Showing posts with label Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Show all posts

15/11/15

Frank Stella: A Retrospective @ Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC - Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth - Young Museum, San Francisco

Frank Stella: A Retrospective
Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC
Through February 7, 2016
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth 
April 17 - September 4, 2016
Young Museum, San Francisco
November 5, 2016 - February 27, 2017

Frank Stella: A Retrospective brings together the artist’s best-known works installed alongside lesser known examples to reveal the extraordinary scope and diversity of his nearly sixty-year career. Approximately 100 works, including icons of major museum and private collections, will be shown. Along with paintings, reliefs, sculptures, and prints, a selection of drawings and maquettes have been included to shed light on Stella’s conceptual and material process.

This is the first comprehensive Stella exhibition to be assembled in the United States since the 1987 retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. “A Stella retrospective presents many challenges,” remarks Michael Auping, “given Frank’s need from the beginning of his career to immediately and continually make new work in response to previous series. And he has never been timid about making large, even monumental, works. The result has been an enormous body of work represented by many different series. Our goal has been to summarize without losing the raw texture of his many innovations.”

“It’s not merely the length of his career, it is the intensity of his work and his ability to reinvent himself as an artist over and over again over six decades that make his contribution so important,” said Adam D. Weinberg. “Frank is a radical innovator who has, from the beginning, absorbed the lessons of art history and then remade the world on his own artistic terms. He is a singular American master and we are thrilled to be celebrating his astonishing accomplishment.”

Throughout his career, Stella has challenged the boundaries of painting and accepted notions of style. Though his early work allied him with the emerging minimalist approach, Stella’s style has evolved to become more complex and dynamic over the years as he has continued his investigation into the nature of abstract painting.

Adam Weinberg and Marla Price, Director of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, note in the directors’ foreword to the catalogue, “Abstract art constitutes the major, and in many ways, defining artistic statement of the twentieth century and it remains a strong presence in this century. Many artists have played a role in its development, but there are a few who stand out in terms of both their innovations and perseverance. Frank Stella is one of those. As institutions devoted to the history and continued development of contemporary art, we are honored to present this tribute to one of the greatest abstract painters of our time.”

Although the thrust of the exhibition is chronological, the artist, who has been closely involved in the installation, has juxtaposed works from various periods allowing some rooms to function as medleys. The presentation highlights the relationships among works executed across the years, suggesting that even the most minimalist compositions may invite associations with architecture, landscapes, and literature.

The earliest works in the exhibition are rarely seen early paintings, such as East Broadway (1958), from the collection of Addison Gallery of American Art, which show Stella’s absorption of Abstract Expressionism and predilections for bold color and all-over compositions that would appear throughout the artist’s career.

Frank Stella’s highly acclaimed Black Paintings follow. Their black stripes executed with enamel house paint were a critical step in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Minimalism. The exhibition includes such major works as Die Fahne hoch!( 1959), a masterpiece from the Whitney’s own collection, and The Marriage of Reason and Squalor II(1959) from The Museum of Modern Art’s collection. A selection of the artist’s Aluminum and Copper Paintings of 1960–61, featuring metallic paint and shaped canvases, further establish Stella’s key role in the development of American Minimalism.

Even with his early success, Frank Stella continued to experiment in order to advance the language of abstraction. The presentation of Stella’s work highlights the artist’s exploration of the relationship between color, structure, and abstract illusionism, beginning with his Benjamin Moore series and Concentric Square Paintings of the early 1960s and 70s—including the masterpiece Jasper’s Dilemma (1962). In his Dartmouth, Notched V, and Running V paintings, Frank Stella combines metallic color with complex shaped canvases that mirror the increasingly dynamic movement of his painted bands. These were followed by the even more radically shaped Irregular Polygon Paintings, such as Chocorua IV (1966) from the Hood Museum, with internally contrasting geometric forms painted in vibrant fluorescent hues; and the monumental Protractor Paintings, such as Harran II (1967) from the Guggenheim's collection, composed of curvilinear forms with complex chromatic variations. 

The Polish Village series marks the beginning of Frank Stella’s work in collage. He begins to build paintings and incorporate various materials into large-scale constructions, further probing questions of surface, line, and geometry. In works like Bechhofen (1972), from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the interlocking geometric planes of unpainted wood stretch the purely pictorial into literal space.

