930s and 1940s. Accordingly, the exhibition Bacon – Picasso. The Life of Images (2005) at the Musée Picasso focused upon that era, and the sole example of Picasso’s late work in that exhibition was a nude drawing from 1972. Olivier Berggruen aptly wrote in the catalogue for the show Francis Bacon and the Pictorial Tradition, held a good year previously in Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum and the Fondation Beyeler, that actually it was more a matter of ‘illuminating that relationship … from the point of view of their shared interests than of reconstructing specific patterns of influence.

This cognitive interest also underlies Museum of Art Lucerne’s exhibition Vis-à-vis. Bacon & Picasso. At the same time it legitimates the fact that the exhibition, with the exception of a Bacon triptych, comes entirely from a private collection. For once it will not be a question of linking together exactly the ‘right’ works to illustrate a thesis, but of using the juxtaposition of exemplary works to examine Bacon’s and Picasso’s artistic attitudes and solutions from a comparative perspective. The fact that this works in this case is primarily a tribute to the collector who sadly died prematurely (and whose family wishes to remain anonymous), a cosmopolitan and distinguished art-lover with an eye and a sense not only for artistic quality but also for the compatibility of the work of Picasso and Bacon. Characteristically, the collection concentrates on the period after 1960, the beginning of Picasso’s so-called late work, and includes hardly any noteworthy positions apart from works by these two 20th century greats.

The artists’ common interests lie (as Berggruen explained in the mentioned catalogue of the Bacon show in Vienna and Riehen, though the exhibition itself unfortunately did not exemplify it) in their effect-oriented strategy, and their thematic focus on the act of painting. A viewer is almost always implied in both Picasso’s and Bacon’s paintings, repoussoir figures stand in for him, like the portrait of the artist in Picasso’s works on the theme of ‘Painter and Model’ or the likeness of Degas, omnipresent in the etchings of the brothel scenes from Maison Tellier. Bacon, on the other hand, involves the viewer through the spatial arrangements of his scenes. He puts his model on display, sometimes in a cage-like structure, as though in a pillory. The gesture of this art might almost be called violent, in one respect in the directly physical sense, whether it be Bacon erasing already painted areas of his canvases or covering them with an over-painted veil, or Picasso attacking his copper-plates again and again with his tool and acids. Violent also in the extended sense, particularly towards the models, who are dismembered and reassembled on the canvas, stripped bare to be made available as objects of desire, or exposed to their worst nightmares. The relationship between painter and model develops into a universal theme, the battle of the sexes or, in more general terms, a conflict between two poles. Force, power, sexuality, ritual, exhaustion, destruction and death are both the weapons and the prize.

The biographies of Bacon and Picasso provide a nutritious breeding-ground for psychological interpretations. That’s not the issue here. The relational character of their work suggests that we should inquire not into whence but whither. The complex web of relationships within each individual work does not, for example, connect it only with selected models by revered masters of art history, hence with the past and tradition, but explicitly and, as suggested above, also with a potential viewer, and consequently with the future. To this extent, what the works have to tell us today and the way in which they do it is at the centre of our interest, and if Picasso’s paintings reveal previously unseen aspects of themselves in the light of Bacon’s (or vice versa), all the better.

This would certainly not occur against the will of the artists, who were themselves practised in retrospectively influencing art history – what would Manet’s Déjeuner sur l’herbe be without Picasso’s paraphrases, or Velázquez’s Pope Innocent X without Bacon’s ‘reconcentrations’, as the artist himself liked to call his reinventions. Vis-à-vis. Bacon & Picasso is one of the high points of Museum of Art Lucerne’s exhibition programme. It may not count these two artists among its ‘regulars’, but there are still points of contact with the history of the Museum and the history of Lucerne. Through the wonderful exhibition here at the Mu

Monday, August 13, 2007

ART DESIGN - Aug 2007


ART DESIGN
August 2007

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SOTTSASS AT FRIEDMAN BENDA
The romance between art and design continues, and the buzz is building about the opening of Friedman Benda, a new design gallery in Chelsea brought to you by dealers Barry Friedman and Marc Benda. Slated to open its doors at 515 West 26th Street next month, the new space debuts with a show of new work by the 90-year-old Italian design legend Ettore Sottsass, Sept. 19-Oct. 27, 2007. The proto-postmodernist Sottsass, founder of the Memphis design firm known for using exotic materials in unconventional ways, showcases a new series of limited-edition furniture and glass works.

Sottsass’ new cabinet designs are said to be playful explorations of symmetry and scale, with some being "monumental in size." The glass works use wire and glue to bring together different colors. Three of the cabinets were already seen as part of a career retrospective at the Design Museum in London earlier in 2007 (Sottsass also received a large retrospective recently at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.) Expect the pieces to go like hotcakes -- in May, a 1965 lacquered walnut-and-brass Sottsass bookcase sold at Christie’s London for a hefty $119,379.

MOCA L.A.: SELL-OUTS OR SUCKERS?
Takashi Murakami is the gift that keeps on giving for Louis Vuitton, the luxury handbag maker that hired the Japanese artist to redesign its brand in 2003. According to a report by Randy Kennedy in the New York Times, the upcoming Murakami retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Oct. 28, 2007-Feb. 11, 2008, is to include a functioning 1,000-square-foot Vuitton boutique right in the museum, selling handbags and coin purses custom-designed for the retrospective.

