29/10/03

Camescope numérique JVC GR-D200

Camescope numérique JVC GR-D200

JVC GR-D200
(c) JVC

Quand on découvre le nouveau caméscope numérique à large bande JVC GR-D200, on se dit qu'il est vraiment mignon avec sa petite taille et son design tout en rondeur. Puis, quand on le met en marche, on est tout aussi surpris par ses belles performances… 

Equipé d'un CCD 1,33 mégapixels, il enregistre des images d'une qualité exceptionnelle, aidé par son processeur large bande qui pousse au maximum les possibilités du format DV, avec une résolution horizontale de 540 lignes. Non content d'enregistrer de magnifiques images animées, il peut aussi se transformer en appareil photo numérique et capturer des images fixes en quatre dimensions au choix, avec une qualité tout aussi exceptionnelle (il multiplie par 1,5 la résolution verticale par rapport aux images fixes classiques). Pourvu des dernières innovations en matière de multimédia, le JVC GR-D200 possède une interface Haute vitesse USB, qui décuple encore ses possibilités. Via un ordinateur, il propose ainsi de créer ses propres CD vidéo au format MPEG1, de réaliser ses clips vidéo au format MPEG4 pour les envoyer ensuite par e-mail, ou encore de l'utiliser comme une webcam… Convivial et performant,il est également simple d'utilisation. Son fonctionnement "Power-Link" lui permet de s'allumer automatiquement, que ce soit en tirant le viseur ou en ouvrant l'écran. Et pour filmer de nuit, son flash automatique est secondé par la technologie "Digital NightScope" qui pousse la sensibilité lumineuse pour obtenir une image claire et en couleur même si la lumière ambiante est insuffisante.

JVC France : jvc.fr

26/10/03

Knut Asdam at Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin

Knut Åsdam 
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
29 October 2003 - 4 January 2004

An exhibition of two filmworks by the Norwegian multi-media artist Knut Åsdam opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Wednesday 29 October. In this, his first showing in Ireland, Åsdam seeks to demonstrate how the architecture of a city can embody contemporary life.

'Filter City', 2003, is Knut Åsdam most ambitious film/video work to date. The work focuses on two women, their relationship to each other, to a larger social group and to a city that is in constant transformation – architecturally, socially and politically. The film is mostly shot outdoors in modern apartment/housing complexes, using scenes that are interchangeable with different Western cities. Through dialogue and filmic description of places and people, Knut Åsdam brings the characters into a narration with a city that is constantly changing socially and politically. 'Filter City' was first shown at the recent Istanbul Biennial.

The second work 'Cluster Praxis', 2002, deals with dancing as a form of social practice, and particularly as an expression of the desire for collectivety. The work is structured around the sound – a narrative mix of voice and ambient soundscapes – dominated by a five-minute-long poetic monologue. Writing in Artforum, Jordan Kantor, described the work as tracing an ever-deepening subjectivity with the “objective” camera.

Knut Åsdam was born in 1968, in Trondheim, Norway, and studied in London at Wimbledon College of Art and Goldsmiths College. He has exhibited extensively in the US and Europe and was selected for the Nordic pavilion in the 1999 Venice Biennale. His most recent shows include solo exhibitions at Klmens Gasser and Tanja Grunert, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, and Tate Britain, London.

A publication, with an essay by Simon Sheikh, Curator and Assistant Professor of Art Theory and Co-ordinator of the Critical Studies Programme, Malmo Art Academy, accompanies the exhibition.

IMMA - IRISH MUSEUM OF MODERN ART 
Military Road, Kilmainham, Dublin 8
www.modernart.ie

25/10/03

Stefana McClure, Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York - Lost in Translation

Stefana McClure: Lost in Translation 
Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York 
October 24 – November 29, 2003 

Cristinerose | Josee Bienvenu Gallery present Lost in Translation, an exhibition by Stefana McClure. This is her second solo show at the gallery. Concurrently, her work is included in Drawings of Choice from a New York Collection at the Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio. She has recently participated in exhibitions at The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, at Yale University Art Gallery and at the University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach, California.