The work of the mid-1970s and 1980s constitutes yet another form of expressive abstraction and illustrates Frank Stella’s absolute insistence on extending his paintings into the viewer’s space. During his tenure as the Charles Eliot Norton Professor in Poetry at Harvard University (1983-4), Stella said that “what painting wants more than anything else is working space—space to grow with and expand into, pictorial space that is capable of direction and movement, pictorial space that encourages unlimited orientation and extension. Painting does not want to be confined by boundaries of edge and surface.” Works from the artist’s Brazilian; Exotic Bird; Indian Bird; Circuit; and Cones and Pillars series, including St. Michael’s Counterguard (1984) from the Los Angeles County 

Museum of Art, address this interest. In these works, sheets of cut metal project out from the picture plane, creating gestures that are further activated with drawing and the addition of various reflective materials. The radical physical and material nature of these works was quite influential to a younger generation of painters in the 1980s.

In the last thirty years, much of Frank Stella’s work has been related in spirit to literature and music. The large-scale painted metallic reliefs in the Moby Dick series (1985-97), titled after each of the chapters of Melville’s novel, also exemplify Stella’s idea of “working space.” The complexity of this series, made primarily in metallic relief with fabricated, cast, and found parts; prints; and freestanding sculpture, is a tour de force. Extraordinary abstractions such as Loomings from the Walker Art Center and The Grand Armada (IRS-6, 1X) from the Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, suggest an abstract narrative composed of visual elements, such as waves and fins, which recur in Melville’s novel.

Since the 1990s Frank Stella has explored this concept in increasingly complex two- and three-dimensional works of various materials, such as the large-scale aluminum and steel sculpture Raft of the Medusa (Part I) (1990) from the collection of The Glass House; and the mural-size painting Earthquake in Chile (1999), part of the artist’s Heinrich von Kleist series (1996-2008), which takes as its point of departure the writings of the early 19th century German author. Extraordinary metal reliefs from his Bali series (2002-2009), as well as the lightweight and dynamic sculpture from his Scarlatti Sonata Kirkpatrick series (2006-present), whose delicacy and intricacy suggest the musical compositions of the Baroque master, represent the later work in the exhibition. In many of these works Frank Stella has used computer generated images and modeling to extend the complexity, layers, and allusions of his material process well beyond traditional media for painting and sculpture. Two of Stella’s recent sculptures, Black Star (2014) and Wooden Star I (2014), are installed on the fifth-floor roof terrace.

Frank Stella: A Retrospective underscores the important role Stella’s work plays within the art historical framework of the last half century. It provides a rare opportunity for viewers to discover the visual and conceptual connections within the extraordinarily expansive and generative body of work of an artist restless with new ideas.

About Frank Stella 
Born in Malden, Massachusetts, in 1936, Stella attended Phillips Academy and then Princeton University, where he studied art history and painting. In college, he produced a number of sophisticated paintings that demonstrated his understanding of the various vocabularies that had brought abstract painting into international prominence. After graduating in 1958, Stella moved to New York and achieved almost immediate fame with his Black Paintings (1958–60), which were included in The Museum of Modern Art’s seminal exhibition Sixteen Americans in 1959-60.

The Leo Castelli Gallery in New York held Frank Stella’s first one-person show in 1960. The Museum of Modern Art presented his first retrospective in 1970, under William Rubin’s stewardship, when Stella was only thirty-four years old. A second retrospective was held at MoMA in 1987. Since then, Stella has been the subject of countless exhibitions throughout the world, including a major retrospective in Wolfsburg in 2012. Frank Stella: A Retrospective is the first survey of the artist’s career in the U.S. since 1987. He was appointed the Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University in 1983. “Working Space,” his provocative lecture series (later published as a book), addresses the issue of pictorial space in postmodern art. Stella has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including the 2009 National Medal of Arts and the 2011 Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award from the International Sculpture Center, as well as the Isabella and Theodor Dalenson Lifetime Achievement Award from Americans for the Arts (2011) and the National Artist Award at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Aspen (2015).

Frank Stella
A Retrospective
Published in association with the Whitney Museum of American Art 
and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth 
Yale University Press, November 2015

About the Catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated scholarly catalogue, published by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and Yale University Press. The publication addresses in depth such themes as the artist’s complex balancing of expressionist gesture and geometric structure, his catholic referencing of the history of art (abstract, figurative, and decorative), the importance of seriality in Stella’s process, and his work’s impact on subsequent generations of American artists.

