Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts

16/12/22

Bob Dylan @ MAXXI, Rome - "Retrospectrum" Exhibition

Bob Dylan: Retrospectrum 
MAXXI, Rome 
16 December 2022 – 30 April 2023 

Bob Dylan: Retrospectrum, a comprehensive collection of visual works by one of the world’s most important cultural figures, opens at Rome’s National Museum of 21st Century Art—MAXXI. 

Curated by Shai Baitel, the Rome exhibition follows globally-renowned showings at MAM Shanghai, China and the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum in Miami, Florida in the United States. Notably, Rome is the very first European city to host this exhibition, which is being completely reimagined to interact with Zaha Hadid’s dynamic and futuristic spaces at MAXXI.

More than 100 works are on display in the exhibition, including paintings, watercolors, ink and graphite drawings, metal sculptures, video material, and archival documents that trace and explore more than 60 years of Bob Dylan’s artistic output.
Bob Dylan says: “It’s gratifying to learn that my visual works are going to be exhibited at MAXXI in Rome, a truly great museum in one of the world’s most beautiful and inspirational cities. This exhibition is meant to provide perspectives that examine the human condition and explore the mysteries of life that continue to leave us perplexed. It’s very different from my music, of course, but every bit as purposeful in its intent”.
Comments Giovanna Melandri, President of Fondazione MAXXI: "Bob Dylan is an absolute legend and one of the most important and influential cultural icons of the 20th and 21st centuries. He is a musician, a composer, a poet, a Nobel laureate in literature. With this exhibition, we will have the privilege of discovering a previously unseen aspect of his inexhaustible talent: his paintings, which, like his songs, are powerful, sincere and immediate, elicit a flavor of on-the-road travels and charm. Dylan is a piece of our history and a part of us. That is why I am particularly pleased with this exhibition at MAXXI, which tells his whole story and ours".

“This career-spanning exhibition showcases Bob Dylan’s unique approach to visual art and command of painting, drawing, and sculpting. It provides a special opportunity to view Dylan’s creative journey across time and locations, including the steps at Rome’s Piazza di Spagna as captured in the featured work “When I paint my Masterpiece”, adds the curator Shai Baitel.
Fondazione MAXXI | Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo
National Museum of 21st Century Art, Rome
Via Guido Reni, 4A - 00196 Roma 

23/04/17

Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964 at Steven Kasher Gallery, New York

Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964
Steven Kasher Gallery, New York
April 20 – June 3, 2017

Dylan singing at Gerde’s Folk City, Greenwich Village, 1961
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

Dylan and Suze Rotolo, 161 W 4th St, 1961
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

Steven Kasher Gallery presents Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964, an exhibition of exceptionally early photographs of the 2016 Nobel Laureate in Literature. Russell, a New York based photographer still living in Forest Hills, depicts Dylan at key moments that established him as one of America’s greatest artists. He performs one of his earliest gigs, makes music and love in his first New York apartment with his first and most important muse, receives his first public award (in the company of James Baldwin) and writes some of his earliest songs. The exhibition features 40 black and white prints of recently discovered images never before exhibited in New York. The exhibition is accompanied by the 2015 Rizzoli book of the same title.

In November of 1961, Bob Dylan was 20 years old, a folk singer on the cusp. His first paid performances, mostly at Gerde’s Folk City, were attracting interest. His first review was just out, a surprising rave in the New York Times, which said “Mr. Dylan is both a comedian and a tragedian.” John Hammond was in the process of signing him to a major label and recording his first demo tapes. This included his first breakthrough original composition, “Song for Woody,” a song more contemporary and personal than any of its time and the template for all the singer-songwriter music of the 1960s and beyond.

In November of 1961, Ted Russell was a photojournalist working regularly for LIFE in New York when an RCA records publicist hired him to photograph their latest discovery, Ann Margret. Shortly after, the RCA publicist moved to Columbia Records and invited Russell to take some pictures of their new hire, Bob Dylan. Russell liked the idea, thinking a story on an up-and-coming Village folksinger could interest Life.

Ted Russell first shot Bob Dylan singing at Folk City. The next day he shot Dylan with his girlfriend, Suze Rotolo in their walk-up brownstone apartment at 161 West 4th Street. Rotolo worked for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and for SANE (The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy). Dylan first wrote civil rights and anti-nuclear war songs under her influence and called her “the most erotic thing I’d ever seen.” In this 1961 set Dylan is adolescent, smooth, relaxed. He pretends to be unaware of the camera, but clearly basks in its gaze. On stage and off, he is a performer, a charmer of great suavity. He plays guitar and harmonica on stage, and on and off the mattress on the apartment floor. He takes his glasses on and off. He fiddles with Rotolo, who the camera also loves. The apartment is full of endearing personal effects: a wicker trimmed phonograph, a stuffed beagle, wine bottles on the floor, a framed reproduction of Roualt’s “The Old King”.

Dylan and Baldwin enjoying each other’s company 
at the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee’s Bill of Rights Dinner, 
New York City, 1963
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

In December of 1963, shortly after the assassination of JFK, Ted Russell photographed Bob Dylan and James Baldwin for Life as Dylan received the Tom Paine award from the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee. In a speech at the reception Dylan scandalized the audience by saying “Lee Harvey Oswald… I saw some of myself in him.” Baldwin’s affection for Dylan is manifest in his broad smile, and Dylan seems to reciprocate.

