Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts

18/11/21

Man Ray: The Paris Years @ VMFA - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond

Man Ray: The Paris Years 
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond 
October 30, 2021 - February 21, 2022

Man Ray: The Paris Years @ VMFA
(c) Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts presents Man Ray: The Paris Years, an exhibition organized by Dr. Michael Taylor, VMFA’s Chief Curator and Deputy Director for Art and Education. The exhibition includes more than 100 compelling portrait photographs made by the artist in Paris between 1921 and 1940, featuring cultural luminaries such as Barbette, André Breton, Jean Cocteau, Marcel Duchamp, Ernest Hemingway, Miriam Hopkins, James Joyce, Henri Matisse, Méret Oppenheim, Alice Prin (Kiki de Montparnasse), Elsa Schiaparelli, Erik Satie, Wallis Simpson and Gertrude Stein.

The son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, Emmanuel “Manny” Radnitzky grew up in New York and adopted the pseudonym Man Ray around 1912. A timely sale of paintings to Ferdinand Howald, an art collector from Columbus, Ohio, provided Man Ray with funds for a trip to Paris, and he arrived in the French capital on July 22, 1921. Although the artist worked in a variety of media over the next two decades, including assemblage, film, sculpture and painting, photography would be his primary means of artistic expression in Paris.

Shortly after moving to France, Man Ray embarked on a sustained campaign to document the international avant-garde in a series of remarkable portraits that established his reputation as one of the leading photographers of his era. Man Ray’s portraits often reflect a dialogue or negotiation between the artist’s vision and the self-fashioning of his subjects. Whether they had their portrait taken to promote their work, affirm their self-image, project their desires, fulfill their dreams or create a new identity, Man Ray’s sitters were not inanimate objects, like blocks of marble to be shaped and coerced, but were instead highly creative cultural and thought leaders who were active participants in the creative act. By telling the stories of his respective sitters and the innovative techniques he used to create their portraits, Man Ray: The Paris Years empowers the subjects portrayed in these photographs and gives them an agency and voice that is not typically realized in monographic accounts of modern artists.

“Timed to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the artist’s arrival in the French capital and, coincidentally, the near-centennial anniversary of the Spanish flu pandemic, Man Ray: The Paris Years proves to be a visually provocative and especially relevant exhibition,” said Alex Nyerges, VMFA’s Director and CEO. “This is an opportunity to better understand the lives of his subjects and see Man Ray in a different light.”
“Man Ray used photography to challenge artistic traditions and break boundaries, including fixed gender roles and racial barriers,” said Michael Taylor. “His portraits went beyond recording the mere outward appearance of the person depicted and aimed instead to capture the essence of his sitters as creative individuals, as well as the collective nature and character of Les Années folles (the crazy years) of Paris between the two world wars.”
Man Ray’s radical portraits also capture an important constituency of the avant-garde at this time, namely the femme moderne (modern woman). Adventurous, ambitious, assertive, daring, enterprising and self-assured modern women like American photographers Berenice Abbott and Lee Miller, French artist Suzanne Duchamp and American sculptor Janet Scudder took full advantage of their unprecedented freedom and access to educational and professional opportunities to participate as equals to their male counterparts in the Parisian avant-garde. Although these women came from different classes and economic backgrounds, they shared a collective goal in the 1920s and 1930s to be creatively, financially and intellectually independent.

“Rejecting traditional gender roles and expectations, modern women were interested in erasing sexual differences,” said Michael Taylor. “They often embraced the symbolic trappings and autonomy of their male counterparts including wearing men’s clothes, driving fast cars, smoking cigarettes and sporting tightly cropped ‘bobbed’ haircuts.”

The exhibition also tells the important stories of Black subjects such as Henry Crowder, Adrienne Fidelin and Ruby Richards, whose contributions have often been unfairly relegated to the margins of modernism due to the legacy of colonialism and racism. The artist’s series of portraits of the dancer and singer Ruby Richards, who was born in St. Kitts in the British West Indies and grew up in Harlem, New York, brings to light an important performer whose work with Man Ray has never been acknowledged in previous accounts of his work. Richards moved to Paris in 1938 to replace the legendary African American performer Josephine Baker as the star attraction at the Folies Bergère, and the famous cabaret music hall commissioned Man Ray to help introduce her to French audiences through his portrait photographs.