The catalogue includes an essay by Michael Auping that encompasses Stella’s entire artistic output and connects the many different series and transitions in the artist’s 60-year career. Adam Weinberg addresses Stella’s formative years at Andover and Princeton and his earliest influences. Art historian and artist Jordan Kantor contributes an essay about the artist’s more recent work, and artist Laura Owens interviews Stella. Stella’s highly articulate Pratt Lecture (1960) is also included. The book concludes with a substantial chronology.

Frank Stella: A Retrospective is jointly organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.

With the close collaboration of the artist, Frank Stella: A Retrospective is organized by Michael Auping, Chief Curator, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, in association with Adam D. Weinberg, Alice Pratt Brown Director, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, with the involvement of Carrie Springer, Assistant Curator, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

Whitney Museum of American Art

05/01/97

Explorations in the City of Light: African-American Artists in Paris, 1945 - 1965, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Explorations in the City of Light: African-American Artists in Paris, 1945 - 1965
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
January 12 - March 23, 1997

Marla Price, Director of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth announced that the museum will be the only Southwest venue for Explorations in the City of Light: African-American Artists in Paris, 1945 - 1965. Organized by The Studio Museum in Harlem, this exhibition examines the importance of Paris (the City of Light) as an artistic mecca for African-American artists in the years following World War II and continues the Studio Museum's mission to conduct scholarship in previously unexplored areas of African-American artists' experience. Explorations in the City of Light showcases the work of seven African-American artists whose imagery, styles and philosophies were shaped by their experience in postwar Paris: Edward Clark, Harold Cousins, Beauford Delaney, Herbert Gentry, Lois Mailou Jones, Larry Potter and Barbara Chase-Riboud.

Following the war, Paris—known as the City of Light for its intellectual enlightenment, gleaming beauty and the quality of its natural light—became a seminal destination for a diverse group of artists, writers and musicians. African-American artists enjoyed acceptance in diverse Paris and embraced the historic and visual stimulation of the city. Featuring over sixty paintings and sculpture, Explorations in the City of Light presents the rich work of African-American artists that resulted from their encounters with the unique beauty and creative forces found in postwar Paris.

African-Americans who wished to pursue an art education in the United States following World War II often encountered difficulties caused by racial segregation. Few prestigious art schools accepted African-American students, and study abroad was seen as an important prerequisite for success. Although the desire to escape discrimination was a significant factor in the African-American artists' sojourn in Paris, several post-WWII artists have said that their primary goal was a quest for artistic freedom and a need to experience modernism firsthand.

Kinshasha Holman Conwill, Director of The Studio Museum in Harlem, explains the premise of the Explorations in the City of Light project: "Past exhibitions have dealt with the subject of the expatriate experience of African-American artists in Europe during the nineteenth and twentieth century. None, however, has concentrated on this specific period, nor with this fascinating group of artists." The seven African-American artists featured in Explorations in the City of Light received significant critical attention while in Paris and have influenced subsequent generations of artists working in America. The power and diversity of creative expression evident in their art continues to inspire others. The endurance of these qualities confirms the significance of their artistic careers that were cultivated in the City of Light. 

A major catalogue containing over 100 illustrations accompanies the exhibition. Essayists for the catalogue are Valerie J. Mercer, Curator of the exhibition and Curator of Collections at The Studio Museum in Harlem, Catherine Bernard, Peter Selz and Michael Fabre. Also included is an introduction by Kinshasha Holman Conwill and a foreword by Geoffrey C. Bible, Chairman and C.E.O. of Philip Morris Companies Inc. 

Biographical information of the artists featured in the exhibition:

EDWARD CLARK

1926 Born in New Orleans, Louisiana
1947-1951 Studies at the Chicago Art Institute
1952 Travels to Paris, studies at L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière, under the GI Bill. Remains in Paris, continues to paint and exhibit
1956 Goes to New York, becomes member of the Tenth Street art scene
1966 Returns to Paris, begins to experiment with the ellipse form in his art
1969 Returns to the United States where he continues to reside, but spends summers in Paris

HAROLD COUSINS

1916 Born in Washington, D.C.
1947 Receives BFA from Howard University, Washington, D. C.
1948 Studies at the Art Students League, New York
1949 Arrives in Paris, studies at L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière
1952 Exhibits in Paris, New York, Toronto and other European cities
1967 Leaves Paris to live in Brussels, Belgium. Continues to work and exhibit
1992 Dies in Brussels

