May 03

The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Announces New Exhibition: “Georgia OKeeffe In New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, And The Land”


Santa Fe, NM (PRWEB) January 24, 2013

The Georgia OKeeffe Museum announces the opening of the exhibition Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land. The exhibition, which opens May 17, 2013 at the museum in Santa Fe, highlights OKeeffes paintings of New Mexicos churches, crosses, folk art and Native American subjects, created between 1929 and 1953. Examples include the paintings Ranchos Church No. I (1929), Kachina (1934), and Ghost Ranch Landscape (1935).

OKeeffe made the first of many trips to northern New Mexico in the summer of 1929, and the importance of the Southwestern landscape and cultures to her artwork is made evident by the fact that she completed at least 23 paintings in that year, many of which are part of this exhibition. The artists experience in New Mexico inspired a significant creative shift in her career. Two influential paintings from 1929 will join the traveling exhibition at the OKeeffe Museum, Black Cross with Stars and Blue and At the Rodeo, New Mexico. These works demonstrate her exploration of a new environment and experimentation with new colors, forms and compositional strategies. Iconic images of the Southwest, like these, became her enduring contribution to a distinctly American Modernism. The abstract interpretations of Katsinam by contemporary Hopi artists Ramona Sakiestewa, and Dan Namingha will also be added to the exhibition at the Georgia OKeeffe Museum.

While the New Mexico landscape remained a prominent part of OKeeffes life and art, especially after she left Taos to live and paint at Alcalde, Ghost Ranch, and Abiquiu, very little has been shown or written about her involvement with Native American and Hispanic art and culture; it is popularly assumed that she had none. Yet, almost immediately upon her arrival in New Mexico, she responded to the areas cultural richness. For example, she attended the Feast Day and Corn Dance at San Filipe Pueblo, and rodeos in Albuquerque and Las Vegas, New Mexico, with Mabel Dodge Luhan and her husband Tony, who was a member of Taos Pueblo. O’Keeffe created numerous drawings, watercolors, and paintings of katsina dolls (carved representations of Katsinam or Hopi spirit beings), also known as kachina dolls, or katsina tithu. Because she retained and seldom exhibited most of these paintings, they remain generally unknown to the public.

Georgia OKeeffe explored an extraordinary diversity of subjects between 1929 and 1953, including the architecture, landscape and religious arts of northern New Mexico, said Robert A. Kret, director of the Georgia OKeeffe Museum. While her landscapes are a familiar theme and represent her contribution to a distinctive American Modernism, Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land reveals the breadth of experiences that inspired a new direction in her art, he added. This exhibition was co-curated by Barbara Buhler Lynes, former Georgia OKeeffe Museum Curator and current Curator Carolyn Kastner.

The exhibition opened in September 2012 at the Montclair Museum in New Jersey, and was reviewed by New York Times writer Martha Schwendener on January 6, who wrote: And so Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico includes not only a number of rich landscapes, but also drawings and paintings that delve into some of the central issues and controversies of modernism. Like Gauguin in the South Pacific or Picasso with his African masks, OKeeffe encountered tribal aesthetic and cultural traditions in New Mexico that were liberating and became integral to her work but that also set off a complicated battle among cultures, histories and legacies.

An exhibition catalogue published by the Museums of New Mexico Press accompanies Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico It includes an introduction by Lynes that discusses OKeeffes interest in aspects of Native and Hispanic culture, along with essays by Kastner, Professor W. Jackson Rushing III, and three Hopi authors: Alph H. Secakuku, Ramona Sakiestewa, and Dan Namingha.

What:

Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land,

organized by the Georgia OKeeffe Museum, Santa Fe.

When & Where:

Montclair Art Museum, 28 September, 2012 20 January 2013

Denver Art Museum, 10 February – 28 April 2013

Georgia OKeeffe Museum, 17 May 2013 8 September 2013

Heard Museum, 27 Sept 2013 12 January 2014

More Information:

http://www.okeeffemuseum.org

Request Images:

Jennifer Hinsley Jennifer(at)jlhmedia(dot)com; 505 603 8643

ABOUT GEORGIA OKEEFFE MUSEUM:

The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is dedicated to the artistic legacy of Georgia O’Keeffe, to defining its ongoing significance, and to the study and interpretation of American Modernism, late 19th century to the present. The Museum’s collections, historic properties, exhibitions, Research Center, publications, and education programs contribute to scholarly discourse and inspire diverse audiences. Located in Santa Fe, NM, the Museums collections, exhibits, research center, publications and education programs contribute to scholarly discourse and serve diverse audiences. The largest single repository of the artists work in the world, it is the only museum in the world dedicated to an internationally known American woman artist and is the most visited art museum in New Mexico.