Many of the subjects portrayed in Man Ray’s photographs were born in Spanish-speaking countries such as Argentina, El Salvador, Peru and Spain, including famous modern artists like Salvador Dalí and Pablo Picasso, as well as the flamenco dancer Prou del Pilar and the pianist Ricardo Viñes. As a state art museum VMFA is committed to representing the cultural and linguistic diversity of the community. According to recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau, more than 7 percent of Virginia’s 8.5 million residents speak Spanish at home. This data has informed the museum’s decision to incorporate dual-language labels throughout the Man Ray: The Paris Years exhibition, as well as the audio tour and gallery guide. Recognizing that English is not the native language of everyone who visits the exhibition, VMFA is offering content in both Spanish and English to create a more accessible, inclusive and welcoming experience for all of our visitors.

Informed by extensive archival research, this exhibition and accompanying catalogue offers a more complete account of Man Ray’s Paris years by focusing not just on his achievement as a photographer and his superb gifts as a portraitist, but also on the friendships and exchange of ideas that took place between the artist and his subjects in Paris between the two world wars.

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS - VMFA
200 N. Arthur Ashe Boulevard., Richmond, VA 23220

25/05/19

Carl Chiarenza @ Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond

Carl Chiarenza
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond
Through November 12, 2019

Carl Chiarenza
CARL CHIARENZA (American, born 1935)
Burnham Brothers, Essex, MA, 1962, printed later
Gelatin silver print
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Gift of Carl Chiarenza, 2016.516
© Carl Chiarenza, Courtesy of the VMFA

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA) presents an exhibition of works by photographer CARL CHIARENZA, on view in the Photography Gallery. Born to Italian immigrant parents and raised in Rochester, New York, Carl Chiarenza’s interest in photography developed early in his childhood. From 1953 to 1957, Carl Chiarenza studied at the Rochester Institute of Technology under the direction of Minor White and Ralph Hattersley. Since the late 1960s, Carl Chiarenza has been a leading figure in a movement that seeks to expand the conceptual boundaries of photography.

Carl Chiarenza’s photographs have been included in more than 80 solo and 250 group exhibitions since 1957. His black and white photographs, which often contain elements of collage, have continued to challenge notions of landscape, abstraction, visitor perspective, and the very medium of photography itself. This free exhibition is curated by Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Executive Director and CEO Alex Nyerges.

“The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is incredibly grateful to Carl Chiarenza for his generous gift of works to the museum,” says Alex Nyerges. “I am honored to curate the first Chiarenza exhibition at VMFA, and hope that these twenty-two phenomenal works will offer museum members and visitors an opportunity for a deeper understanding and fresh perspective of the limitless world of photography.”

Carl Chiarenza
CARL CHIARENZA (American, born 1935)
Sulfite White Figure with Spears, 1962, printed later
Gelatin silver print
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Gift of Carl Chiarenza, 2016.517
© Carl Chiarenza, Courtesy of the VMFA

Carl Chiarenza is inspired by both the beauty and human connections to landscapes, but has been continuously dissatisfied with traditional outdoor nature photographs. In acknowledging that depictions of landscapes in paintings are constructed, he began to approach his photographs as abstract and emotional constructions that allow us to examine nature in relation to the self.

The key characteristic that came to dominate Carl Chiarenza’s style was nyctophilia, or a preference for and comfort in darkness. His photographs do not offer familiar faces or landscapes; there is no evident cultural or psychological framework for the viewer to build their response. Rather, the lack of specificity and sense of timelessness reminds us that all photographs are constructions of reality that produce various interpretations relative to each viewer. Carl Chiarenza’s work invites individual reflection by forcing us to examine the subliminal workings of the mind. In these photographs, nothing is absolute, leaving all realities subject to each observer. 