According to MoCA, the handbag maker is underwriting the cost of the store and its staffing during the exhibition. And, while special tie-in merchandise is de rigueur at major museum surveys these days -- think the "King Tut tissue box" from LACMA’s Tut survey a few years back [see Artnet News, July 20, 2005] -- in this case, MoCA L.A. is not receiving a dime from the collaboration.

Instead, the functioning boutique is designed to allow viewers a first-hand experience of Murakami’s commercial work, cash-registers and all. According to curator Paul Schimmel visitors should "experience the commercial work of Murakami as profoundly as they will the most complex paintings, sculptures and exhibitions." Despite the explanation, it seems that the museum may well have crossed that ever-harder-to-see line that separates real art from vulgar commerce -- albeit, bafflingly, without actually benefiting commercially.

DESIGN LONDON

Paris-based Patrick Perrin -- the brains behind the Pavilion Art and Antiques Fair, now in its 12th year, which returns to the Tuileries gardens in 2008 -- is looking to parlay the City of Light’s buzz as a design capital into an international franchise with the first-ever Design London, Oct. 12-14, 2007. The fair goes up for Frieze Week at Hanover Square, with 20 galleries.

Among the dealers, the largest contingent (seven galleries) comes from Paris -- Galerie Downtown/Laffanour, Galerie Italienne, Jousse Entreprise, Galerie Kreo, Galerie du Passage, Clara Scremini Gallery and Galerie Patrick Séguin. New York sends Antik, Demisch Danant, Magen H Gallery, R 20th Century and Sebastian + Barquet, while Brussels sends Galerie Philippe Denys, Galerie Dewindt and Galerie Pierre-Marie Giraud. London galleries Carpenters Workshop Gallery and David Gill Galleries represent the home team, while Contrasts (Shanghai), Dansk Møbelkunst (Copenhagen) and Nilufar (Milan) come from further afield.

CALIFORNIA DESIGN BIENNIAL

An impressive roster selects the work in the upcoming 2007 California Design Biennial, Aug. 19-Sept. 30, 2007, at the Pasadena Museum of California Art. The jurors are Vogue West Coast editor Lisa Love; CalArts design department co-director Michael Worthington; Art Center College of Design chairman of the transportation design Stewart Reed; New Deal Design president Gadi Amit; and Laura Dye, brand strategist at Art Center.

The biennial includes examples of fashion, furniture, transportation, consumer products and graphic design from a wide varieties of companies and designers, including Apple, Belkin, Fuseproject, Motion Theory, Mike and Maaike, Mitsubishi, Rodarte and Katy Rodriguez. More information at www.pmcaonline.org

HUNT SLONEM IN THE HOUSE

PowerHouse Books has published a new coffee-table tome devoted to the interior design sensibility of the zoophiliac artist Hunt Slonem. Titled Pleasure Palaces: The Art and Homes of Hunt Slonem (204 pp., $60), the book includes an introduction by Vincent Katz and page after page of views of Slonem five major homes: his estate in Hudson, N.Y., his two plantation homes in Louisiana, and his two lofts in New York City. Images of the artist’s neo-Raoul Dufyian paintings of parrots, leopards and other animals are interspersed with photos of his idiosyncratic table settings and interior designs. Best of all is the cover illustration, which shows a luxe loft interior with antique chairs and chandeliers -- and dozens of painted canvases leaning against the wall.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Edward Hopper Exhibition Near the End at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Edward Hopper Exhibition Near the End at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Edward Hopper, Morning in a City, 1944, Oil on canvas, Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, Massachusetts; Bequest of Lawrence H. Bloedel, Class of 1923. Courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

BOSTON, MA.- The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, presents Edward Hopper, an exhibition devoted to the work of one of the most enduringly popular American painters of the 20th century. On view through August 19, 2007. This comprehensive retrospective comprises nearly 100 paintings, watercolors, and prints, and focuses on the artist’s work from about 1925 to 1950––the period of Hopper’s greatest achievements. During this time, he produced emorable works of New York city scenes, as well as New England lighthouses and seascapes. Many paintings that will be on view are considered icons of 20th-century American art including Nighthawks (1942, The Art Institute of Chicago), Early Sunday Morning (1930, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York), and Automat (1927, Des Moines Art Center, Iowa). The exhibition is organized by the MFA, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and the Art Institute of Chicago. The show will be accompanied by a catalogue published by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Tour Dates: MFA: 5/6/2007–8/19/2007; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.: 9/2007–1/2008; Art Institute of Chicago: 2/2008–5/2008.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Irish Museum of Modern Art Presents Major Exhibition of Celebrated Artist Lucian Freud

Irish Museum of Modern Art Presents Major Exhibition of Celebrated Artist Lucian Freud

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Lucian Freud, Esther, 1982-83, oil on canvas, Courtesy of the artist.