BEAUFORD DELANEY

1901 Born in Knoxville, Tennessee
1918 Moves to Boston at the age of 17
Studies at the Massachusetts Normal Art School, the South Boston School of Art and the Copley School of Art
1929 Arrives in New York where his work is exhibited at various galleries, Meets Henry Miller who writes about Delaney's art
1953 Arrives in Paris where he exhibits his work steadily at various galleries
1978 Retrospective exhibition at The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York
1979 Dies in Paris

HERBERT GENTRY

1919 Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1938-1939 Participates in WPA Program
1940-1942 Attends New York University
1946 Arrives in Paris
1946-1949 Studies at L'Ecole des Hautes Etudes and L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière, Paris, under the GI Bill
1948 Opens club, Chew Honey, frequented by artists and musicians
1952 Returns to the United States
1954 Returns to Paris, then moves to Malmo, Sweden
Present Divides time between Malmo, Paris and the United States

LOIS MAILOU-JONES

1905 Born in Boston, Massachusetts
1923-1927 Studies at Boston Museum School of Fine Arts
1930 Joins faculty of Howard University as a professor of design and watercolor painting
1937-1938 Makes first trip to Paris to study at the Académie Julian
1953 Marries Louis Vergniaud Pierre-Noel, well-known Haitian artist
1954 Is guest professor at Centre d'Art and Foyer des Arts Plastiques, Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Present Returns to Paris annually; continues to exhibit in Paris, Haiti U.S.

LARRY POTTER

1925 Born in Mount Vernon, New York
1945-1950 Studies at Cooper Union and later at the Art Students League, N.Y.
1956 Travels to Paris where he paints and exhibits art
1966 Dies in Paris

BARBARA CHASE-RIBOUD

1939 Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1957 Receives her BFA from Tyler School of Art, Temple University
1960 Receives her MFA from Yale University
1961 Arrives in Paris
Present Continues to reside in Paris, exhibits in Europe and the United States

The exhibition is organized by The Studio Museum in Harlem. Following its premiere at the Studio Museum in January 1996, Explorations in the City of Light: African-American Artists in Paris, 1945 - 1965 began a four-city tour of the United States. 

MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH
Fort Worth's Cultural District
www.mamfw.org

Updated 23.06.2019

24/03/96

Howard Hodgkin: Paintings 1975-1995 at Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Howard Hodgkin: Paintings 19751995 
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth 
March 31 - July 14, 1996 

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth will exhibit Howard Hodgkin: Paintings 1975-1995 at the Modern's main location in Fort Worth's Cultural District. This special exhibition, which premiered at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York last November where it was seen by over 144,000 visitors, surveys the achievement over the past 20 years of one of the most important British artists of the postwar era. Consisting of 46 oil paintings borrowed from private and public collections in the United States, Europe and Mexico, this exhibition constitutes the first major museum exhibition of Howard Hodgkin's work in the United States in ten years. The exhibition begins with works from 1975, the year Howard Hodgkin achieved a mature and independent style, and concludes with works recently completed in 1995, including four paintings that have never before been exhibited.

Howard Hodgkin: Paintings 1975-1995 was organized over the course of four years by the Modern Art Museum's Director, Marla Price, in collaboration with the Modern's Chief Curator, Michael Auping. This exhibition focuses on the period of Howard Hodgkin's greatest achievement and places particular emphasis on his paintings from 1985 to 1995.

Howard Hodgkin was born in London, England in 1932. He studied at the Camberwell School of Art, London and the Bath Academy of Art, Corsham, between 1949 and 1954. Even though Hodgkin's early work is associated with the British pop art movement and the School of London, he has always been a strongly independent artist. Howard Hodgkin has stated, "I am a representational painter, but not a painter of appearances. I paint representational appearances of emotional situations." Hodgkin's paintings depict memories of places and encounters; trips to Italy, India or Morocco, interiors of hotels and restaurants, visits with friends and love affairs. The feelings Hodgkin experiences are captured in intense colors; remembered people and objects are transformed into expressive splotches, swirls and blobs of paint, the elements that constitute his own visual vocabulary.

Although Howard Hodgkin's paintings appear spontaneous they are often worked on over extended periods of time. A painting begins when the artist first recalls a particular moment and ends when the subject comes back. Hodgkin describes the artistic process: "I start out with the subject and naturally I have to remember first of all what it looked like, but it would also perhaps contain a great deal of feeling and sentiment. All of that has got to be somehow transmuted, transformed or made into a physical object and when that happens, when that's finally been done, when the last physical marks have been put on and the subject comes back——then the picture's finished and there is no question of doing anything more to it."

