Sunday, November 7, 2010

The First Annual C2 Gallery AFFORDABLE ART HOLIDAY GIFT SHOW

SAVE THE DATES
November 20, 2010

 A show dedicated to bringing you an incredible
resource of very affordable art work...
purchase something for those important people
on your holiday shopping list
(or find some amazing deals on art for your home or office)

To further support the spirit of giving in this holiday season, C2 Gallery will ensure 10 % of all sales are donated to the

BROOKHAVEN HOSPICE PROGRAM

PHOTOGRAPHY - ACRYLICS - JEWELRY - MIXED MEDIA

C2 Fine Art Gallery
DATE: Nov 20. 2010
TIME: 3pm to 7pm
LOCATION: 22 W Main St / Patchogue
Running through December 2010
Mon through Fri
9am to 4pm
Saturdays
NOV 27, DEC 4, DEC 11
10AM to 3PM

NYWIFT Business Beyond The WWE Ring Event: Tuesday Nov. 16, 2010

Each week, nearly 15 million fans in the U.S. and millions more in 145 countries across the globe watch World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). 
Executives from WWE and NBC reveal the secrets behind the brand’s worldwide expansion through new business opportunities and partnerships, including the recent move of Friday Night SmackDown to Syfy and a focus on WWE's TV-PG content. Find out about the WWE Studios theatrical strategy and how creative integration into television, pay-per-view, digital and other platforms have added to the amazing success of this popular entertainment.


Big Views/Small Paintings Art Exhibition & Sale

Hello Friends and Lovers of the Natural Landscape by the Sea!
We are having an Art Show and Sale of paintings to benefit the
East Hampton Food Pantry and the Springs Food Pantry.

I hope you can come and enjoy the show!-Casey
(free and open to the public)



Big Views/Small Paintings
Art Exhibition & Sale


to benefit the East Hampton Food Pantry & Springs Community Food Pantry

November 6 & 7, 2010
Reception: Saturday, November 6, 5-8pm, All Welcome
Hours: 10am-5pm

Featuring Landscape Paintings of the East End by:
Casey Chalem Anderson, Susan D'Alessio, Aubrey Grainger, Michele Margit,
Gordon Matheson, Joanne Rosko, Eileen Dawn Skretch

Ashawagh Hall
Springs fireplace Road, East Hampton, NY
Artist info: 516.380.7032
www.easthamptonfoodpantry.org
www.springscommunitypc.org

Art Couture’s theme for the month of November is “ The Beauty of the Living Form in Movement” by Corine Pagny

ART FOR A CAUSE: NEW 40,000-SQUARE-FOOT EXHIBITION LAUNCHES IN WYNWOOD DURING ART BASEL MIAMI BRACH – OPENING NIGHT NOVEMBER 30, 2010

Miami, FL (November 5, 2010) - Joining Miami’s December art scene with élan, ARTS FOR A BETTER WORLD (“AFABW”) is a bold endeavor to unite a large-scale commercial exhibition with the non-profit community.  From December 1 to 5, 2010, more than 40 world-class international and United States artists, and nationally-recognized charities Save the Children, American Red Cross, American Cancer Society and Water.org, will present important works across 40,000-square-feet at Soho Studios (NW 22nd Street at NW 1st Avenue, Miami).  The largest curated exhibition in the Wynwood Arts District, a healthy “Better World Café,” youth workshops and an interactive awareness project, utilizing 442 pounds of reusable materials, are all part of AFABW’s ambitious program.  For more information call 754.423.3226 or visit the website atwww.ArtsForABetterWorld.com.

Milton Avery and the End of Modernism

Milton Avery and the End of Modernism

January 22, 2011 through May 8, 2011
Nassau County Museum of Art

I try to construct a picture in which shapes, spaces, colors, form
a set of unique relationships, independent of any subject matter.
At the same time I try to capture and translate the excitement
and emotion aroused in me by the impact with the original idea.
     —Milton Avery

Milton Avery and the End of Modernism looks at work by the artist who brought the sketch, with its spontaneity, movement and fleetingness, to the status of a finished painting. The exhibition features Avery’s intense saturated color fields, the simplification of form, and figures that emphasize the flatness of canvas surface. Milton Avery and the End of Modernism opens at Nassau County Museum of Art (NCMA) on January 22, 2011 and remains on view through May 8, 2011. It is organized for NCMA by Museum Director Karl E. Willers, Ph.D. The exhibition was organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York. It was funded, in part, by the New York State Council for the Arts, a state agency; the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art; and the Westchester Arts Council.


Call (516) 484-9337 for current exhibitions, events, hours and directions or log onto nassaumuseum.org.

Nassau County Museum of Art (NCMA), announced that Laura Lynch has been appointed the museum’s Director of Education.