DUBLIN, IRELAND.- A major exhibition of the work of the celebrated British artist Lucian Freud, regarded by many as the most important figurative painter working today, is open to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Entitled simply Lucian Freud, the exhibition comprises some 50 paintings and 20 works on paper and etchings from the last 60 years, several completed just months prior to the exhibition and others being shown for the first time in a public venue. The exhibition is particularly strong in portraits of mature men, many connected to horse racing; in little-known, small-scale works; in a painting and nearly identical etching of the same person, and in that triumph of Freud’s art – nudes depicting “the body in the round”.

Best known for his portraits and nudes, Freud’s subjects include his family, friends, lovers and fellow artists. His early works date from the 1940s. Several drawings and paintings from this period show the artist experimenting with dream-like ideas and with people and plants in unusual juxtapositions. For example, in Interior Scene, 1948, painted during a stay in the Zetland Hotel in Cashel Bay, Connemara, he shows his female subject partly covered by a blackberry branch and a curtain. From the 1950s Freud began to paint portraits and the nude, using muted colours. The artist’s decision to reject a reliance on drawing, to paint with less control – standing instead of sitting – and to handle thicker paint more loosely, changed his work. The consequence, sustained for 40 years, has been a wholly original way of depicting people he gets to know intimately, ‘I didn’t want to get just a likeness like a mimic, but to portray them, like an actor.’

The works in this exhibition are organised around a number of themes. They begin with models ‘awake with closed eyes’, in a particular state special to painting from life. There is a concentration of paintings from the mid-1960s, like A Man, 1965. Self portraits are well represented, beginning with Self Portrait, 1940, and Man Wheeling Painting, 1942. In the latter the figure, apparently a labouring man, transporting a canvas in a wheelbarrow is, in fact, the artist. Also included are the extraordinary Self Portrait Reflection, Fragment, 1965, and a powerful self-portrait etching of 1996. The Painter’s Garden, 2005-06, and an etching After Constable’s Elm, 2003, connect closely to Freud’s lifetime interest in John Constable, renewed when he acted as a selector for an exhibition in Paris in 2003.

Portraits of the same person at different ages and of people who are related form another important group and include those of several daughters, Annie, Esther and Bella and ‘the Irishman’ and his two sons. These works epitomise Freud’s approach to his subjects: “I am quite tyrannical. The more I know them, I wouldn’t say it makes it easier, it makes it more potential, I have to refer less and less to things that happen to be there. I’m in a stronger position to choose what I want to use”. This intensity is manifest in the grand nudes that began in the 1980s. One masterpiece in the exhibition is Leigh under the Skylight, 1994, the last full-length study of the performance artist Leigh Bowery. There are also bold pictures from the last five years, like Irishwoman on a Bed, 2003 – 04.

The exhibition also presents several fragments, or early versions of better known works, allowing the viewer to peer still further into Freud’s working process. A number of remarkable photographs capture something of the atmosphere in Freud’s studio. In the accompanying catalogue, the curator of the exhibition, Catherine Lampert, describes Freud’s magnetic hold on people and his instinct to use this as a tool, while varying his ‘style’ with each work. Many years ago Freud described something akin to this in his assertion: “ The subject must be kept under closest observation: if this is done, day and night, the subject – he, she or it – will eventually reveal the all without which selection itself is not possible.”

In addition to the Cashel Bay painting and the recurring affinity to racing and animals, there are other Irish connections. In the 1940s and ‘50s, Freud made several working visits to Dublin, where he found the rawness of the city of that time stimulating. Dead Cock’s Head, 1951, for example, is the result of his fascination with the butchers’ displays of unwashed meat. By contrast one of his most recent portraits, The Donegal Man, 2006, a portrait of a leading Irish businessman, shows the face of a more modern, enterprising Ireland.

Lucian Freud, grandson of the founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, was born in 1922 in Berlin, but his family moved to the UK in 1933. He attended the Cedric Morris’s East Anglican School of Painting and Drawing in Dedham. His first solo exhibition, at the Lefevre Gallery in 1944, featured the now celebrated painting The Painter’s Room, 1944, and he was one of three artists to represent Britain at the Venice Biennal in 1954. Since then Freud has become one of the best-known and most highly-regarded British artists of recent times. He was awarded the Companion of Honour and the Order of Merit. A major retrospective of his work was held in Tate Britain in 2002 and at the end of 2007 the Museum of Modern Art, New York, will present an exhibition organised around his etchings. He lives and works in London and is represented by the Acquavella Gallery.

The exhibition is curated by Catherine Lampert, specialist on the work of Freud, a friend of the artist and former Director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery. The exhibition will travel to the Louisiana Museum, near Copenhagen, and to the Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, in 2008.

The exhibition is sponsored by The Tea Room at The Clarence Hotel and is presented in association with THE IRISH TIMES.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Treasure Hunt Introduces Kids to Noted Artist Jasper Johns

Treasure Hunt Introduces Kids to Noted Artist Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns, Targets Flags 1968.

MYRTLE BEACH, SC.-When it’s too hot for outdoor play and the kids are complaining that they’re bored, what could be better than an indoor treasure hunt – and better yet, one that offers a chance to learn about one of America’s most revered artists?

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum is the place, and the subject is Jasper Johns: 41 Years of Prints. From now through September 2, when the exhibition closes, kids can hunt through six Museum galleries to find the answers to 10 questions related to the artworks on display. Those who answer all 10 correctly win a prize.

