Showing posts with label California exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California exhibition. Show all posts

16/01/15

Monumental Works by El Anatsui @ MCASD - Gravity and Grace

Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui 
MCASD, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla, CA
March 5 - June 28, 2015

El Anatsui’s artworks embody a wide array of artistic techniques and aesthetic traditions, as well as layers of cultural meaning. Tapping into personal experience—his upbringing and education in Ghana, teaching and art making in Ghana and Nigeria, and his global travels—he creates art that represents ideas specific to his life and environment yet also speaks to universal themes of human connection and change.

Gravity and Grace features Anatsui's signature hangings composed of discarded liquor bottle caps, milk tin lids, and aluminum printing plates. Anatsui uses copper wire to connect countless units of cut and folded metal into massive expanses. The frugality of the materials and this patchwork technique suggest the mass consumption habits that his accumulations evidence, and counter the opulence of the finished objects. Whether hanging from the ceiling or on the wall, Anatsui’s works are refigured and draped anew each time they are installed. Malleable and shimmering, they bridge painting and sculpture, taking on a different form with every installation. He wishes for his art to remain fluid, reflecting the ever-changing nature of life. The exhibition's 11 metal objects, along with Anastui's wall reliefs of reclaimed wood and works on paper, will fill MCASD Downtown’s 10,000-square feet of gallery space, with the largest piece spanning 35 feet.

Embracing the African ethos of repurposing used items, Anatsui places a deep value on the human imprint that each object bears. Liquor bottle caps retain an especially potent history, not only for the hands that have touched them but as a symbolic connecting point between Africa, Europe, and the United States, owing to the key role of liquor in the colonization of West Africa and the slave trade.

Anatsui’s recent body of work has an African point of view yet cannot be culturally or geographically pinned down. His alchemical transformations connect with viewers through scale, pattern, light, and texture that, like the micro-history contained within each bottle cap, together leave a spiritual imprint on the mind.

Born in 1944 in Anyako, Ghana, Anatsui has maintained a complex relationship with traditional African art throughout his more than 40-year artistic career. Raised by a Presbyterian minister uncle, Anatsui was oriented from an early age toward Western religious ideals and modes of learning. Anatsui’s education at the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana (1965-69) focused on Western art and history, since the institution continued to operate under the British education model during Ghana’s post-colonial transition.

As a result, Anatsui gained much of his knowledge of African art through direct observation of indigenous artists and independent research. While teaching art in Winneba, Ghana in the late 1960s, he studied the techniques of traditional weavers, carvers, drummers, and musicians, whose visual and musical representation of abstract concepts attracted him. Particularly inspired by Akan Adinkra cloth, Anatsui has cited the Adinkra symbol Sankofa, the notion of “looking back and picking up,” as a key concept in his practice. Though his metal wall hangings have been associated with Kente cloth, the artist does not claim it as a direct source stating, “I think that cloth has been maybe an unconscious influence.”

Leaving Ghana in 1975 to teach art at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka was an important catalyst for Anatsui. He states, “If I had lived in Ghana, my mind wouldn’t have roamed, therefore I wouldn’t have expanded my experiences.” In Nigeria, as in Ghana, Anatsui engaged with a variety of local, pre-colonial art forms. During this time, he solidified the core principles of his artistic practice: learn from local artists, use found materials, consider location and environment, embrace the metaphoric potential of artworks.