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION:

Georgia OKeeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land was organized by the Georgia OKeeffe Museum. This exhibition and related programming were made possible in part by a generous grant from The Burnett Foundation. Additional support was provided by American Express, the Healy Foundation, Shiprock Gallery, the City of Santa FE Arts Commission, 1% Lodgers Tax Funding, New Mexico Arts (plus NEA recognition).







Feb 23

Frederic Remington Bronze Sculpture Exhibition To Expand at Sid Richardson Museum


Fort Worth, TX (PRWEB) February 21, 2013

Frederic Remington fans will enjoy four more sculptures in Part 2 of Violent Motion: Frederic Remingtons Artistry in Bronze, which opens at the Sid Richardson Museum on Thursday, February 28, 2013, and runs through Sunday, June 2, 2013.

The expanded focused exhibition features 11 action-filled bronze casts of horses and their riders sculpted by the iconic Western artist. Ten sculptures are on loan from rarely seen private collections, and one is from the Amon Carter Museum of American Art; ten of the sculptures are lifetime casts. As in Part 1 of the exhibition, Remingtons bronzes will be juxtaposed with his paintings from the Richardson and Carter museums to demonstrate how his artworks reveal action in a two-dimensional versus a three-dimensional medium.

Nov 04

Zen Compounds Mirus Gallery is Holding a Groundbreaking Exhibition: Crucible


San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) November 02, 2012

Mirus Gallery is pleased to announce its launch with the inaugural exhibition, Crucible: collaborative works by artists Damon Soule, David Choong Lee, Mars-1, NoMe Edonna and Oliver Vernon who will each be exhibiting new solo works alongside a number of the collectives large-scale collaborative paintings.

This exhibition marks the opening of Mirus Gallery, a new gallery space in downtown San Francisco. Run by art collector and entrepreneur Paul Hemming, the programming will be marked by a commitment to championing new movements in contemporary art. Crucible is co-curated by long-time art collector, Brian Chambers. The opening reception for Crucible will be held on November 10, 2012 from 6pm 10pm. The exhibition will be on view through December 1, 2012.

At times it feels as if painting is alchemy. We throw in the many ingredients of painting technique and abstract language; they mix, dissolve, simmer, combust, coagulate into new forms and spaces. To grapple with the age-old tradition of paint while aiming for a pure and contemporary expression can be an arduous test of fortitude and perseverance, says Oliver Vernon discussing Crucible.

The centerpiece for Crucible is an eponymously titled collaborative work, a 7 x 16 foot canvas created over the course of one week spent in the Black Rock Desert. Compositionally complex, with intricate shapes and geometric patterning that resonate virtuosity. While the painting is ultimately an abstracted work comprised of line, color and form, these fundamental visual elements pulse and contract creating a dimensionality that evokes representational elements of the natural world such as space, movement and depth. In this work, the celestial and the terrestrial converge with overt references to the natural world; quasi-meteorological forms resembling whirling tornadoes, geological allusions to bodies of water and astral patterns blanket the canvas and saturate the eye.

Crucible is a collective reference point for the visual language explored by each of the collaborating artists. This exhibition will also include individual works by the artists produced autonomously or outside of the collective. Individually produced works are included in this exhibition to illuminate the artists collective efforts in their synergistic work while simultaneously highlighting each artist as a singular facet of the creative prismatic whole. For instance, viewers can look at a piece by an individual artist and see the way that artists style is echoed in the collectives shared artwork. In this way Crucible aims to showcase the dialogue that takes place between these artists, whether it is on a shared canvas or manifested in their solo work.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

Friends for a decade, Damon Soule, David Choong Lee, Mars-1, NoMe Edonna and Oliver Vernon have admired each others work, shared ideas and engaged in creating works on a collaborative basis. The artists have published three books together: 4 Words, 2003; Convergence, 2005 and Further in 2010.

ABOUT MIRUS GALLERY

Mirus Gallery is a dynamic exhibition space established by curator and entrepreneur, Paul Hemming. The gallery features a program of contemporary artwork by emerging and mid-career artists in both solo and thematically organized group shows. Mirus Gallery will highlight work that emphasizes skill and process and aims to engage viewers on a sentient, emotional and evocative level.

