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Fine Arts

  • Cubism for the Holidays

    School of Paris Museum and Gallery Exhibitions

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 17th, 2014

    The School of Paris, particularly Picasso and Matisse, with sidebars on Georges Braque, Juan Gris and Fernand Leger are the heart and soul of museum and gallery exhibitions during the busy holiday season. These show provide invlauable insights to the issues of cubism and abstract art in the 20th century.

  • Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs

    At MoMA through February 4

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 15th, 2014

    During the busy holiday season The Museum of Modern Art is featuring the blockbuster exhibition of the artist’s triumphant and inventive last works Henri Matisse: The Cutouts. The exhibition drew some 500,000 visitors last summer to London’s Tate Modern.

  • Perry T. Rathbone and The Boston Raphael

    A Biography by His Daughter Belinda

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 12th, 2014

    The Boston Raphael by Belinda Rathbone is the first book to focus on the Museum of Fine Arts since the two volume official centennial history by Walter Muir Whitehill in 1970. She writes about the scandal that brought disgrace to her father's brilliant career. This attempt to rehabilitate his reputation also provides a rich and compelling overview of the era in which he was the paradigm of a successful museum director.

  • The British Invade Portland, Maine

    Museum Hosts the Berger Collection from Denver

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 29th, 2014

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  • Peter Dean: Life on the Edge of the World

    The Figurative Expressionist Comes Full Circle

    By: Adam Zucker - Nov 22nd, 2014

    Peter Dean was a major force in the New York City art scene during the 1960s, 70s and 80s. He co-founded two distinct socially conscious art groups, showed in major galleries, and exhibited at the US Pavilion at the 41st Venice Biennale. A current exhibition in Chelsea gives us a rare and thrilling look into Dean's world.

  • James Turrell at Mass MoCA

    Light Years for Planned Installation

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 21st, 2014

    James Turrell is best known for developing Roden Crater in Arizona as an epic scaled celestial observatory and light work. The project is incomplete and not accessible to visitors. But it is the heart and soul of work that is world renowned. In 2013 there was a touring retrospective of his work. The approximate scale of that exhibition, some 32,000 square feet, will be used for a 25-year-long Turrell installation at Mass MoCA.

  • Laurie Anderson’s Mass MoCA Project

    Part of Phase Three Museum Expansion

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 20th, 2014

    Mass MoCA a kunsthalle or non collecting museum established a new paradigm when it opened 25-year-long, large scale installations of works by Sol LeWitt and Anselm Kiefer. Now six more A list artists are planned including space for multi media performance artist Laurie Anderson. During the recent media event to announce these ambitious projects we spoke with Anderson about her ongoing relationship with MoCA and the Berkshires.

  • Figurative Expressionist Artist Jay Milder

    Unblotting the Rainbow

    By: Adam Zucker - Nov 20th, 2014

    Jay Milder came of age during the Second Generation of the New York School as one of the seminal Figurative Expressionist painters and one of the SoHo loft pioneers. Today Milder's influence on painting is widespread and he has been cited as influence of both Neo-Expressionism in the United States and the graffiti art movement in Brazil.

  • Mass MoCA Launches Confluence Campaign

    Some $13.56 of $30 Million Matched to States $25.4 Million

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 18th, 2014

    Yesterday's lively press conference at Mass MoCA, announcing the $54.4 million Confluence Campaign, was preempted by a news leak of an embargoed press release by Geoff Edgers of the Washington Post. While that story provided a tantalizing overview the press conference covered many of the complex and exciting details. This updates our prior reports with more to follow.

  • Mass MoCA’s Phase Three Renovations

    Major Artists Chosen for Long-term Installations

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 16th, 2014

    On November 17 Mass MoCA announces plans for the renovation and programming of 130,000 square feet of industrial space as the final phase of development for its North Adams campus. Planned to open in 2016 the museum must match a state grant for $25.4 million. Works from the estates of Robert Rauchenberg and Louise Bourgeoise will be on view in addition to installations by Laurie Anderson, Jenny Holzer, James Turrell and Gunnar Schoenbeck.

  • Water & Earth : A Call to Protect Fragile Ecosystems

    At Gallery 51 in North Adams, MA

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Nov 15th, 2014

    The exhibition's curators, Julia Morgan-Leamon and Sarah Sutro, have brought together ten national and international artists, who are committed in their work to affect the environment and preserve our ecology by producing works that are mindful and attempt to encourage the visitor to live with care. The individual works are beautifully made and thoughtfully presented. It is a cohesive exhibition, well worth seeing - at Gallery 51, North Adams, MA, until November 30th, open daily from 10 am to 6 pm.

  • The Getty Center Cost $1.3 Billion

    Destination for 1.3 Million Annual Visitors

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 14th, 2014

    Recently we were among the 1.3 million annual visitors to the Getty Center in California. The Richard Meier designed complex opened in 1997 at a cost of some $1.3 billion. While spectacular in scale and cliff top site the museum is oddly generic displaying a thin permanent collection with a handful of very expensive acquisitions through some curatorial hanky panky.