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS - VMFA
200 N. Arthur Ashe Blvd., Richmond,  VA 23220
www.vmfa.museum

26/12/17

Reclamation! Pan-African Works from the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection @ Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke, VA

Reclamation! Pan-African Works from the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection 
Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke, VA
March 3 - September 2, 2018


Hank Willis Thomas 
Branded Head, 2003 
Ed. 1 of 3 lambda photograph, digital c-print , 99 x 52 inches 
© Hank Willis Thomas. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York

The Taubman Museum of Art presents Reclamation! Pan-African Works from the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection, featuring more than 100 works from various media highlighting the global migration of peoples across the world.

Drawn from DeWoody’s significant contemporary African diaspora collection, it features world renowned artists such as Willie Cole, Hank Thomas Willis, Kerry James Marshall, Kara Walker, Romare Bearden, Kehinde Wiley, Sandford Biggers, and Yinka Shonibare MBE (RA) among others working in a broad reach of media and conceptual approaches.
"I am delighted to share this important selection of Pan-African artwork with the Taubman Museum of Art and Roanoke community,” said DeWoody. “Reclamation! introduces themes of globalization and diaspora that I feel are especially timely and important within art history. It is truly special to me that this exhibition will include my very first acquisition, by Benny Andrews in 1969, alongside major works in my collection spanning the 1940’s to present. It has been a pleasure working with the Taubman Museum of Art to develop this wonderful exhibition, and I look forward to the opening in March 2018."
The exhibiting artists create work that investigates the universal conversation of migration, history, race and representation in art being made today. The exhibition captures the personal stories and collective histories of artists reflected through installations, videos, paintings and sculptures. The exhibition aims to represent artists whose work references ownership of their own home countries while developing narratives that embrace global histories.

About the Collector: Beth Rudin DeWoody, art collector and curator, resides between Los Angeles, New York City, and West Palm Beach, Fla. She is president of The Rudin Family Foundations and executive vice president of Rudin Management. Her Board affiliations include the Whitney Museum of American Art, Hammer Museum, The New School, The Glass House, Empowers Africa, New Yorkers for Children, and The New York City Police Foundation. She is an honorary trustee at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and on the photography steering committee at the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach.

Reclamation! Pan-African Works from the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection is co-curated by the Taubman Museum of Art with Laura Dvorkin of the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection.

TAUBMAN ART MUSEUM
110 Salem Avenue SE, Roanoke, VA 24011
www.taubmanmuseum.org

04/09/16

Legacies: Honoring Artistic Luminaries from Southwestern Virginia, Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke, VA

Legacies: Honoring Artistic Luminaries from Southwestern Virginia 
Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke, VA 
August 27, 2016 - January 28, 2017 

The Taubman Museum of Art presents the major posthumous exhibition, Legacies: Honoring Artistic Luminaries from Southwestern Virginia, celebrating artists in Southwestern Virginia who shaped the region’s artistic landscape today. 

The featured artists represent the very best artistic efforts of the region from the 1800s to the very recent past. Working in a variety of media from paintings to sculpture and from glass to jewelry, the artists’ works highlight the rich and fertile artistic ground that is the Roanoke Valley.
“The exhibition aims to draw attention to and raise awareness on a topic underrepresented in the region, honoring artistic legacies who have influenced artists working today and paved the way for them in their own artistic endeavors,” said Taubman Museum of Art Deputy Director of Exhibitions and Collections Amy Moorefield, who curated the exhibition.
Selected artists in the exhibition include John Ballator, Walter Biggs, Mary Jane Burtch, Dean Carter, John Will Creasy, Lyn Yeatts-Gilhooly, Dorothy Gillespie, Page Hazlegrove, Peyton Klein, Harold Little, Allen Ingles Palmer, Paul Ostaseski, William deJarnette Rutherfoord, George Solonevich, Inga Solonevich, Harriett Stokes, Lewis Thompson, Peter Wreden, and Jim Yeatts, among others.

Each of these artists contributed greatly to the region’s thriving art practice through teaching, mentoring future generations of artists, establishing galleries, and working as museum professionals.

The exhibition is divided into sections highlighting each artist’s legacy and includes major loans borrowed from private and museum collections. Legacies: Honoring Artistic Luminaries from Southwestern Virginia provides significant examples to engage the current generation in the important history of those who helped shaped the region’s artistic identity while referencing past traditions and stories.

