Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Philadelphia Museum of Art Old Masters Now


Philadelphia Museum of Art
Last Chance
Old Masters Now: Celebrating the Johnson Collection
Through February 19
After a hundred years of care and study, we’re taking a fresh look at the John G. Johnson Collection. Exploring familiar faces and some works we think will become your new favorites, you’ll see this collection like never before.

Who is John G. Johnson?
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Last Chance
Old Masters Now: Celebrating the Johnson Collection
Through February 19
After a hundred years of care and study, we’re taking a fresh look at the John G. Johnson Collection. Exploring familiar faces and some works we think will become your new favorites, you’ll see this collection like never before.
Textiles
John G. Johnson at Home
See how a Gilded Age collector decorated his home and examine Johnson’s collection of Renaissance textiles and embroideries.
Sculpture
Charm and Distinction: Sculpture from the Johnson Collection
Rarely seen sculptures that reveal the eclectic tastes of a turn-of-the-century Philadelphia collector.
Talks
Inside Look
February 14, 6:00–6:30 p.m.
Join Teresa Lignelli, The Aronson Senior Conservator of Paintings, for a conversation about the recently restored Portrait of Archbishop Filippo Archinto.
See all current exhibitions.
Fall in Love with Rodin
The Kiss
Rodin Museum
Discover what passion looks like in the hands of a master sculptor. This installation explores the artist’s intimate and powerful depictions of romantic love. Rodin Museum admission is always Pay What You Wish. 
Chef Demo
For Chocolate Lovers
February 14, 6:00–8:00 p.m.
Looking for something romantic to do on Valentine's Day? How about a special chef demo of chocolaty desserts? Reservations required. $55 ($50 members); includes Museum admission.
Extended Hours
Rodin Museum
February 14,
10:00 a.m.–8:45 p.m.
Bring your sweetheart to the Rodin Museum during extended evening hours this Valentine's Day. Add a bit of artistry to this romantic day with stories behind some of the master's most passionate works.
Shopping
Artfully Yours
Give your special someone a gift that's as unforgettable as they are. Whether shopping for an art enthusiast, a fashionista, or a master-chef-in-the-making, you can find countless ways via our online store to say those three little words.
Object Lessons
Destination: Philadelphia
Classes start Feb. 14 & 15
Discover how art treasures were brought to the City of Brotherly Love in this art history course in the galleries. Choose Wednesdaymornings or Thursday afternoons. $125 ($100 members).
Trolley Tours
Peale & Washington's World
February 18, 1:00 p.m.
Explore The Art of the Peales and learn of the family's close connection to George Washington. Then head over to Cedar Grove and Woodford Mansion to see the homes of their political friends and foes. $40 ($32 members).
Final Friday
King Britt Presents “The Missed Guided Tour”
February 23, 5:00–8:45 p.m.
This Final Friday experience the vision, connections, and expertise of producer, musician, and musical maverick King Britt. Free after admission.
See a full calendar of What's On this season.
We will be closed Thurs., Feb. 8, due to the Eagles Super Bowl Victory Parade.
We will be open Mon., Feb. 19, in celebration of Presidents' Day.
2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
philamuseum.org
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Morgan Lehman Gallery : Carly Glovinski, Bret Slater February 15 - March 17, 2018



Carly Glovinski
How to Build a Fire


February 15 - March 17, 2018
Opening Reception: Thursday, February 15, 6 - 8pm



              Morgan Lehman Gallery is pleased to present "How to Build a Fire," Carly Glovinski's first solo exhibition in New York City. The show's title refers to the "log cabin" technique of creating a fire by stacking alternating wood sticks in pairs and igniting them to stay warm. This piled wood architecture becomes an important structuring device that informs much of the creative process in the artist's latest body of work. The image of a homemade fire also has symbolic resonance, evoking narratives of survival, comfort, nature, recreation, and community.
            Rooted in observation, Glovinski's practice is inspired by an astute curiosity about the patterns, icons and organizing mechanisms of the everyday world.  Employing trompe l'oeil and methodical craft techniques, Glovinski aims to bend our perceptions of the things we recognize and take at face value, allowing for unexpected connections to be made between the materiality and iconography of objects.
            These recent drawings, wall-hangings, and sculptures consider the organizing systems inherent in woven textiles, rugs, and stacks of wood, as well as the narrative symbolism embedded in quilting patterns, and are often the result of the accumulation of simple repeated gestures. Working from a studio located in a historical New England textile mill, Glovinski makes a direct connection to that past, and by employing craft in a manner that is self-aware of its history, she acknowledges its transcendence from decoration to language and invites the creation of new meaning.
 