Stefana McClure investigates the structure and visual properties of language. She is captivated by the physical appearance of subtitles, closed captions, intertitles, dictionary definitions, and the layout of text on a page. The exhibition comprises three bodies of work: a large group of films on paper (including a wall installation of scattered mini DVD drawings and a “video wall”); a series of ten dictionary drawings and five fiction filmed drawings. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, Stefana McClure spent twelve years in Japan, she now lives in New York but remains fascinated by the gray area that exists between languages and cultures.

Stefana McClure turns text into image. Distillation of time and obliteration of information characterize her drawings. To make her films on paper she watches a film frame by frame, and inscribes successively all the subtitles on top of each other on a background of transfer paper. As the successive layers of information are transferred off, the surface of the colored paper gets slowly eroded. The image is built by removing. Hours of translated dialogues are reduced to a ghost form, dense in the middle, fading towards the edges. The hypersensitivity and intrinsic memory of the transfer paper enables these multi-layered works to become palimpsests. They have the iridescent glow of high tech video screens.

The Video Wall, an installation of Passionless Moments: Japanese subtitles to a film by Jane Campion, as shown on thirteen different television monitors, recreates the electronics store experience of simultaneously viewing the same video on multiple screens. The installation explores the qualities of clarity, precision of focus, image distortion and interference distinct to each monitor. For this piece, she deliberately looked for irregularities inherent in mass-produced rolls of graphite transfer. The scratchy gray backgrounds have the feeling of used home video tapes. The Scatter Wall (of mini DVDs and Audiovox format films) is a celebration of cinema in the form of a random scatter of 47 films on paper. Installed on a sky blue wall, the works included range from English subtitles to Krzysztof Kieslowski’s A Short Film about Love to Japanese intertitles to a number of early silent films by Yasujiro Ozu to English subtitles to Jour de fete by Jacques Tati, depicted on a bright yellow screen.

She subjects herself to a series of “non-decisions” and lets the material dictate its own rules. The size of the work is determined by the format of the TV monitor on which the film was viewed or by the physical dimensions of the text she has decided to transcribe. The color and texture of the transfer paper is restricted to availability on the office supply market: graphite, red wax, yellow, pink, light blue, dark blue, white and black.

The series of ten dictionary drawings present a distillation of Kenkyusha’s New Collegiate Japanese- English Dictionary, a dictionary that prides itself on the wealth of examples it provides, and the first “serious” Japanese-English dictionary the artist acquired when she moved to Japan. The drawings offer tribute to knowledge. The architectural structure of the dictionary gradually reveals itself as more and more layers of information are removed. Also based on books, Stefana McClure inaugurates a new series entitled fiction filmed drawings. Each of the five works capture and condense an entire novel, short story or play on which a film was subsequently based. Among them: The Birds: a story by Daphne Du Maurier, Double Indemnity: a novel by James M. Cain and Rashomon: a short story by Ryunosuke Akutagawa.

Josée Bienvenu Gallery
529 West 20th Street, New York NY, 10011
www.joseebienvenugallery.com

11/10/03

Hayley Tompkins, at Andrew Kreps Gallery, NYC

Hayley Tompkins
Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York
October 11 - November 15, 2003
My street's very, very quiet, and no-one brings anyone in here - it's very private.
But there are these motor homes and
20 people in black suits,
standing in the middle of my street, So I pull up.
In my car and I've got my hair pulled back - and he
starts to take pictures. No make-up, no nothing.
So I said, "Fine" I see myself like that every day.
I think I'm very free. On + on.
Once you overcome an obstacle,
You springboard into the future.

Borrow it.
His / her / it's life activity. Conscious life activity.
Find it.

Life is interesting and short
It's not supposed to be easy, and if it is
You're probably just in denial and you're existing here
Like a zombie.
No zombies.
That's what I love about -

-Sue Tompkins
Andrew Kreps Gallery presents an exhibition of new work by Hayley Tompkins. Based in Glasgow, Scotland, Hayley Tompkins has recently participated in exhibitions at Galerie Krinzinger in Vienna, Austria and at The Modern Institute in Glasgow. This is her second solo exhibition at Andrew Kreps Gallery.

The exhibition features Hayley Tompkins' trademark watercolors on paper as well as paintings on wooden board, a new medium for her. Hayley Tompkins sees these paintings on board as an "attempt to retrieve images of other paintings in my mind. Like remembering. The paintings feel aged to me already, like I am making ready-made objects and inserting them into history straight away."