And while the small fry hunt down their treasure, parents can enjoy perusing the more than 60 lithographs, silkscreens, intaglios and mezzotints by South Carolina-raised Jasper Johns, the artist credited with paving the way from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art and Minimalism. In his paintings and prints, Johns depicted such familiar icons as flags, maps, targets, letters and numbers, striving to portray these symbols as existing outside of their symbolic context.

Before, after, or instead of the treasure hunt, families can relax on the Museum’s Tea Porch with games, puzzles and Masterpiece coloring pages, including special Jasper Johns “art” created just for this event. Refreshments are available at nominal charges.

Museum hours are from 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and from 1 – 4 p.m. Sundays.

Jasper Johns: 41 Years of Prints, is on loan from the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation of Kansas City, Missouri, and is presented as part of the Art Museum’s 10th Anniversary Celebration.

Also on display at the Museum is From Whence I’ve Come: Drawings, Paintings and Sculptures by Sigmund Abeles, a strikingly personal retrospective from another world-renowned artist. The exhibit includes 46 works (plus artist sketchbooks) created over some six decades.

Admission to the Museum is free, but donations are welcome. For further information, call 843-238-2510 or visit www.MyrtleBeachArtMuseum.org.

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum is a wholly nonprofit institution located across from Springmaid Pier at 3100 South Ocean Boulevard in Myrtle Beach. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free, but donations are welcomed. Components of Museum programs are funded in part by support from the City of Myrtle Beach, the Horry County Council and the South Carolina Arts Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

New Work By Ettore Sottsass in New York

New Work By Ettore Sottsass in New York

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Ettore Sottsass, Cabinet nr. 71, 2006.

NEW YORK.-Friedman Benda will inaugurate the opening of its gallery with a seminal exhibition of new work by celebrated architect Ettore Sottsass. Created over the last three years, this body of work has never been shown publicly in its entirety. It marks the culmination of a series of limited edition furniture and glass works that Sottsass has spent the last fifteen years designing which have rarely been shown outside of museums. The exhibition will be on view from September 19 – October 27, 2007. An opening reception will be held on September 19th at Friedman Benda, located at 515 West 26th Street.

Recognized for his uniquely subversive and counterintuitive vision, at 90 years of age, Ettore Sottsass continues to be one of the most influential architects working today. This vision, expressed in the upcoming exhibition of new studio pieces, brings together a lifetime exploration of material, color and form into their most elegant and seductive application yet.

The cabinets, constructed with highly architectural properties yet seemingly unfettered by structural constraints, feel like intimate buildings. Some focus on the smooth surface of a single tropical wood, while others combine materials such as polished or patinated aluminum. With legs made of huge slabs of seamless acrylic, some appear suspended in air. Up to ten feet high, some are monumental in size. Out of scale proportions and off-kilter details endow each design with a sculptural quality that entreats the viewer to explore every side. Even those that seem symmetrical at first glance, reveal elements askew when taken in at every angle.

The glassworks, Sottsass’ first in five years, combine various shapes and colors into his most intricate and dynamic exploration of the material. Sottsass first began working with glass in the early 1970s on Murano. Fascinated by its pre-formed fluid nature, glass became his most artistic vehicle for experimentation with color and form, and remains so today. Contradicting prevailing modernist conventions, he began using wire and glue to assemble pieces together in the mid-1980s. This now iconic method is employed in many of the works in the new collection.

Earlier this year, a retrospective at the Design Museum London, Work in Progress, previewed three of the cabinets included in this exhibition. Not since MoMA’s influential exhibition Italy: The New Domestic Landscape (1972) and the first exhibition of Memphis (1981) has Sottsass created an exhibition of this scale.

About Ettore Sottsass: One of the most significant counter-forces to modernism in the history of design, Ettore Sottsass has made monumental artistic contributions to every decade since his life in design began in Italy in 1945. His remarkable career has produced a provocative body of work, including architecture, furniture, industrial design, glass, ceramics, painting, photography and a wealth of writings. With this work he has consistently intellectually and aesthetically challenged the conventional wisdom of forms and proportions for over 65 years.

Sottsass has been continually driven by what Penny Sparke aptly described in her essay for LACMA’s 2006 Sottsass retrospective as “a personal search for a new language of modern design.” His rigorous pursuit has led to the creation of such groundbreaking movements as radical design, anti-design, and post-modernist architecture, which led to his founding Memphis in the early 1980s.

A central concern of much of Sottsass’ work has been the social, cultural and technical implications of architecture and design on the way people live and interact. He has been particularly affected by the new materials and technologies introduced during his lifetime. His exploration of these elements has led him to apply both newfangled and historical materials in non-traditional ways. Color and form have played a role of equal importance in Sottsass’ work and he is well-known for embracing them with a similarly radical approach. Throughout the entirety of his career, from early paintings of the 1930s to later works of architecture during the 1980s, Sottsass has used color to determine shapes within a composition and the relationship of exterior surface to interior function.