About the Artists

Long-term Hollins University professor and painter John Ballator (1909-1967) along with his colleague Lewis Thompson forged greater ties to the community with the art department while teaching legions of young artists. He exhibited widely, and his work is held in several private and museum collections.

Salem, Va., artist Walter Biggs (1886-1968) made his living in the 1920s and ’30s painting illustrations for books and magazines and was a contemporary of Norman Rockwell, who called his work “brilliant and poetic.” Ladies’ Home Journal routinely chose Biggs’ original paintings. Biggs later became an artist-in-residence at Roanoke College, which owns the largest collection of his art.

Roanoke mixed media artist Mary Jane Burtch (1944-2016) exhibited her paintings, monotypes and assemblages throughout the country as well as serving as a teacher and curator. She was one of the original founders of Open Studios of Roanoke.

Blacksburg, Va., artist Dean Carter (1922-2013) joined the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University’s architecture department in 1950 to teach sculpting. At that time, Virginia Tech had no art department. Carter later helped establish the art department and became its head for 10 years. Although he retired in 1995, Dean Carter continued to actively exhibit his work and provide guest lectures.

For more than fifty years, Roanoke watercolorist John Will Creasy (1920-1994) was associated with numerous arts organizations, including Mill Mountain Theatre, and served as an early board member of the Art Museum of Western Virginia. John Will Creasy was known as a watercolorist, and his work is included in the collections of many corporate and private collections.

Lyn Yeatts-Gihooly (1937-2012), wife of Jim Yeatts, was a prominent Virginia artist and art educator. Her work is represented in collections in the United States, Canada, Mexico, England and France. She was an assistant art professor at Virginia Tech and also served as the executive director of the Roanoke Fine Arts Center (now the Taubman Museum of Art). During her tenure there, she instituted the Docent Guild, the Fine Arts Festival, and the Arts in The Schools Program.

Born in 1920, sculptor Richard Gans’ work, rooted in Minimalism, employed cast and constructed geometric shapes. Exhibited widely, his work can be found in collections from Colorado to Virginia.

Sculptor Dorothy Gillespie (1920-2012) blazed a trail nationally with her unique and colorful large-scale installations and garnered solo exhibitions at museums worldwide. A native of Roanoke, Dorothy Gillespie once told a hometown interviewer that seeing a Christmas tree as a child initially inspired her work.

Experimental glass artist Page Hazlegrove (1956-1997) staged several international exhibitions, and her work is featured in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, among others. Globe art critic Christine Temin wrote that her art “combines a preciousness of material with a majesty of subject” and counted her among the “growing number of artists who reach beyond the technical challenges of glass to explore that medium’s expressive powers. ” In 2000, the Taubman Museum of Art mounted a solo exhibition of her work titled Incandescent Spirit.

Roanoke-based painter Peyton Klein (1912-2005) studied art under the tutelage of Jim Yeatts. She served as the art critic for the Roanoke Times for many years, taught at Virginia Western Community College and the Roanoke Fine Arts Center, and was one of the co-founders of the Studio School.

At age 34, painter and printmaker Harold Little (1940-2011) resigned his high school teaching position and declared himself a full-time artist. Over the next 35 years, he created a remarkable and well-known body of woodcuts, etchings and paintings that documented both the history and transformation of Roanoke and Fincastle, Va.

Born in 1947, sculptor Paul Ostaseski’s welded steel abstract sculptures represented geometry in motion. Commissioned for several large public works, Ostaseski died suddenly in 1982 just as he started to earn wider recognition and sales outside the Roanoke area.

Roanoke County painter and watercolorist Allen Ingles Palmer born in 1910 lost his life in a plane crash in 1950. He exhibited extensively, and his work is owned in numerous private and public collections. Critics raved, “Allen Palmer has portrayed for permanent preservation the changing aspects of the Roanoke countryside, deftly interpreting various moods, by an emotional and technical response to nature’s countenance.”

Roanoke-based painter William deJarnette Rutherfoord (1919-2001) led a successful career as an illustrator of several national publications and children’s Golden Book series as well as exhibiting his paintings in his community and beyond.