In this exhibition, a number of works are hung on a large cubical structure built in the center of the gallery space. As viewers navigate around the structure, Hayley Tompkins' installation unfolds. The artist sees encountering the structure as "a gestalt, 'unwhole' experience" because only one part of the exhibition is visible at a time. The four walls of the box-structure provide a stage of sorts, where the paintings are installed to express their distinctive qualities. Some of the works contain references to stage or costume design. Hayley Tompkins cites Malevich, Sonia Delaunay and Oskar Schlemmer as influential for their work, as well as for their holistic approaches as artists-cum-stage designers. Other works in the exhibition are hung to emphasize their surreal content.

ANDREW KREPS GALLERY
516 wEST 20th Street, New York City

Exposition Botticelli au Musée du Luxembourg, Paris

 

Botticelli, de Laurent le Magnifique à Savonarole

Musée du Luxembourg, Paris

1er octobre 2003 - 22 février 2004

Palais Strozzi, Florence, 10 mars - 11 juillet 2004

 

Dans le cadre des grandes manifestations qu'il consacre à la Renaissance italienne, le Sénat présente au Musée du Luxembourg après Raphaël, Grâce et Beauté, une importante exposition consacrée à Sandro Botticelli. Fruit d'un accord international entre le Musée du Luxembourg et la Surintendance spéciale des Musées florentins, cette exposition situe l'art de Botticelli dans le contexte politique de Florence à la fin du Quattrocento.

L'exposition réunit plus d'une vingtaine de peintures de Botticelli. Provenant de différents musées et collections privées, elles sont pour la première fois rassemblées et certaines sont montrées pour la première fois au public. Sont aussi exposés des dessins importants. Il s'agit pour l'essentiel de chef d'œuvres à destination privée, réalisés pour des familles et des personnages importants de la cour des Médicis et dont l'exposition montre qu'ils développent un propos en relation avec les événements de l'époque. L'exposition comprend également, à titre de comparaison, un petit ensemble de peintures et de dessins exécutés par d'autres protagonistes de la scène artistique florentine contemporaine : Léonard de Vinci, Piero di Cosimo et Filippino Lippi.

Le parcours de l'exposition se fonde sur les résultats des travaux historiques les plus récents pour proposer une relecture approfondie de l'œuvre et de la personnalité de Botticelli. Fruit d'une recherche formelle systématique et inspiré par des « stratégies figuratives » qui attribuent à l'image une fonction polyvalente, à la fois esthétique et symbolique, son langage artistique n'ignore jamais la destination des œuvres. Dans l'atmosphère particulière de Florence au cours des trente dernières années du siècle, alimentée d'abord par l'humanisme intellectuel médicéen avant d'être agitée par les inquiétudes suscitées par les prédications de Savonarole, Botticelli atteint des sommets de raffinement linéaire et chromatique, aussi bien dans les thèmes mythologiques et littéraires que dans la méditation douloureuse sur le thème chrétien.

Outre diverses versions de la Vierge à l'Enfant, sont présentées quelques Annonciations dont la tension dramatique et spirituelle est exemplaire de l'artiste. Sont également présentes des peintures narratives inspirées par la littérature romanesque ou hagiographique, quelques-unes des mythologies et des allégories les plus célèbres, comme la Calomnie, des oeuvres religieuses de la dernière période, les cercles de l'enfer de la Divine Comédie de Dante, ainsi qu'une tapisserie et une broderie exécutées sur des dessins de Botticelli et des panneaux décoratifs de coffres de mariage.

Né à Florence en 1445, Alessandro Filipepi aurait, selon la tradition, reçu sa première formation artistique chez un orfèvre appelé « Botticello », auquel il aurait dû son surnom. L'hypothèse n'est plus acceptée par la critique, mais on peut la rapporter à son frère Giovanni, dont un document de 1458 note qu'il pratiquait la profession d'orfèvre. Il est probable que Sandro ait fait un bref apprentissage dans l'atelier de son frère, dont il a hérité le surnom. Comme dans le cas de Pollaiolo et de Verrocchio, cette expérience d'orfèvre, même limitée, laissera une marque reconnaissable dans la linéarité rapide et nerveuse des premières oeuvres. Mais c'est à l'école du frère dominicain, et peintre affirmé, Filippo Lippi que Botticelli a reçu sa véritable formation artistique.