Sottsass’ remarkable career has produced a diverse array of commissions that have transformed architecture and design. Iconic built architectural works include Wolf House (1989) in Colorado and Milan’s Malpensa Airport (2000). Objects he designed for Alessi and electronic products for Olivetti, including his iconic Valentine typewriter, have changed the landscape of industrial design. The Memphis movement, for which he is most popularly known, set the style for an entire decade. Celebrating his 90th birthday in September, Sottsass continues to produce work through Sottsass Associati, the architecture and design practice he founded in Milan in 1985.
About Friedman Benda:

Friedman Benda was founded in 2007 by Barry Friedman and Marc Benda as a venue for established and emerging designers and artists who push the boundaries of their mediums. The gallery features a program of rotating exhibitions of contemporary work by some of the world’s leading artists, architects, and designers. Friedman Benda is located at 515 West 26th Street in the Chelsea area of New York City. For more information please visit www.friedmanbenda.com.

Three Picasso Paintings Were Recovered in France After They Were Stolen in February

Three Picasso Paintings Were Recovered in France After They Were Stolen in February

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Pablo Picasso, Maya a la poupee (Maya with doll), 1938.

PARIS, FRANCE.- French agents secured three Picasso paintings which had been stolen from the Paris home of the Spanish painter's granddaughter in February. The thieves have also been arrested. The paintings are worth around $69 million dollars and had been taken from their frames and rolled up, according to police. The works were stolen in February from the home of Diana Widmaier Picasso, daughter of Maya. According to ploce, the thieves had an intimate knowledge of the apartment.

A Widmaier Picasso lawyer stated, "The paintings are coming back to the Picasso family."

Pablo Ruiz Picasso (October 25, 1881 – April 8, 1973) was a Spanish painter and sculptor. His full name was Pablo Diego José Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno María de los Remedios Cipriano de la Santísima Trinidad Clito Ruiz y Picasso. One of the most recognized figures in 20th century art, he is best known as the co-founder, along with Georges Braque, of cubism.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Maîtres anciens

Maîtres anciens


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Les maîtres de l´art ancien font la fierté des musées les plus prestigieux et de quelques collectionneurs peu enclins à se séparer de leurs chefs-d´œuvre. La pénurie d´œuvres, alliée à la tentation du prestige d´une grande signature, emmène quelques toiles, mais aussi des dessins, vers des enchères spectaculaires. Cependant, les amateurs peuvent se tourner vers des signatures moins connues du grand public ou vers des dessins et des estampes, dont le marché foisonne.

La cote de l´art ancien s´est considérablement essoufflée depuis le pic atteint en 1990. Elle n´a jamais retrouvé les sommets de l´époque et affichait en 2007 un indice des prix presque deux fois moindre que 17 ans plus tôt. Ce tassement du marché n´empêche pas quelques adjudications exceptionnelles pour les rares toiles de qualité muséale soumises à la velléité des collectionneurs. Les années 2000 ont en effet été le théâtre de compétitions d´acheteurs multi-millionnaires dont quelques enchères spectaculaires. En tête, celle signée par Peter Paul RUBENS en juillet 2002 : Sotheby´s présentait à Londres Le Massacre des innocents (c.1608-1609) qui devint l´une des peintures les plus coûteuses au monde avec une adjudication à 45 millions de livres sterling, soit plus de 70 millions d´euros. L´œuvre propulsait le produit des ventes annuel de Rubens de +1 790% ! Outre l´esthétique baroque de Rubens, les vues vénitiennes d'Antonio Canal CANALETTO séduisent toujours les collectionneurs européens et anglo-saxons. Le produit des ventes de l´artiste italien est le plus important des maîtres anciens depuis 1990 : la dispersion de ses œuvres a dégagé plus de 166,7 millions d´euros sur les 17 dernières années. Les toiles de belles dimensions (plus d´un mètre) s´échangent plus chèrement que dans les années 90, soutenues par un record en 2005 à hauteur de 16,65 millions de livres sterling pour Venise, the Grand Canal, looking North-East from Palazzo Balbi (plus de 29 millions de dollars, Sotheby's, Londres). Ses œuvres secondaires sont de plus en plus rares : un capriccio ou une vedute à l´encre de Canaletto est difficile a acquérir car, depuis 2001, on compte tout juste une œuvre soumise annuellement aux enchères. Ces petits travaux s´échangent aujourd´hui entre 50 000 et 100 000 euros en moyenne.

L´assèchement du marché est plus frustrant encore concernant les artistes des XVème et XVIème siècles. L´acquisition d´une signature à la résonance prestigieuse telle que Lucas I CRANACH, Andrea MANTEGNA, LEONARDO DA VINCI ou MICHELANGELO s´avère un exercice difficile. Ici encore, les collectionneurs se livrent à de véritables compétitions d´enchères lorsqu´une pièce de belle qualité sort de l´ombre, y compris pour des œuvres secondaires (dessins, esquisses) qui peuvent atteindre des sommets. Imaginez… une collection enrichie d´un Michel-Ange ou d´un Leonard de Vinci ! L´idée est séduisante mais il faut s´armer de patience avant d´espérer enchérir sur de tels noms. Michel-Ange est, par exemple l´un des plus rares aux enchères et le marché est uniquement alimenté par quelques dessins : depuis 1990, seuls six papiers travaillés à l´encre ou au fusain furent proposés pour un produit des ventes total de plus de 32,4 millions d´euros. Ces dessins constituaient des études préparatoires pour des œuvres de plus grande envergure. Malgré l´inachèvement de ces feuilles, le prestige de la signature engage les collectionneurs vers des enchères à plusieurs centaines de milliers, voire à des millions d´euros. Le papier le plus cher de Michel-Ange décrochait 7,4 millions de livres sterling en juillet 2000 chez Christie´s Londres (The Risen Christ: Three-Quarter Nude/Study of the Same Figure, étude à l´encre, au fusain et à la sanguine). Son contemporain, Leonard de Vinci, dont la Joconde est devenu le symbole de la peinture renaissance, affiche la même enchère record, signée un an plus tard dans la même maison de ventes. Son dessin à 7,4 millions de livres sterling est un travail intitulé Horse and Rider sur une feuille de 12 x 8 cm ! Le prix de l´exception puisque seuls trois dessins de l´artiste furent soumis aux enchères ces 10 dernières années.