Anatsui’s art career flourished in Nigeria in the 1970s and 1980s, where he was highly respected for his innovative use of materials and metaphors rooted in the history of Africa. After participating in an exhibition of African artists in the 1990 Venice Biennale, Anatsui was recognized by critics and scholars around the world. Discovering a sack of discarded bottle caps in 1999 initiated a new chapter in Anatsui’s career that catapulted him onto the global contemporary art stage. In 2010, after 35 years of teaching at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Anatsui retired to focus on his studio work.
“I’ve been to Venice four times now, twice as exhibitor and twice as a visitor. When I first went, twenty years ago, I was cast in the light of an ‘African artist,’ whereas in 2007, I was just another artist. The constraining label of being an artist from somewhere else had disappeared…. The world is beginning to realize that artists are just artists; not ‘European artists,’ not ‘African,’ nor ‘American.’ Art is not the preserve of any one particular people, it’s something that happens around the whole world.” —El Anatsui, 2011

MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART SAN DIEGO

23/08/13

Beauty Revealed: Images of Women in Qing Dynasty Chinese Painting at BAM/PFA, Berkeley, California

Beauty Revealed: Images of Women in Qing Dynasty Chinese Painting 
University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive - BAM / PFA 
September 25 - December 22, 2013 

Beauty About to Bathe, China, 18th century 
Hanging scroll, ink and colors on silk; 61 x 34 ¼ in. 
Private collection: Ferdinand M. Bertholet, Amsterdam 
Photo courstesy BAM / PFA 

Featuring nearly thirty works, Beauty Revealed: Images of Women in Qing Dynasty Chinese Painting is the first to bring together a genre of Chinese painting known as meiren hua, or paintings of beautiful women. Situating the works within the social and economic contexts of the High Qing period (midseventeenth to the late eighteenth century), the exhibition challenges the prevailing opinion that these subjects are high status women—either members of the court or other privileged women. By reading the visual codes embedded in the images, Beauty Revealed instead makes the case that these women are courtesans.

Borrowing seldom-before-utilized techniques from the West, including one-point perspective and heavy opaque colors, the artists, many of them unknown professional painters who painted on demand and for a fee, pursue a realism not previously seen in Chinese painting. Rather than the willowy beauty shown in a garden setting or surrounded by family among luxurious furnishings typical of earlier periods, these paintings generally feature a single, near life-size figure, often in a brazenly unladylike posture. Their garments tend to be low cut and transparent, and their bound feet exposed. 

For example, the direct gaze of the woman in Putting out the Lamp, addressed to the (presumably male) intended viewer, offers a suggestive undercurrent of greater intimacy, one of the hallmarks of this genre. Other codes of accessibility include the woman’s relaxed posture with right leg drawn up under left, the open sleeves that reveal her arms, and the highly stylized extension of her right hand in a controlled gesture reaching to snuff out the light. Her expression engages the audience in a way never before seen in Chinese figure painting. 

Putting Out the Lamp, China, late 18th century (detail) 
Hanging scroll, ink and colors on paper; 65 x 24-5/8 in. 
University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Gift of James Cahill and Hsingyuan Tsao 
Photo courstesy BAM / PFA 

The backdrops further draw viewers into the women’s world, conveying significant information about their wealth, taste, learning, and accomplishments. The women are depicted surrounded by everyday objects packed with erotic symbolism. The art has an immediate impact, inviting viewers to enter and enjoy another world, one perhaps longed for and unattainable. 

In addition to several paintings from BAM/PFA’s own collection, Beauty Revealed features loans from institutions and private collections from around the US and Europe. It is organized into distinct sections that explore the intimate life of women within the garden, home, bath, and brothel. Curated by Senior Curator for Asian Art Julia M. White in collaboration with UC Berkeley Professor Emeritus James Cahill, the exhibition is accompanied by an exquisitely illustrated catalog with essays by Cahill, White, and noted historian Sarah Handler. The catalog entries are by Chen Fongfong, with contributions by Nancy Berliner and White. Published by UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Distributed by D.A.P. , 126 pages; 67 color illustrations.

Colloquium, November 22, 2013: In tribute to James Cahill's fundamental insights regarding Chinese experiments with perspectival representation during the late-imperial period, the Institute for East  Asian Studies will host a symposium on perspective in Chinese painting to accompany Beauty Revealed. Participants will include Eugene Wang, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Professor of Asian Art, History of Art & Architecture, Harvard University; Richard Vinograd, Christensen Fund Professor in Asian Art, Department of Art & Art History at Stanford University; and Nancy Berliner, Curator of Chinese Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. 