In 2013, the initiation of an artist-in-residency program will pursue the gallerys values of community and collaboration by providing a live-in/on-site studio space for artists to make and exhibit work in a supportive environment, conducive to creativity.

ABOUT PAUL HEMMING

Paul Hemming is a San Francisco-based business pioneer. Moving adeptly in multifaceted entrepreneurial roles, Hemming is at once a DJ, green enthusiast, and philanthropist who has created a prolic output of radically distinctive businesses during his career. In his role as an eco-business forerunner, he has founded an impressive track list of eco-conscience entertainment companies comprised of Temple Nightclub and Ki Sushi, as well TMG record label and music studios. Paul continues to pursue his visionary goals as an avid art collector with a passion for discovering and promoting new artists.

Gallery Hours

Tuesday Saturday 10-6

Location

540 Howard Street

San Francisco, CA

94105

Gallery Contact

monica(at)mirusgallery(dot)com







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Aug 14

Vermont Artisan Designs Gallery Prepares New Exhibition of Fine Art and Hand Crafted Jewelry for Brattleboros August 3rd Gallery Walk


Brattleboro, VT (PRWEB) July 30, 2012

Vermont Artisan Designs Gallery, in its 40th year, announces its August exhibition. In addition to the fine art and contemporary American craft of more than 350 artisans, the gallery will feature the oil paintings of Dane Tilghman and watercolors and oils of Marrin Robinson during the Aug. 3 Gallery Walk.

For the month of August, featured artists include Marrin Robinson of Vermont and Dane Tilghman of Pennsylvania. Additionally, Andrea and Jim Lorette of Jayelay Jewelers will demonstrate how they make jewelry from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 3, at the gallery.

Artist Marrin Robinson will greet visitors and tell about her experiences of painting the plains of Kansas over the past year. Marrin is home for the summer from a teaching job at Kansas State University. Her painting style using both watercolor and oil — has been described recently as exuberant.

Dane Tilghman is the other featured artist for August. Danes work is in the African American Museum and he was featured in a book of the 100 Best Artists of the Brandywine Valley last year. More than 30 works by Tilghman will be available for viewing and purchase.

Several artists featured at this Vermont Art Gallery have been getting extra notice regionally and nationally. The July/August issue of Artscope Magazine focuses on Janis Sanders, who paints in oil and works with a palette knife to create some striking effects punctuated by his signature blue sky. Hes brought three new paintings in for our August show and will be a featured artist in October.

In other news, Charlie Hunter just won Best in Show at the Plein Air Easton Competition & Arts Fair in Maryland. The show at Easton is one of the premier plein air competitions in the United States. More than 400 applied for the show and only 48 were accepted. Charlie reports that he had an excellent number of sales as well. Hunters monochromatic oils will be on display for the month of August.

Owners Susan and Greg Worden invite you to visit when youre in Southeastern Vermont and see first-hand the quality of the workmanship on display. Whether it be oil paintings, watercolors, egg temperas, acrylics, jewelry, pottery, blown glass, wrought iron, clocks, pewter, turned wooden bowls, hand-crafted furniture including a comfortable rocking chair that conforms to whoever sits in it, paintings, photographs, sculpture, lamps, scarves and fiber arts, or hand-fashioned wedding and commitment rings, Vermont Artisan Designs is a gallery not to be missed.

Vermont Artisan Designs is open seven days a week at 106 Main St. in Brattleboro, a town recently voted the No. 11 best small town in America by Smithsonian Magazine and voted in the Top 25 best arts towns with populations under 100,000 by readers of American Style Magazine.

In addition to the monthly first Friday Gallery Walks, Brattleboro hosts numerous concerts and activities including the annual Strolling of the Heifers in June, a village celebration in July, a well-regarded literary festival in October and ongoing concerts at the Vermont Jazz Center.







Jul 27

3-day painting exhibition 'Rang Samvad' begins'

3-day painting exhibition 'Rang Samvad' begins'
A three-day group painting exhibition 'Rang Samvad' is being organised at Swaraj Kala Vithi, Swaraj Bhavan. The Artist Guild of Madhya Pradesh is organising the exhibition. The exhibition which began from Thursday showcases the painting of five female …
Read more on Daily Pioneer

A look at Adam Khan's nature paintings in his studio in Kodaikanal
Adam Khan, an English artist living off his paintings in the Western Ghats, has been capturing the many facets of nature for the last 32 years. His dimly lit studio-cum-home in Kodaikanal breathes life into his art. “Look at this, this is live art …
Read more on The Hindu