Sa première commande publique lui est confiée par le Tribunal de l'Arte della Mercanzia (Guilde des Marchands) en 1470 – date à laquelle le nom de Botticelli figure parmi ceux des maîtres d'atelier. Il s'agit d'un panneau (La Force, conservée aux Offices) qui devait compléter une série de représentations des sept Vertus théologales et cardinales (Foi, Espérance, Charité, Force, Justice, Prudence et Tempérance).

Entre 1481 et 1482, l'artiste séjourne à Rome, et, avec d'autres peintres florentins comme Cosimo Rosselli et Domenico Ghirlandaio, il travaille à la décoration des murs de la Chapelle Sixtine, construite entre 1475 et 1477 par le pape Sixte IV à l'image du Temple de Salomon. Tout de suite après cette expérience romaine, il réalise d'affilée quelques-unes de ses plus belles peintures de thèmes mythologiques et poétiques, toutes liées d'une manière ou d'une autre au mécénat médicéen : les quatre panneaux peints à la détrempe représentant la nouvelle de Boccace, Nastagio degli Onesti, le célèbre Printemps, Pallas et le Centaure et La Naissance de Vénus.

Un climat d'insécurité générale pèse sur Florence après le départ des Médicis, chassés de la ville en 1494, tandis que leurs adversaires accèdent au pouvoir et que les prédications de Savonarole minent les valeurs morales et la conception même de la vie auxquelles on avait cru. Dans cette phase tardive, à partir des années 1490, les peintures de Botticelli sont animées par des figures emportées par une tension spirituelle croissante, qui traduisent l'inquiétude de cette fin de siècle à Florence. Mais cette transformation est perçue comme une opposition à la modernité et aux développements formels apportés par Léonard de Vinci et Michel-Ange. Ce dernier le critique en particulier pour sa conception des utilisations de la perspective. Les diverses versions de la Pietà et de la Nativité reflètent cette ultime phase de tourment spirituel.

Botticelli meurt à Florence en 1510.

Commissaires de l'exposition :
Daniel Arasse, Directeur d'Etudes à l'EHESS, Paris.
Pierluigi De Vecchi, Professeur d'iconografie d'iconologie à la Facoltà di Lettere dell'Università degli Studi di Milano.

Un catalogue de 250 pages sera édité par Skira avec des reproductions en couleur de toutes les oeuvres de l'exposition.

 

Musée du Luxembourg
19, rue de Vaugirard
75006 Paris

Horaires de l'exposition
Vendredi, samedi, dimanche, lundi 11h - 22h30 (nocturnes)
Mardi, mercredi, jeudi 11 h - 19 h

05/10/03

Laura Owens at Milwaukee Art Museum

Laura Owens 
Milwaukee Art Museum
October 18, 2003 - January 18, 2004 

Los Angeles-based artist Laura Owens is one of the most highly regarded young painters working today. The exhibition Laura Owens, on view in the Milwaukee Art Museum's Vogel/Helfaer Contemporary Galleries is the first major monographic survey of the artist's work and traces her development from 1997 to the present. Incorporating a wide and imaginative range of subjects and techniques, her work moves with ease between high and low, personal and social, figuration and abstraction. The exhibition, Laura Owens' most significant presentation to date, features approximately 20 paintings and several drawings, including a group of new large-scale works created for this presentation. 

Laura Owens is part of an international movement of emerging painters who investigate the formal issues of the medium through a highly personal blend of abstract and representational imagery. Her work incorporates an eclectic range of visual references, including English embroidery, Chinese and Japanese landscape painting, European and American modernism, and her own photography. Her unique style moves from landscape to abstraction with energetic, thick brushstrokes, fanciful childlike doodles, whimsical collage and sophisticated fine line drawings. 

"Laura Owens is one of the most important painters to emerge in the past decade," said Margaret Andera, exhibition coordinator at MAM and associate curator. "We are happy to be able to have her work on view for Milwaukeeans and visitors to enjoy." 