University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive - BAM / PFA
Museum's website: bampfa.berkeley.edu

16/09/12

Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1889 on Loan from the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC at the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California


Vincent van Gogh: Self-Portrait, 1889 
Loan from the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC 
At the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California
December 7, 2012 - March 4, 2013

The installation of Vincent van Gogh’s Self-Portrait at the Norton Simon Museum is the first time the painting has been on view on the US West Coast, and while Southern California is home to several outstanding works by Van Gogh, none of his self-portraits are in collections here. The loan is part of a special exchange program between the Norton Simon foundations and the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. 

VINCENT VAN GOGH, SELF-PORTRAIT, 1889

Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890) 
Self-Portrait, 1889 
Oil on canvas 
57.2 x 43.8 cm (22 1/2 x 17 1/4 in.)  
Collection of Mr. and Mrs. John Hay Whitney, 
National Gallery of Art, Washington 


Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890) is among the world’s most beloved and admired artists, yet he was virtually unknown during his lifetime, and struggled with depression and mental illness. After voluntarily committing himself in May of 1889 to the mental asylum Saint-Paul-de-Mausole at Saint-Rémy in France, the tormented Vincent Van Gogh began the isolated and recuperative process of calming the delusions, paranoid panics and poor health that had plagued him for much of his adult life. Only six months before, he had quarreled with his dear friend Paul Gauguin in Arles and then severed part of his own ear in a fit of desperation and despair. The National Gallery of Art’s jolting, Self-Portrait is one of the last renditions of Vincent Van Gogh’s interpretation of his own visage. Only three of his 36 self-portraits depict him as an artist, holding his palette and brushes. With his wounded ear turned away from the viewer, he confronts his own gaunt image, full of introspection and intensity. Unable at this point to confront other patients, or reality itself, he assumes the dual role of model and artist. By September 1889, after creating Starry Night (now at the Museum of Modern Art, New York) and painting the wheat fields that could be seen from his rooms at the asylum, he wrote to his brother Theo in Paris about two self-portraits he was painting:
So I am working on two portraits of myself at this moment—for want of another model—because it is more than time I did a little figure work. One I began the day I got up; I was thin and pale as a ghost. It is dark violet–blue and the head whitish with yellow hair, so it has a color effect. 
The rapid, almost violent background strokes, painted thickly, shimmer in dissonance and contrast with the artist’s deeply penetrating stare. Emerald highlights in his face, the blue of his smock, and the golden yellows of his hair and beard are all echoed on his palette—pigments that had only recently been ordered and sent as a care package from his brother. The rapidity and repetition of his linear movement belie the amount of forethought and precision that Van Gogh has applied to this composition; it is with utmost restraint that he circumscribes the nose with that bold green outline and calculates the effects of the brilliant yellows and blues. He was known as the redheaded madman by locals, and yet he carefully composed hundreds of moving letters that demonstrated his love of nature, of man, of literature and language. In 10 short years, from 1880 to 1890, he painted almost unceasingly; more than 850 oil paintings are attributed to him today. One can only imagine his legacy, had he lived beyond his short 37 years.

Art exchange program
In 2007, the Norton Simon foundations entered a new phase in their history by forming an art exchange program with both the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and The Frick Collection in New York City. Works of art from the Norton Simon foundations are lent to both of these estimable institutions for special viewings and, in return, masterpieces from their collections make their way to the Norton Simon Museum. The exchange is an opportunity to promote the Norton Simon collections to a much wider audience while simultaneously providing Southern California audiences the chance to view some of the world’s most significant and visually compelling paintings.