La peinture ancienne n´est cependant pas le terrain de chasse gardé de collectionneurs millionnaires. Nombres de toiles secondaires sous de grandes signatures, ou des artistes moins connus du grand public demeurent accessibles aux budgets plus modestes. L´anglais Thomas GAINSBOROUGH, dont les portraits sont très prisés (entre 20 000 et 50 000 euros en moyenne), affiche quelques toiles accessibles pour moins de 5 000 euros à l´instar de Landscape with Trees and rocky Outcrop, une huile vendue 2 500 livres sterling (3 719 euros en février 2007, chez W.H. Lane & Son, Penzance, Cornwall). Les secteurs du dessin et de l´estampe offrent plus d´opportunités. Pour moins de 1 000 euros, il est possible d´acquérir des travaux d´Augustin PAJOU, de Victor Jean NICOLLE, de Jean PILLEMENT, de Louis Félix LARUE de et même, pour l´amateur prompt aux découvertes, des œuvres anonymes « attribuées à ».

Si le marché des plus grands maîtres anciens est pauvre en peintures et dessins, il et cependant abondant en gravures sous les signatures de REMBRANDT VAN RIJN, Albrecht DÜRER ou Francisco GOYA Y LUCIENTES. Chez Goya par exemple, les auctioneers dispersent parfois des lots de plusieurs gravures. Ainsi, la série de 80 feuilles des Désastres de la guerre fut emportée pour 62 000 euros le 1er juin dernier à Hambourg (Hauswedell & Nolte), soit une valeur moyenne de 775 euros par gravure. Très prisés, les travaux au burin de Dürer trouvent preneur à partir de 1 000 euros. Le 28 juin dernier par exemple, La dame à cheval et le Landsquenet (10,2x7,2 cm) fut adjugée 2 350 euros chez Rossini à Paris. Cependant, certaines feuilles de Dürer s´envolent à prix d´or. Parmi les plus convoitées, citons Adam and Eve (1504) qui a dépassé à plusieurs reprises le seuil des 100 000 dollars ! C´était le cas en décembre dernier chez Christie´s ou le précieux papier décrochait 55 000 livres sterling (plus de 81 000 euros, Londres). Quant à la production gravée de Rembrandt, la plus riche des maîtres anciens, elle s´étend sur 40 ans (1628 – 1665). Des 300 estampes connues, l´artiste a créé de nombreux états dont la large diffusion lui permis d´accéder à la célébrité de son vivant. Certaines estampes affichent une cote supérieure à des dessins originaux de la même signature. Citons par exemple Le Paysage aux trois arbres de 1643, le plus grand paysage gravé de Rembrandt (21,3x27,9 cm), qui atteignait le prix de l´exception le 9 juin 2006 en décrochant 255 000 euros (sous le titre Die Landschaft mit den drei Bäumen, Hauswedell & Nolte à Hamburg). Son œuvre gravée fait du maître néerlandais l´artiste le plus présent en ventes publiques avec plus de 5 400 œuvres ayant changé de main depuis 1990.

Les collectionneurs privilégient, outre la signature, l´aboutissement de l´œuvre et sa bonne conservation. Difficile à cerner pour les néophytes, le marché de l´art ancien oscille entre de rares chefs-d´œuvre réservés à un public aisé et des œuvres plus confidentielles dont le marché demeure raisonnable.

Howard Hodgkin: Prints at Victoria Art Gallery

Howard Hodgkin: Prints at Victoria Art Gallery

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Howard Hodgkin, Moonlight, 1980.

BATH, UK.- The Victoria Art Gallery in Bath presents Howard Hodgkin: Prints, on view through September 30, 2007. Howard was interviewed on Radio 4's Front Row recently, when the show at the Victoria was mentioned. Howard trained and taught at the Bath Academy of Art from 1950 to 1964, but he has never had a show in the city before. Some of his very earliest paintings were entered into Bath Society of Artists exhibitions at the Victoria Art Gallery in the 1950s. One of them, showing a Staff Meeting at Corsham (i.e. the Bath Academy), has been borrowed specially for our show from its usual home in Kettering Art Gallery. Howard turns 75 on August 7th, during the run of our show. Many of the most painterly pieces were made at Jack Shirreff’s 107 Workshop in Wiltshire. A catalogue is available and prints are for sale.