The Milwaukee Art Museum's presentation of Laura Owens allows viewers to track the artist's development and to forge links between works that, in many cases, have never been shown together. Laura Owens is creating significant new, large-scale paintings for the exhibition. Among them is Untitled (2002), a spacious desert landscape comprised of washes of color, strange sponge effects, and cacti drawn in outline with paint squeezed from a tube. 

Laura Owens' paintings, which challenge traditional concepts of painting, are often grandly scaled. They envelop the viewer and incorporate the walls and floors of the room in which they were made or exhibited. Her practice takes the exhibition site into account and she frequently plays with the installation of works to enhance their meaning. Installed on one wall but spaced apart, her two-panel painting Untitled (1999) features monkeys who beckon to each other across the blank space between them. The viewer who stands between the two canvases ends up occupying the virtual space of the work of art. Another work, Untitled (2000) is one of a pair of works created for an installation at Inverleith House in Edinburgh; it was both inspired by and made to compete with the view from the gallery windows of the surrounding botanical garden. 

Laura Owens' work has been included in the most important surveys of new painting, including Examining Pictures (Whitechapel Art Gallery, London and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 1999), Painting at the End of the World (Walker Art Center, 2001), Painting on the Move (Kunstmuseum, Kunsthalle, and Museum für Gegenwartkunst, Basel, 2002), as well as the 1999-2000 Carnegie International and Drawing Now: Eight Propositions (The Museum of Modern Art, 2002-03). 

Born in 1970 in Euclid, Ohio, Laura Owens is a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence; Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Maine; and the California Institute of Arts, Valencia. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles. Since her first solo show in 1995, Laura Owens has exhibited extensively and has enjoyed wide international exposure and substantial critical acclaim. Her works are in the collections of MOCA, the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, and the Guggenheim Museum in New York. 

The exhibition is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and coordinated at MAM by Margaret Andera, associate curator. The exhibition is accompanied by a major catalogue, with essays by exhibition curator Paul Schimmel and art historian Thomas Lawson. Nationally, Laura Owens is made possible by the generous support of Mark S. Siegel, The Pasadena Art Alliance, Kathi and Gary Cypres, David Hockney and Betye Monell Burton. 

The exhibition comes to the Milwaukee Art Museum after its debut at MOCA and showing at the Aspen Art Museum (August 2 - September 28, 2003). After MAM, the exhibition travels to the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami (March 4 - May 9, 2004).

MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
700 N. Art Museum Drive, Milwaukee, WI 53202
www.mam.org

Updated 02.07.2019

Childe Hassam at Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh - Prints and Drawings from the Collection

Childe Hassam: Prints and Drawings from the Collection 
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
October 4, 2003 - February 8, 2004

Frederick Childe Hassam (1859–1935), the best-known American painter in the Impressionist style, began his artistic career in his native Boston, working first as a wood-engraver, then as an illustrator, and eventually established himself as a painter of city life. Childe Hassam began to paint in the Impressionist style after he visited Paris between 1887 and 1889. In his paintings, he portrayed life in urban America, primarily his winter home of New York City, and the country landscapes of New England, where he spent his summers. Although Childe Hassam did not consider himself an Impressionist, his paintings and drawings are as filled with color and sunlight as the works of the French painters who inspired him.

In 1915, Childe Hassam took up printmaking–first etching and later lithography. Over the course of his career, Childe Hassam produced some 375 etchings and 42 lithographs. His earliest prints reflect his interest in the effect of light on objects in the landscape. As he achieved technical mastery as a printmaker, his approach became bolder and more decorative. He exploited the inherent contrast between black ink and white paper to emphasize light and shadow.

Linda Batis, associate curator of fine arts, said "The drawings on view in the exhibition reveal Hassam's natural affinity for the graphic arts as a way to explore color and pictorial structure. They provide insight into a fundamental fact about Hassam's work. He drew and painted what he saw before him."