NORTON SIMON MUSEUM
411 W. Colorado Blvd, Pasaneda, California 91105
www.nortonsimon.org


02/06/11

The Modern Photographer Exhibition at San Jose Museum of Art


Exhibition: 
The Modern Photographer 

Observation and Intention 
San Jose Museum of Art, California 
Through July 3, 2011

This exhibition explore the role of the photographer as a purposeful observer and editor of everyday experience. THE MODERN PHOTOGRAPHER: OBSERVATION AND INTENTION features some 50 photographs and photogravures by notable photographers of the first half of the 20th century: Ansel Adams (1902, San Francisco - 1984, Carmel, California), Ruth Bernhard (1905, Berlin - 2006, San Francisco), Walker Evans (1903, St. Louis - 1975, New Haven, Connecticut), Gordfrey Frankel (1912, Cleveland - 1995, Washington, DC), Jack Delano (1914, Kiev, Ukraine - 1997, Puerto Rico), John Gutmann (1905, Breslau, Germany - 1998, San Francisco), Dorothea Lange (1895, Hoboken, New Jersey - 1965, Marin County, California), Barbara Morgan (1900, Buffalo, Kansas - 1990, North Tarrytown, New York), André Kertész (1894, Budapest - 1985, New York), Wright Morris (1910, Central City, Nebraska - 1998, Mill Valley, California), PH Polk (1898, Bessemer, Alabama - 1984, Tuskegee, Alabama), Arthur Rothstein (1915, New York - 1985, New Rochelle, New York), Peter Stackpole (1913, San Francisco - 1997, Novato, California), Edward Steichen (1879, Bivange, Luxembourg - 1973, West Redding, Connecticut), Alfred Stieglitz (1864, Hoboken, New Jersey - 1946, New York), Paul Strand (1890, New York - 1976, Orgeval, France), Edward Weston (1886, Highland Park, Illinois - 1958, Carmel, California), Weegee (1899, Zloczew, Poland), Minor White (1908, Mineapolis - 1976, Boston), Ida Wyman (b. 1926, Malden, Massachusetts). Drawn from the San Jose Museum of Art’s permanent collection, the exhibition emphasizes the ability of the photographer to both craft and chronicle reality.

“These photographers believed in the utmost importance of detailed observation,” said JODI THROCKMORTON, assistant curator at the San Jose Museum of Art. “Regardless, their photographs are carefully orchestrated and highly subjective, influenced by the photographer’s particular vision and consciousness.”

The images on view range from abstract still-lifes, such as Paul Strand’s Wire Wheel, New York (1920) or Ruth Bernhard’s Lifesavers (1930), to documentary images of Depression-era life, be it the desolate dust bowl farms of Arthur Rothstein or the San Francisco streets of John Gutmann. 

The Modern Photographer is on view since October 1, 2010, through July 3, 2011.

SJMA - SAN JOSE MUSEUM OF ART, CALIFORNIA

04/05/11

German Drawings at J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Exhibition: Spirit of an Age 
Drawings from the Germanic World, 1770-1900 
J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Center, Los Angeles
Through June 19, 2011 

CARL BARTH (German, 1787-1853). 
Portrait of Peder Hjort, about 1818-1819. Pencil on wove paper. 
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. Image courtesy of the Museum

Unveiling recent acquisitions that reflect a new area of the Museum's collection, this exhibition features about forty German and Austrian drawings and watercolors. The works reflect  the profound changes—intellectual, social, and political—that the Germanic world underwent from about 1770 to 1900. Events such as the publication of the writings of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and the formal unification of Germany contributed to shaping the artist's world. Drawing captured the spirit of the age and evolved quite dramatically over the course of this  period, which is rarely showcased by North American museums.  

Spirit of an Age: Drawings from the Germanic World, 1770-1900 
March 29 - June 19, 2011

J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM 
Getty Center, 1200 Getty Center Drive
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 

18/09/10

Call For Entries 2010 Artists - Santa Barbara CAF

Call For Entries 2010 Artists: Graham Bury, Alejandro Casazi, Madelaine Frezza, Laura Krifka, Christine Morla, and Shane Tolbert 
Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum 
Through October 3, 2010 

Call For Entries is an annual juried exhibition that is open to all visual artists living and/or working within Santa Barbara, Ventura, and San Luis Obispo counties. Selected  artists from the local community present new work in relation to the alternative arts context of CAF. 