Daylight through the window, 161 W 4th St, 1964
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

In 1964, again on assignment for Life, Russell photographed Dylan in his same Village apartment. Rotolo had broken up with Dylan, inspiring “Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright” and other great ballads. The Roualt on the wall has been replaced by the framed Tom Paine award. Dylan has traded in his guitar and harmonica for a typewriter and a telephone. By now Dylan is a recording star, and has written some of the most important songs of the century. He is older, more anxious. Russell even portrays him as a silhouette looking out a window, a classic pose for a dignitary in deep thought.

TED RUSSEL was born in London in 1930. He began photographing at age 10, and by age 15 was apprenticing in London's Fleet Street. The following year he worked as a stringer photographer for Acme Newspictures in Brussels. He later joined the staff of Now, an English language picture magazine, and then U.S. Army's Spotlight magazine. In 1952 he boarded the Queen Mary for New York, arriving with four cameras and $200. He was soon drafted and served as unit photographer with the U.S. Army's 2nd Engineers in the Korean War. After attending the University of California at Berkeley, he returned to New York and became a contributing photographer for Life magazine for over 12 years, shooting hundreds of domestic and overseas assignments. Later Russell did numerous advertising campaigns before ending up as Cover Photo Editor of Newsweek magazine for 11 years. His work has appeared in Life, Newsweek, Time, Saturday Review and New York magazines. His photographs have been exhibited at the International Center of Photography and Museum of Modern Art.

STEVEN KASHER GALLERY 
515 W. 26th St., New York, NY 10001

04/11/07

Bob Dylan, Kunstammlungen Chemnitz - The Drawn Blank Series

Bob Dylan: The Drawn Blank Series 
Kunstammlungen Chemnitz
October 28, 2007 - March 24, 2008

With The Drawn Blank Series, the Kunstammlungen Chemnitz (Chemnitz Art Collections) are presenting the world's first museum exhibition with around 140 watercolors and gouaches by Bob Dylan. The works are based on motifs that the artist sketched, predominantly in pencil and charcoal, during his travels through the USA, Mexico, Europe and Asia between 1989 and 1992. 92 of the black and white drawings created at that time were published in book form in 1994 under the title Drawn Blank, but have never been publicly exhibited.

Bob Dylan presents familiar subjects such as portraits of women and men, interiors, landscapes, still lifes, female nudes, city and beach views, streets, buildings, cars and ships in expressive images. In contrast to the delicate black and white drawings from Drawn Blank, the works in the Drawn Blank Series show several versions of one of the original motifs in a dynamic, expressive painting style that creates completely new images from the first black and white motifs. Bob Dylan gave all of the works in his Drawn Blank Series additional titles that make the locations more real and more vivid for the viewer.

What is particularly fascinating about this exhibition project is that you can almost be an eyewitness to the creation of an artistic work. The result is of impressive authenticity. They are travel or experience reports that describe locations or capture snapshots. The artist appears like a participating but always invisible observer. The viewing angle is often from a bird's eye view, and an imaginary narrator looks from a great height at the events far below him. A perspective that emphasizes the artist's perspective as a superior observer.

It is a phenomenon of our time that multiple talents are viewed with suspicion. Although it has actually been linked to human nature since time immemorial. The exhibition of the Chemnitz Art Collections shows that Bob Dylan, with his extraordinary synesthetic perceptual talent, succeeds like few other artists in conveying complex perceptions and feelings in several artistic areas.

An extensive catalog with 170 color and 85 black-and-white illustrations in German and English is published by Prestel Verlag for the exhibition, edited by Ingrid Mössinger and Kerstin Drechsel, with text contributions by Prof. Dr. Frank Zöllner, Leipzig, Dr. Diana Widmaier-Picasso, Paris and Dr. Jens Rosteck, Nice.

KUNSTSAMMLUNGEN CHEMNITZ
Theaterplatz 1, 09111 Chemnitz

09/10/05

Daniel Kramer: Photographs of Bob Dylan, Staley-Wise Gallery, New York

Daniel Kramer 
Photographs of Bob Dylan
Staley-Wise Gallery, New York 
October 7 - November 5, 2005

This collection of black and white photographs was made during the mid 1960s when Bob Dylan was transforming himself from a popular folk singer into an international rock star.  Based on Daniel Kramer’s 1967 book, which was the first major work about Bob Dylan, these photographs illuminate the working and behind-the-scenes life of one of the great artists of our time.

Daniel Kramer first saw the young Bob Dylan on a TV show and was so impressed with his performance and his lyrics that he spent many months pursuing a photo session with the singer.  What resulted was more than a year of photographing Dylan, with a unique, almost unlimited access; photographing him at home, backstage, at concert performances, and in the photographer’s studio.  Photographed also are recording sessions documenting two of his seminal albums Bringing It All Back Home, and Highway 61 Revisited, and the extraordinary session for Like A Rolling Stone.  These iconic photographs cover a year between 1964 and 1965 culminating at the now famous electrified concert at Forest Hills Stadium.

The photographs have appeared on the covers and pages of countless magazines and books worldwide and have been honored with numerous awards including a nomination from the Music Journalism Awards and a Grammy nomination for his Bob Dylan album cover Bringing it all Back Home which was named one of The100 Greatest Album Covers Of All Time by Rolling Stone Magazine and Entertainment Weekly. 

Throughout Daniel Kramer’s varied career, he has photographed some of the most prominent and creative people of his time yet he still considers his photographic sessions with Bob Dylan his most challenging and interesting.

STALEY-WISE GALLERY
560 Broadway, New York, NY 10012