Russian-born painter George Solonevich (1915-2003) escaped the former Soviet Union and eventually had a successful art career based in Roanoke. He is well known for his space illustrations created for the Golden Book Planets titled, Other Worlds of Our Solar System.

Finnish-born painter and sculptor Inga Solonevich (1915-2012) was the wife of the artist George Solonevich and had a successful art career in both Roanoke and abroad. She is well known for her whimsical animal sculptures and bird paintings.

Painter Harriett Stokes (1914-2014) is remembered for her mentoring and passion for arts education. She was founder of the Salem-based Art in the Alley, which ended in 2010 after a 40-year run. Besides coordinating Art in the Alley, Stokes also served on various art committees at her alma mater Roanoke College, the Medical Foundation of the Roanoke Valley, and the Art Museum of Western Virginia.

Long-term Hollins University professor and painter Lewis Thompson (1924-2002) developed the reputation of the art department while teaching generations of young artists along with fellow professor John Ballator. His work was highlighted in several solo exhibitions, including at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in 1978.

Artist Peter Wreden (1929-2013) was a central figure in the Roanoke Valley’s art scene for half a century. “Art is awareness,” Peter Wreden said. “It takes us out of the stupor of everyday life.” Best known for the jewelry he handcrafted in his studio in South Roanoke, he was a teacher at the Roanoke Fine Arts Center before it became the Art Museum of Western Virginia, and then the Taubman Museum of Art. Peter Wreden helped many younger artists pursue their own creative dreams.

The Princeton-educated architect and abstract painter Jim Yeatts (d. 2005) was the Roanoke Fine Arts Center’s (now Taubman Museum of Art) unpaid director in the 1950s. Yeatts, regarded by many as one of Roanoke’s premier painters of the 1950s and ’60s, taught art at colleges and universities and gave lessons at the arts center for years. He is credited with nurturing a generation of painters.

TAUBMAN MUSEUM OF ART
110 Salem Avenue SE, Roanoke, Virginia 24011 

14/11/04

Salmagundi Club: An American Institution, Art Museum of Western Virginia, Roanoke, Virginia

Salmagundi Club: An American Institution 
Works by Robert Blum, William Merritt Chase, Emil Carlsen, Gari Melchers, Howard Chandler Christy, Frank Desch, Guy Wiggins, and other prominent American artists
Art Museum of Western Virginia, Roanoke, Virginia
November 5, 2004 - January 2, 2005

The Art Museum of Western Virginia presents Salmagundi Club: An American Institution. The exhibition features sixty works of art by Salmagundi Club members from the 1870s to the present, along with mugs decorated by prominent artists that were created to benefit the Salmagundi Clubís library, and artists' palettes, of which the Salmagundi Club has the world's largest collection.

A related exhibition of works by Salmagundi Club artists in the Art Museum's permanent collection will open Friday, November 19. Artists featured will include local favorites Walter Biggs and Allen Ingles Palmer, as well as Reynolds Beal, Ralph Blakelock, Walter Dorwin Teague, and others.

The Salmagundi Club was started in 1871 by a group of artists who gathered on Saturday nights to discuss each others works, paint and socialize. The name "Salmagundi" meaning a collection of odds and ends, was made popular by Washington Irving's book The Salmagundi Papers. By 1880, the popularity of the club had grown to such an extent that the organization was formally established. Through the Salmagundi Club, members formed a welcoming community where artists in New York City had a means to try out new ideas and have their work critiqued, create in a friendly atmosphere, and exhibit and network with other artists. In addition to their artistic endeavors, members of the Salmagundi Club also enjoyed each others company through boxing matches, social dinners and costume parties.

Throughout the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the Salmagundi Club was known for its exhibitions and influential membership. Many of the key figures in American art were Salmagundi Club members, including William Merritt Chase, Howard Chandler Christy, Childe Hassam, and George Inness, Jr. Artists with Virginia connections such as Walter Biggs, Gari Melchers and Allen Ingles Palmer also played active roles in the club.

ART MUSEUM OF WESTERN VIRGINIA
Center in the Square, One Market Square, Roanoke, Virginia 24011
artmuseumroanoke.org