  • Abstract Expressionist Arshile Gorky

    Exploring Boston/ Watertown Armenian Heritage

    By: Martin Mugar - Nov 11th, 2014

    Arshile Gorky painted several portraits of himself with his mother. They were based on a precious photograph. She died during the Armenian Genocide. The child emigrated to America and grew up in the Boston/ Watertown Armenian community. The artist, Martin Mugar, discusses family tradition and his Armenian heritage as it relates to the early years and art education of the seminal abstract expressionist.

  • Framing the Rose

    De Gustibus

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 06th, 2014

    When not installing exhibitions Rose Art Museum preparator, the artist Roger Kizik, was encouraged by director Carl Belz and then Joe Ketner to design and create hand crafted frames for singular works in the collection. One of the most successful of these was for a painting from Marsden Hartley's German series. While viewing the Hartley exhibition at the LA Couunty Museum of Art we were furious to find the painting reframed generically. Kizik responds to this issue.

  • Marsden Hartley: The German Paintings 1913 to 1915

    LA County Museum of Art to November 30

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 05th, 2014

    Arriving in Paris in 1912, Marsden Hartley, then 35, met two German officers and joined them in Berlin. From 1913 to 1915, and his return to the States, Hartley created a brilliant series of works inspired by and on equal footing with Europe's leading modernists. These works are now on view at the LA County Museum of Art.

  • Poetic Whimsy Spoken in Form and Motion

    Calder and Abstraction: From Avant-Garde To Iconic

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 05th, 2014

    Alexander Calder's brilliant abstract works revolutionized modern sculpture and made him one of the most celebrated artists of the 20th century. This wonderful exhibition brings together 40 of the artist's mobiles (kinetic) and stabiles ( stationary) to explore how Alexander Calder introduced the visual vocabulary into American cultural vernacular. At this once in a generation show, the power of his poetic mastery of elegant form, balance and motion is underscored by his infectious personality of delight and whimsy.

  • James Hampton at the Smithsonian

    The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nation's Millennium

    By: David Zaig - Nov 04th, 2014

    James Hampton is considered one of the great American folk artist. For 14 years, Hampton created the Throne using various shimmering metallic foils, old furniture, pieces of cardboard, old light bulbs, shards of mirror and old desk blotters. He had pinned it together with tacks, glue, and tape.

  • LA Museums

    A Week on the Run

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 31st, 2014

    Enduring fits of road rage during a week in LA we made daily visits to great museums. This is an initial report which will continue.

  • Hampton's the Throne of the Third Heaven.

    By: david zaig - Oct 30th, 2014

    It's hard to uncover Hampton's intuitions or thoughts processes that went into making of the Throne.

  • Shadows

    Warhol at LA Moca through February 2

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 30th, 2014

    Edge to edge LA MoCA is showing the 102 silk screen paintings comprising Andy Warhol's 1978-79 series Shadows. Viewing this dense installation, on view through February 2, entailed no heavy lifting. Andy called the series "Disco Decor."

  • Modern Spirit: The Art of George Morrison

    Heard Museum Phoenix to January 12

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 28th, 2014

    The Modern Spirit: The Arts of George Morrison is a five venue traveling exhibition which is on view at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona through January 12. Morrison (1919-2000) left the Chippewa people of Lake Superior to study at the Arts Student League in 1943. He enjoyed success in New York with numerous gallery and national museum exhibitions. In 1970 he returned to teach in Minnesota where he primarily lived and worked for the remainder of his life. As an abstract artist Morrison defies narrow definitions of American Indian Art. His life and work did much to expand that.

  • Double Rhythm Writings about Painting

    Jean Helion Collected with an Introduction by Deborah Rosenthal

    By: Martin Mugar - Oct 27th, 2014

    The notion of the hermeneutical way of thinking is evident throughout Helion’s writings. One intriguing essay tries to untangle the origins of Abstraction’s roots in Seurat and Cezanne. Who was more important in influencing Abstraction? Helion comes down on the side of Seurat. Cezanne, he feels, is still attached to the real space of objects and is more Janus-like looking backward as well as forward. Seurat’s work lends itself to further reduction, which is crucial to abstraction.

  • State of the Art in Arkansas

    Crystal Bridges Captures America's Heartbeat

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 20th, 2014

    In Bentonville, Arkansas, a stunning museum by Moshe Safdie houses one of the great collections of American Art, and celebrates the future too in 'State of Art."

  • Covert Operations: Investigating the Known Unknowns

    Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art to January 15

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 18th, 2014

    The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art received a grant from the Tremaine Foundation in support of the ambitious and insightful special exhibition Covert Operations: Investigating the Known Unknowns. It has been installed for several months in the three galleries of a former movie theater. The provocative project plays well in a staunchly red state dealing with unchecked undocumented immigration.

  • Xanti Schawinsky Eclipse

    Bauhaus Artist at Broadway 1602 to Nov. 22

    By: Broadway - Oct 05th, 2014

    Bauhaus artist Xanti Schawinsky (1904-79), of Polish-Jewish origin, immigrated in 1936 to the United States. After his years at the Bauhaus he continued an intense and ultra creative journey from his radical post-Bauhaus theater work at the Black Mountain College, the innovative designs for the New York World Fair in 1939, to his unparalleled surreal drawing and painting work throughout the 1940s influenced by war and immigration (on show at the Drawing Center in tandem with our exhibition). In the 1960s Schawinsky entered a new phase of creation with an intense and enigmatic body of work of abstract and optical paintings, the Eclipses and Spheras.

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