Artists were selected by a panel of jurors made up of: Anne Ellegood, Senior Curator, UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Michael Barton Miller, Artist and Studio Art Professor, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA; Yasmine Mohseni, Curator and Writer, Los Angeles, CA; and Adrian Rivas, Co-founder, g727, Los Angeles, CA.

This year the jurors selected 5 artists: Graham Bury, Alejandro Casazi, Madelaine Frezza, Laura Krifka, Christine Morla, and Shane Tolbert.

Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum
August 7 - October 3, 2010

653 Paseo Nuevo - Santa Barbara, CA 93101 - Web: www.sbcaf.org

08/05/10

New Topographics: Photography Exhibition at SFMOMA

Photography exhibition > United States > California > San Francisco

 

New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape

SFMOMA - San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

July 17 - October 3, 2010

 

Comprised of close to 150 photographs, New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape is a restaging of a historically significant exhibition held in 1975 at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.

This reprisal brings together the work of all ten photographers included in the original New Topographics: Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Joe Deal, Frank Gohlke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore, and Henry Wessel. Widely considered one of the seminal exhibitions in the history of photography, New Topographics signaled the emergence of a radically new approach to landscape and demonstrated the influence of Conceptualism and Minimalism on photography in the 1970s.

New Topographics is significant to the history of photography primarily because it marked a dramatic shift in attitude towards landscape as a photographic subject. Unlike their predecessors, such as Ansel Adams or Minor White, the photographers featured in New Topographics did not use their work to express transcendent personal experiences of untrammeled nature. Rather, they used a more seemingly neutral approach to depict the ordinary landscapes that surround us, including aspects of the built environment that are often overlooked and considered eyesores: cheap motels, gas stations, tract homes, trailer parks, and parking lots. Included in the exhibition are: Buena Vista, Colorado (1973) by Henry Wessel; South Corner, Riccar America Company, 3184 Pullman, Costa Mesa (1974) from the series New Industrial Parks by Lewis Baltz; and Irrigation Canal, Albuquerque, New Mexico (1974) and Untitled View, (Boulder City) (1974) by Joe Deal, which all evince this radical reconceptualization of landscape.

Although they might lack conventional aesthetic hooks of expression, narrative, and beauty, these photographs are powerful aesthetic statements that reflect the complex and ambiguous relationship between humans and the environment—a relationship of particular importance in the West of the USA. As open to the work of conceptual artists such as Ed Ruscha as they were to the history of their chosen medium, the photographers in New Topographics represent a crucial bridge between the once-insular photography world and the larger field of contemporary art. This restaging offers an opportunity to consider the photographs both in the context of the newly central role photography was playing in 1970s contemporary art as well as in relation to the period's prevailing cultural concerns, such as land use, national identity, environmentalism, and nostalgia.

The exhibition was coorganized by Dr. Britt Salvesen, department head and curator of photography, prints and drawings at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and Dr. Alison Nordström, curator of photographs at George Eastman House International Museum of Photography in Rochester, New York. The San Francisco presentation is organized by Erin O'Toole, assistant curator of photography at SFMOMA.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue, New Topographics, published by Steidl, George Eastman House, and CCP. In the lead essay, Salvesen traces the prevailing cultural and aesthetic ideas that gave rise to the show, as well as the interconnections between the participants. Also featured is an essay by Nordström outlining the significance of New Topographics in Eastman House's history and its influence on photographic history as a whole.