Karl E. Willers, Ph.D., Director of Nassau County Museum of Art (NCMA), announced that Laura Lynch has been appointed the museum’s Director of Education. She begins her new position at the Museum on November 8, 2010.

Lynch brings extensive experience in art education and administration to her new responsibilities at NCMA. For 10 years she served Queens Museum of Art (QMA) in a variety of roles, including and most recently as the senior manager of school, youth and family programs. At QMA, she created and implemented programs for children, schools, educators, and family groups and also was responsible for a program of encouraging English language proficiency in ESL students using visual literacy. At NCMA Lynch will oversee all public educational programming for adults, children and school groups and all aspects of the museum’s educational outreach to the community, including the development of the museum’s new Art Space for Children. She will also oversee the training of the museum’s approximately 50 docents.

Lynch said: "I look forward to joining the fine staff of Nassau County Museum of Art. It is my goal to continue the outstanding work that occurs at the museum on a daily basis while providing additional opportunities for creative enrichment utilizing the museum's outstanding resources."

Laura Lynch, a resident of Merrick, NY, holds an undergraduate degree in art education and painting from SUNY-New Paltz and a graduate degree in secondary art education from Queens College. She was recognized by the Queens Teens Program with the President’s Office on Arts and Humanities 2008 Coming Up Taller award.

Nassau County Museum of Art is chartered under the laws of New York State as a not-for-profit private educational institution and museum. A privately elected board of trustees is responsible for its governance. The museum is funded through income derived from admissions, parking, membership, special events and private and corporate donations as well as federal and state grants.

Nassau County Museum of Art is located at 1 Museum Drive in Roslyn Harbor, New York just off Northern Boulevard, Route 25A, two traffic lights west of Glen Cove Road. For information call (516) 484-9337 or log onto nassaumuseum/org.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

The Fine Art Detour Club 11/12-14th

Rob Jackson's U.S Stork Club Cal 12/11

SUNDARAM TAGORE GALLERY NEW YORK PRESENTS: RICARDO MAZAL KORA

Guggenheim: Public Programs for Chaos and Classicism: Art in France, Italy, and Germany, 1918-1936

A full schedule of educational programs is being presented in conjunction with Chaos and Classicism: Art in France, Italy, and Germany, 1918–1936, the first exhibition in the United States to focus on the vast transformation in European culture between the world wars and to examine its manifestations in all media. On view through January 9, 2011, the exhibition features work by artists including Balthus, Giorgio de Chirico, Jean Cocteau, Otto Dix, Hannah Höch, Fernand Léger, Henri Matisse, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Pablo Picasso, and August Sander.


ON VIEW AT THE SACKLER CENTER FOR ARTS EDUCATION
Vox Populi: Posters of the Interwar Years
Through January 9, 2011
The 1920s and 1930s were among the greatest years in the history of poster design. The popular voice of manufacturers, political movements, and the travel and entertainment industries, the poster was an immensely refined art created for a vast public. Vox Populi: Posters of the Interwar Years presents a selection of six posters from France, Italy, and Germany.


FILM SCREENINGS
The Blood of a Poet (Le sang d’un poète), 1930
Directed by Jean Cocteau
Fridays, October 29, November 5, 12, and 19, 1 and 2:30 pm
The first installment in the Orphic Trilogy—a series of three films by acclaimed French avant-garde director Jean Cocteau—the groundbreaking film The Blood of a Poet is one of cinema’s great experiments. A portrait of the plight of the artist, the film uses surrealist imagery to explore the poet’s obsessions with the relationships between art and dreams, metaphor and reality, and life and death.

Free with museum admission.
Films are shown in the New Media Theater, lower level.


FILM SCREENINGS
Metropolis, 1927
Directed by Fritz Lang
Fridays, December 3 and 10, 12 and 3 pm
Perhaps one of the most famous and influential of all silent films, Metropolis takes place in 2026, when the populace is divided between workers who must live in the dark underground and the rich who enjoy a futuristic city of splendor. In this new digital restoration, the tense balance between these two societies is realized through elaborate sets and modern science fiction.

Free with museum admission.
Films are shown in the New Media Theater, lower level.


FILM SCREENINGS
The Architecture of Doom, 1991
Directed by Peter Cohen
Fridays, December 17 and 24, 12 and 3 pm
Featuring newly researched footage of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime, The Architecture of Doom captures the inner workings of the Third Reich and illuminates the Nazi aesthetic in art, architecture, and popular culture. Hitler worshipped ancient Rome and Greece and dreamed of a new golden age of classical art and monumental architecture populated by beautiful, patriotic Aryans. There was no place for so-called degenerate artists like Pablo Picasso and other modernists or for “inferior” races like Jews in his lurid fantasy. This riveting documentary shows how Hitler rose from failed artist to creator of a world of ponderous kitsch and horrifying terror.