Childe Hassam enjoyed a long relationship with Carnegie Museum of Art and John Beatty, the museum's first director. Between 1896 and 1935, Childe Hassam exhibited more than 90 paintings at several Carnegie Internationals, the museum's recurring exhibition of contemporary art. He served on the exhibition's Jury of Award in 1903, 1904, and 1910, the year he was also honored with a solo exhibition of paintings. With the purchase of Fifth Avenue in Winter in 1900, Carnegie Museum became the first American museum to acquire one of Childe Hassam's paintings. In 1907, John Beatty purchased 30 drawings from the artist, one of the largest such groups in any museum collection. The etchings and lithographs on view are from a group of 60 prints donated to the museum by the artist's widow in 1940 in recognition of the close relationship between Childe Hassam and the Carnegie Museum of Art.

Childe Hassam: Prints and Drawings from the Collection includes 72 drawings, etchings and paintings. Many of the drawings on view were studies for some of Childe Hassam's most notable paintings. Replicas of some of these are on view alongside the drawings to give visitors a sense of the correlation between the study and the final work. Correspondence between Childe Hassam and John Beatty, which reveals a friendship based on mutual enthusiasm for art, are also on view as part of the exhibition.

CARNEGIE MUSEUM OF ART
4400 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

01/10/03

Bill Viola at The National Gallery, London - The Passions

Bill Viola: The Passions
The National Gallery, London
22 October 2003 - 4 January 2004

BILL VIOLA (b.1951) is one of the world’s leading video artists. This major solo exhibition shows 14 works by Bill Viola dating from 1995 to the present, most unseen in the UK, and including two specially commissioned pieces. His work is both at the forefront of technical innovation and deeply rooted in the art of the past. Drawing on images and ideas from the art and philosophy of both European and Eastern traditions he produces work of enormous intensity. The focus of this exhibition will be his ongoing series ‘The Passions’, exploring the power, range and expression of the human emotions. These will be seen with a selection of other art works, including paintings from the National Gallery collection.

The National Gallery’s relationship with Bill Viola began when he was invited to contribute a work in response to a painting in the Gallery’s collection for the exhibition ‘Encounters’ (2000). Taking Hieronymus Bosch’s ‘Christ Mocked (The Crowning of Thorns)’ as his starting point, Viola produced his ‘The Quintet of the Astonished’, in which a group of five people, shown in extreme slow motion, display a range of conflicting emotions, from sorrow to bliss.

‘Quintet’ was the first completed work in ‘The Passions’. Deeply influenced by the devotional imagery of the 15th and 16th centuries, these works are for the most part shown on flat digital panel screens whose size, display, texture and sharpness of definition imitate portable painted panels. In ‘Dolorosa’, for example, two hinged screens each show a man and a woman crying in slow motion. This evokes diptychs showing the Man of Sorrows and the weeping Virgin, such as the National Gallery’s examples by Dieric Bouts. Despite the New Testament echoes in this and many of Viola’s works, these figures are anonymous and contemporary, their situation secular and undefined. Another work, ‘Catherine’s Room’ comprises five small screens inspired by the narrative predella panels of Italian Renaissance altarpieces.

Two important works - both previously unseen in the UK - provide a prelude to ‘The Passions’. The exhibition will open with Bill Viola’s first work made in response to an Old Master painting, ‘The Greeting’ (1995) inspired by Pontormo’s ‘The Visitation’, in which a 40-second ambiguous encounter between three women is slowed to last ten minutes. In contrast the powerful and dramatic ‘The Crossing’ (1996) is an all encompassing video and sound installation: on two sides of a single central screen a figure is simultaneously consumed by the elemental forces of fire and water.

His new works, ‘Emergence’ and ‘Observance’ continue ‘The Passions’ series and both derive from Old Master paintings. In ‘Emergence’, based on a fresco by Masolino, two women receive the lifeless body of a man from an overflowing well in a work that can be read as symbolising birth and resurrection. ‘Observance’ is a narrow, vertical composition (derived from Dürer’s ‘Four Apostles’ in Munich) in which people respond to a disturbing sight that occurs out of frame. Their intense emotions and reactions are seen in hyper-slow movement, creating an absorbing and mesmerising ritual of grief.

The exhibition has been organised by the J. Paul Getty Museum in collaboration with The National Gallery. It has been curated by John Walsh, director emeritus at the J.Paul Getty Museum, and in London, by Alexander Sturgis.

THE NATIONAL GALLERY
Trafalgar Square, London