Following the presentation at SFMOMA, the exhibition will travel to several international locales, including: Landesgalerie in Linz, Austria (November 10, 2010, through January 9, 2011); Die Photographische Sammlung Stiftung Kultur in Cologne, Germany (January 20 through March 28, 2011); The Netherlands Fotomuseum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands (June 25 through September 11, 2011); and Museum of Fine Arts in Bilbao, Spain (October 17, 2011 through January 8, 2012).

The new presentation and international tour of New Topographics is made possible by a grant from the Terra Foundation for American Art.

 

New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape
July 17 - October 3, 2010

SFMOMA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
151 Third Street
San Francisco, CA 94103

 

Related Posts

Heiner Meyer Paintings Exhibition at Caldwell Snyder Gallery, San Francisco

Greg Miller: Recent Paintings Exhibition at Caldwell Snyder Gallery, Saint Helena, California

.

07/05/10

Heiner Meyer Paintings Exhibition at Caldwell Snyder

Contemporary Art Exhibition > United States > California > San Francisco

 

Heiner Meyer

Caldwell Snyder Gallery, San Francisco

May 6 - 31, 2010

 

Heiner Meyer

  Heiner Meyer, Meet Mr. Product, 78 x 110" Mixed Media on Canvas
  © and courtesy Heiner Meyer / Caldwell Snyder Gallery, San Francisco

 

German artist Heiner Meyer captivates viewers with his compelling images that cut across art history. A constant mix of juxtaposing imagery- from Greek art to Hollywood stars, geishas to classic cars- his clever compositions are painted with the precision of renaissance art peppered by contemporary colors, designs and text. The canvas serves as his ultimate game where the past and present, sacred and commonplace, realistic and abstract dance along side one another.

 

Caldwell Snyder Gallery
341 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94108

Hours : Open Monday - Saturday 10 - 6 PM - Sunday 11 - 6 pm

 

Related Posts

New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape – Photography exhibition at SFMOMA

Greg Miller: Recent Paintings Exhibition at Caldwell Snyder Gallery, Saint Helena, California

.

Greg Miller: Recent Paintings at Caldwell Snyder Gallery

Contemporary Art Exhibition > United States > California

 

Recent Paintings - Greg Miller

Caldwell Snyder Gallery, Saint Helena, CA

May 7 - 31, 2010

 

Greg Miller, For Love. From Recent Paintings exhibition at Caldwell Snyder Gallery, St. Helena, CA

  Greg Miller, “For Love”, 48 x 48" Oil, Resin & Collage on Canvas
  © and courtesy : Greg Miller / Caldwell Snyder Gallery, St. Helena, CA

 

Greg Miller’s classic imagery explored the endless vacation- lounging poolside, mountain adventures in the snow, weekend trips to the movies. Images spanning from kitch popcorn bags to photorealistic swimmers intermingle with retro text, reminding us that such picture perfect memories only exist in the past, their flaws faded by the passage of time. Greg Miller longs to recreate these faded memories. The images worn down on the surface are sprinkled with odd collage objects, sporadic moments that create puzzles for the viewer to piece together.

Greg Miller never ceases to surprise with his tireless quest for nostalgic moments. His work is infused with optimism, a space where endless possibilities are explored.

“My work is sexy, thought provoking, and Angeleno inspired art, where unspoken heroes, and the lure of women casually mingle together. I offer the excitement of discovery mixed with the unexpected thrill of recovering something long lost. Bold contemporary images and popular themes are intermingled with text and presented in billboard-like simplicity, offering a varied and often surprising look at the timelessness of American historical and cultural events. The merging of pop culture, American Art, and the conceptual art movement of the 60s and 70s provide the content that is found throughout my art, paintings, and films.” – Greg Miller .

 

Caldwell Snyder Gallery
1328 Main Street
St. Helena, CA 94574

Hours: Open Daily 10 am - 6 pm

 

Related Posts

New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape – Photography exhibition at SFMOMA

Heiner Meyer Paintings Exhibition at Caldwell Snyder Gallery, San Francisco

.