FREE with museum admission.
Films are shown in the New Media Theater, lower level.


LECTURES
Scultura Lingua Morta:
Sculpture’s Forbidden Languages
Wednesday, November 10, 6:30 pm
Penelope Curtis
Director, Tate Britain
Penelope Curtis, a noted scholar of modern sculpture from Fascist Italy and the Third Reich, shares new thoughts in the context of Chaos and Classicism.

Tickets are $10, $7 for members and students, and are available at guggenheim.org/publicprograms.


LECTURES
23rd Annual Hilla Rebay Lecture: Objects as Sculpture
Tuesday, November 16, 6:30 pm
Elizabeth Cowling
Honorary Fellow, History of Art, University of Edinburgh
Shortly before World War I, when Umberto Boccioni, Georges Braque, and Pablo Picasso began to sculpt objects and still-life compositions, they set in motion a revolution, the repercussions of which can still be felt in the work of many of today’s leading sculptors. Soon afterward, Marcel Duchamp launched his assault on the very foundations of art with his found-object readymades. In this year’s Hilla Rebay Lecture, Elizabeth Cowling focuses on a pivotal period in the history of modern sculpture when the object, rather than the human form, assumed the role of agent provocateur. The Hilla Rebay Lecture brings distinguished scholars to the Guggenheim Museum to examine significant issues in the theory, criticism, and history of art. This annual program is supported by the Hilla von Rebay Foundation. Free admission (no advance ticket registration).


LECTURES
Constructing Classicism in Fashion
Tuesday, December 7, 6:30 pm
Patricia Mears
Deputy Director, The Museum at FIT
Between the world wars, women such as Madeleine Vionnet dominated fashion design in Paris and New York. Charting the embrace of classicism, Patricia Mears, a renowned costume historian and style expert, discusses clothing innovations that defined fashion in the 1930s, changed the course of modern dress, and continue to influence couture today.

Tickets are $10, $7 for members and students, and are available at guggenheim.org/publicprograms.


TOURS
Mind’s Eye
Monday, November 8, 6:30 pm
As part of the museum’s free programs for partially sighted, blind, and deaf visitors, Guggenheim museum educators, led by Georgia Krantz, guide an interactive tour and discussion focusing on Chaos and Classicism followed by a private reception.

Free admission with advance RSVP required at access@guggenheim.org.


Curator’s Eye Tours
The exhibition’s curators lead tours of Chaos and Classicism.
Helen Hsu: Friday, November 12, 2 pm
Kenneth E. Silver: Friday, December 3, 2 pm

Free with museum admission.


FAMILY PROGRAMS
Fall Family Day
Sunday, November 14, 2–5 pm
The public is invited to celebrate the museum’s architecture and fall exhibitions, including Chaos and Classicism. Families can learn about the artworks on view by meeting different characters and personalities in the paintings, photographs, and sculptures in the rotunda and galleries. Participants can investigate the ways artists tell us about characters depicted in their works and experiment with materials, shapes, and colors for their own portraits. Everyone is encouraged to play a character and try on costumes. Other activities include readings, performances, much more. Recommended for families with children ages 4–10.

$15 per family; $10 for members; cash only. Free for Family members, Cool Culture families, and Guggenheim partner schools. No registration needed.


INTERACT
Guggenheim Online Forum
Mon, November 15–Fri, November 19
Guggenheim Forum presents an installment titled “Satire, Critique, Provocation, Propaganda” to accompany the Chaos and Classicism exhibition. A new, diverse group of panelists including novelist and journalist Francisco Goldman and art historian Jennie Hirsh will discuss the various ways artists address politics in their work.

Visit guggenheim.org/forum for complete information and to join the conversation.


CALL FOR PAPERS
Emerging Scholars Symposium:
Is Returning to the Past Modern?
Wednesday, January 5, 1 pm
In the spirit of Chaos and Classicism, the Sackler Center for Arts Education is sponsoring a program showcasing emerging scholars. Through new research, this series of focused presentations grapples with the long-standing questions of whether artists, architects, and designers can look to the past for inspiration and still be considered modern.

To register and review the call for papers, visit guggenheim.org/publicprograms.


For updated information regarding programs, contact the Box Office at 212 423 3587 or visit guggenheim.org/publicprograms.

Kaveh Ansari Opening reception, Thursday Oct 28 (9E) Fall/Spring Collection

Celebrate Fall with Art and Fashion at Rogue Space! We have dual opening receptions at Rogue Space | Chelsea this evening Thursday October 30 with New York based MOVEMENT-E presenting "Be Unique Love Yourself" curated by Peter Boseung Kang in Gallery 1 while Kaveh Ansari showcases the Fall-Spring Ansari Collection with a cocktail reception in Gallery 2.