Major Warhol Show Marks 20th Anniversary

Major Warhol Show Marks 20th Anniversary

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Andy Warhol (1928-1987), Dolly Parton, 1985, Acrylic and silkscreen ink on linen, 42 x 42 in. (106.7 x 106.7 cm.) The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. © AWF.

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND.-Andy Warhol is a major exhibition which is part of the Bank of Scotland totalArt series, which marks the 20th anniversary of the artist’s death in New York in 1987, and opens at the National Gallery Complex in Edinburgh on 4 August 2007. The exhibition has attracted the biggest ever sponsorship of modern art in Scotland from the Bank of Scotland.

Bank of Scotland totalART Andy Warhol is the first in a series of two major modern art exhibitions at the National Gallery Complex featuring Andy Warhol and Joseph Beuys. Bank of Scotland will invest over £400,000 in the programme over the next two years.

The exhibition will be the most comprehensive show dedicated to the work of the artist in Scotland and will be arranged on both floors at the National Galleries of Scotland’s world-renowned temporary exhibition space in the centre of Edinburgh. The exhibition aims to show how a life/death duality runs through all of Warhol’s work.

The show will present a broad range of Warhol’s work from the early 1950s to 1986 in a wide range of media – painting, sculpture, drawing, collage, film, photography and installation. Many of the works are being lent by the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh and there will also be loans from other museums and private collections in Britain and Europe.

Special displays will be dedicated to ‘Marilyn, Liz, Jackie and Elvis’, ‘Portraits of the 1970s and 1980s’, ‘Consumer Products’, ‘Death and Disaster’, ‘Skulls’, ‘Stitched Photographs’, and ‘War, Death and Religion’.

The important installation Silver Clouds (1966) - a room of floating silver-coloured helium balloons - will be included in the display and a number of Time Capsules and Screen Tests are among the many works on loan from the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. There will be a special recreation of Warhol's 1983 Zurich exhibition. Paintings for Children, with artworks hung at child's eye level. The Edinburgh College of Art will present a programme of films by and on Warhol and the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, will show a special exhibition of 125 original posters by Warhol covering exhibitions, films and advertising from 1964 to 1988.

The exhibition in Scotland is one of a number of worldwide events dedicated to the artist throughout 2007-2008. Highlights include the screening of Andy Warhol’s first film Sleep (1963) at Tate Modern in London as part of The UBS Long Weekend. The Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, USA is planning a number of special events and The Warhol Foundation will publish a special 20th anniversary report on the activities of the Foundation.

Andy Warhol (1928 – 1987) is one of the seminal artists of the twentieth century. The recent sale of his 1963 painting Green Car Crash (Green Burning Car I) from his Death and Disaster series set a new record for the artist at auction when it was sold for $71.7 million at Christies in New York on 16 May 2007. The Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh is lending the white version of this painting, White Burning Car III, to the Edinburgh exhibition.

Born Andrew Warhola in Pittsburgh, Warhol showed an interest in photography and drawing from a young age, attending free classes at Carnegie Institute. He studied pictorial design at the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Melon University) 1945 – 1949. He moved to New York in 1949 and throughout the 1950s, enjoyed a successful career as a commercial artist, winning several commendations from the Art Directors Club and the American Institute of Graphic Arts. His first one-man exhibition of drawings was at the Hugo Gallery, New York in 1952 where he exhibited Fifteen Drawings Based on the Writings of Truman Capote.

Appropriating images from popular culture, Warhol created many paintings that remain icons of 20th-century art including the Campbell's Soup Can, Marilyn and Elvis series. In 1962, the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles exhibited his Campbell's Soup Cans and in New York, the Stable Gallery showed the Baseball, Coca-Cola, Do-It-Yourself and Dance Diagram paintings among others.

In 1963 Warhol established a studio at 231 East 47th Street that became known as the "Factory". In addition to painting and creating box sculptures such as Brillo Box and Heinz Box, Warhol began working in other mediums including record-producing (The Velvet Underground), magazine publishing (Interview) and filmmaking. He shot his first film in 1963 and became increasingly active as an experimental film-maker; the films made by him and Warhol Films Factory Inc. include Sleep (1963), Empire (1964) and Chelsea Girls (1966).

In the 1970's, Warhol renewed his focus on painting and worked extensively on a commissioned basis both for corporations and for individuals whose portrait he painted. Works created in this decade include Skulls, Hammer and Sickles, Torsos, Maos and Shadows. Firmly established as a major 20th-century artist and international celebrity, Warhol was given a major retrospective of his work at the Pasadena Art Museum that travelled to museums around the world.

In the 1980s the artist began work on Andy Warhol's TV, a series of half-hour video programmes patterned after Interview magazine. In 1985, "Andy Warhol's Fifteen Minutes" appeared on MTV, half-hour programmes featuring celebrities, artists, musicians, and designers, with Warhol as the host. The paintings he created during this time included Dollar Signs, Guns, Ads and Illustrations, Camouflages and Last Suppers. He also produced several paintings in collaboration with other artists including Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Francesco Clemente.

In 1989, the Museum of Modern Art in New York held a major retrospective exhibition. In 2001 Heiner Bastian curated a Warhol retrospective that began in Berlin and travelled to Tate Modern in London and finally to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Artexpo Paints a New Canvas in Las Vegas

Artexpo Paints a New Canvas in Las Vegas

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L. Li’s “Song of Muse”.