The final venue of this exhibition is the Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen in Düsseldorf, Germany (August 17 - October 13, 1996).

A major book documents the exhibition and provides a broad overview of Howard Hodgkin's achievement. Essays by Michael Auping, John Elderfield and noted author Susan Sontag examine various aspects of Hodgkin's work and his importance in postwar twentieth-century art. A catalogue raisonné of all of Hodgkin's oil paintings complements the essays, providing the first scholarly history of his work, beginning with his first paintings in 1948-1949. The catalogue contains eighty color illustrations, an extensive bibliography and an exhibition checklist.

MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH, TEXAS
www.mamfw.org

Updated 23.06.2019

07/01/96

Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years at Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years 
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth 
January 14 - March 17, 1996 

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth will exhibit Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years at the Modern's main location in Fort Worth's Cultural District. The exhibition has been organized by the Modern Art Museum in cooperation with the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Michael Auping, Chief Curator of the Modern Art Museum and former Chief Curator of the Albright-Knox, conceived of this presentation as a tribute to the Armenian-born American artist Arshile Gorky, and the historical impact of his lush, gestural paintings of the 1940s on the development of American art. This exhibition features 42 major paintings and drawings that illustrate Arshile Gorky's critical role as a link between European surrealism and the American abstract expressionist movement of the 1950s.

Arshile Gorky was born Vosdanik Adoian in 1904 in Khorkom, Armenia. The artist's childhood was marked by poignant suffering and tragedy caused by the Turkish invasions of Armenia and subsequent ethnic persecutions. Gorky's father fled to America in search of a new life for his family. During this difficult time Gorky witnessed the death of his mother by starvation as she sacrificed herself for the lives In the 1940s Arshile Gorky began to merge ideas from surrealism with his admiration for the art of Joan Miro and Wassily Kandinsky. As Michael Auping states in the exhibition catalogue: "Remembered landscapes from [Gorky's] childhood home in Armenia fuse surrealist representation with abstract plumes of color, anticipating the enigmatic symbols and expressive gestures that would be a hallmark of abstract expressionism." Works in the exhibition form the pinnacle of Gorky's artistic expression and illustrate the role he played in "leading American painting into one of the most experimental periods in its history," according to Michael Auping.

The presentation begins with a series of breakthrough paintings and drawings from Arshile Gorky's famed Garden in Sochi (1938-1942) series. Other major works featured in the exhibition are: Waterfall (1942-43) from the Tate Gallery, London; How My Mother's Embroidered Apron Unfolds in My Life (1944) from the Seattle Art Museum; Love of the New Gun (1944) from The Peril Collection, Houston; and the National Gallery's One Year the Milkweed (1944). Waterfall and One Year the Milkweed are composed of veils of luminous color that illustrate how Arshile Gorky translated abstracted surrealist forms into highly personalized imagery.

The highlight of the exhibition is the Albright-Knox Art Gallery's The Liver is the Cock's Comb (1944), recognized as the fullest and grandest of Gorky's paintings. In this work, Gorky presents viewers with an imagined reality——a psychological landscape——full of intricate imagery and sensuous colors. This grand painting is rarely loaned and has not left Buffalo in more than a decade. These paintings are accompanied by a selection of eighteen drawings that track Gorky's complex working methods throughout the 1940s.

The dramatic intensity of Arshile Gorky's later works, such as Agony (1947) from the Museum of Modern Art, New York, coincided with a series of disasters in the artist's life including a fire in his studio, an automobile accident in which his painting arm was paralyzed, and a separation from his second wife and their children. On July 21, 1948, Arshile Gorky committed suicide in his Sherman, Connecticut studio at the age of 44.

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth is the final venue for Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years, which was exhibited last year at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (May 7 - September 17, 1995) and the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York (October 13 - December 31, 1995.)

A fully-illustrated catalogue published by Rizzoli International, with essays by Dore Ashton, Michael Auping and Matthew Spender, and selected letters written by the artist, accompanies the exhibition. Arshile Gorky: The Breakthrough Years is supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. The exhibition and catalogue were also made possible, in part, by The Henry Luce Foundation, with additional funding from the T.J. Brown and C.A. Lupton Foundation, Fort Worth.

MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH, TEXAS
www.mamfw.org

Updated 23.06.2019