NEW YORK.-Artexpo, the biggest name in international art fairs, is expanding and launching its first annual show in Las Vegas. Building on the 29-year success of Artexpo New York, which takes place every spring, Artexpo Las Vegas provides an exciting opportunity to showcase talent on the West Coast in the fall. Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, easily accessed on Vegas’ famed Strip, will host the inaugural event from September 28 to 30.

For years, many of the fine art world’s largest companies have requested a western venue for Artexpo, and Las Vegas was chosen to conveniently serve the growing number of buyers and exhibitors from the western states. The city’s limitless entertainment options, world-class restaurants, luxurious hotels, convenient access and warm fall temperatures, make Las Vegas a welcome destination for art buyers from California, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas and a long list of international locations. Excitement is mounting in the art world with booths already sold out by eager exhibitors.

“Artexpo Las Vegas offers West Coast art enthusiasts a unique opportunity to visit their favorite publishers, galleries and artists in an exciting location that is closer to home,” said Eric Smith, Vice President of The Art Group, the show’s producer. “We’re thrilled to expand the national reach of Artexpo to provide a dynamic forum for even more talented professionals.”

Art collectors from all walks of life, whether novices or experienced buyers, are expected to attend the show and explore the latest trends in the fine art world; purchasing both traditional and cutting-edge works ranging from original paintings and sculptures to limited-edition lithographs, giclees, animation art, photography and more.

Over 250 exhibitors will display creations by celebrated contemporary artists, such as Pino, Leon Bronstein and Hamilton Aguiar, alongside limited-edition pieces by the “masters”, including Pissarro and Chagall. A big draw card for music fans and collectors will be prized paintings, including some originals, by rock legends Ronnie Wood, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix. All works are for sale.

Another section of the show expected to be popular among trade and consumers alike is the SOLO Independent Artists’ Pavilion, which will showcase the work of the world’s emerging artists that have yet to sign with a gallery or art dealer. SOLO is the ultimate venue for artists to be discovered, not only by gallery owners and art publishers, but by collectors and enthusiasts in search of something unique.

“Nowhere else on the West Coast will you find so many artists under one roof,” said Jack Solomon, respected owner of the national S2 Art Group, based in Las Vegas. “Most people don’t realize Vegas is home to a thriving art scene, but there is a huge audience and hunger for arts coming from both the rapidly expanding local population as well as the 40 million annual tourists.”

Artexpo Las Vegas builds on the success of the world’s largest fine and popular art fair, Artexpo New York, which will celebrate its 30th anniversary in February, 2008 at the Javits Convention Center in New York City. Over its storied history, Artexpo has helped propel the careers of some of the finest American artists of the 20th century, including Andy Warhol, Peter Max, Robert Indiana, Leroy Neiman and Robert Rauschenberg.

Tickets for Artexpo Las Vegas are available the day of the show at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, or at www.artexpos.com. The show is open to the public on Friday, September 28 from 12-6pm, Saturday, September 29 from 11am to 6pm, and Sunday, September 30 from 11am to 5pm. Adult tickets for Artexpo Las Vegas are $10 a day; $5 for seniors and students. Children under 12 are free.

Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) at Baltimore Museum of Art

Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) at Baltimore Museum of Art

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Auguste Rodin. Mignon (Rose Beuret). 1867–68.The Baltimore Museum of Art: Partial and promised gift of Therese and Richard Lansburgh, Baltimore, BMA 1998.532.

BALTIMORE, MD.-The Modern Masters Series at the BMA continues with this intimate one-gallery exhibition exploring the legacy of the great French sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840–1917). One of the most popular sculptors of the early 20th century, Rodin changed the face of figurative sculpture for the modern era, introducing a new age of artistic expression and inspiring a generation of artists from Edgar Degas to Henri Matisse. Rodin: Expression & Influence, on view August 1, 2007 – April 6, 2008, showcases nearly 30 works from the BMA’s collection by Rodin and his contemporaries, many on display for the first time.

Highlights of the exhibition include Rodin’s The Thinker, one of the artist’s most well-known and iconic works, as well as four bronze casts of the great French writer Honoré de Balzac. The two busts, one head, and a full standing figure reveal Rodin’s extensive campaign to monumentalize this literary giant. Other featured works include the bust Mignon, depicting Rodin’s long-time companion Rose Beuret; figure studies from The Burghers of Calais, one of Rodin’s most heroic and moving historical tributes; and two figures for The Gates of Hell, the monumental masterpiece that the artist worked on from 1880 until his death in 1917.

Rodin: Expression & Influence also features sculpture by Emile Antoine Bourdelle, Edgar Degas, Charles Despiau, Auguste Renoir, Aristide Maillol, and Pablo Picasso—as well as a selection of works on paper. In addition to presenting Rodin’s expressive variations, the exhibition traces the ways in which his artistic process charted new territory and both inspired and provoked reaction from his contemporaries.

Rodin: Expression & Influence is curated by Associate Curator of European Painting & Sculpture Dr. Oliver Shell. The exhibition is generously supported by Stiles Tuttle Colwil and Jonathan Gargiulo.