 
            Carly Glovinski was the 2016 recipient of the Piscataqua Region Artist Advancement Grant from the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, and an Artist's Resource Trust (A.R.T.) grant from the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation. She received her BFA from Boston University in 2003 and has been awarded residencies at the Studios at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, Teton ArtLab, Jackson, WY, and the Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, VT. Her work has been included in exhibitions at the deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln, MA, Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockland, Boston Center for the Arts, Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME, Museum of Contemporary Art, Jacksonville, FL, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, Salt Lake City, and the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey. Recent and forthcoming solo exhibitions include "Scout Land" at Carroll and Sons, Boston, MA, and shows at the Colby Museum of Art, Waterville, ME, and at the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art. Glovinski lives and works in Dover, New Hampshire.


Click here for to see a preview of works in the exhibition.


Image: Carly Glovinski, Footbridge Sunrise Rag Rug, pigment marker on paper, 51 x 46 inches, 2017
Project Room
Bret Slater


          "Like us, each painting grows into its individuality. They exist in the world as inanimate beings with living souls."

-Bret Slater


       Bret Slater (b. 1987 Bronx, NY) lives and works in New York, NY. He received a B.F.A. from the School of Art + Design at Purchase College, SUNY, Purchase, NY (2009), and an M.F.A. from the Meadows School of the Arts at SMU, Dallas, TX (2011). The artist received the "Rising Star in Art" award by the Fashion Group International, Dallas, TX and his work is in the collections of the Dallas Museum of Art and Indianapolis Museum of Art. Recent solo exhibitions include The Stuff What Don't Get Spoke at annex14, Zürich, Switzerland.


Click here for to see a preview of works in the exhibition.


Image: Bret Slater, Timmy Hendrix, acrylic on canvas, diameter 10 inches, 2015
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Morgan Lehman Gallery, 534 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Making Plans for Art Basel Hong Kong March 29-31? See what is happening

  


HONG KONG | JANUARY 31 | 2018

Encounters: 12 ambitious projects at this year’s Art Basel show in Hong Kong

Curated for the fourth consecutive year by Alexie Glass-Kantor, Executive Director of Artspace in Sydney, Encounters will present institutional-scale installations and site-specific projects, with nine new works created specifically for this year’s show. The 2018 edition, which again will be installed along the four boulevards that run through the two exhibition floors of the show, will feature work by Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan, Chou Yu-Cheng, Toshikatsu Endo, Ryan Gander, Subodh Gupta, Iván Navarro, Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran, Shinji Ohmaki, Jorge Pardo, Erwin Wurm, Ulla von Brandenburg and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu. Art Basel, whose Lead Partner is UBS, takes place at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC) from Thursday, March 29 to Saturday, March 31, 2018.


Bringing together 12 artists from 11 countries and territories including Australia, Austria, Chile, Cuba, Germany, India, Japan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom, Alexie Glass-Kantor’s focus for this year’s curation centers around inviting the audience to make contact with objects, artists and ideas. While some artworks will require the viewer’s participation to activate the work, others will reflect or mirror the body of the audience, directly implicating them into each work.

Information on individual presentations:

‘7 Curtains’ (2017), a new site-specific work by Ulla von Brandenburg (b. 1974) will be presented jointly by Pilar Corrias and Meyer Riegger. Interested in theatre and absurdity, von Brandenburg's installation consists of a sequence of seven monumental stage curtains, inviting the audience to perform by stepping into the color field.

Erwin Wurm's (b. 1954) iconic series ‘One Minute Sculptures’ will be jointly showcased by Lehmann Maupin, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac and König Galerie. First performed in 1997, the ongoing series instructs the audience to "make one minute sculptures", questioning and reflecting on sculpture itself and limiting the sculptures' lifetime to 60 seconds.

neugerriemschneider will present ‘Untitled’ (2009, 2017) by Cuban artist Jorge Pardo (b. 1963). Inspired by medieval manuscripts, Pardo has choreographed a series of objects that intersect architecture, sculpture and design, challenging our expectations of these categories.

‘Start. Stop’ (2008) by Subodh Gupta (b. 1964), who has received international attention for his large-scale monuments exploring subjects of Indian life and culture, will be presented by Arario Gallery. The installation consists of a large and slowly moving sushi belt with scores of tiffin boxes and gleaming pots, recalling the fate of the "dabbawallas" who transport tiffin boxes filled with home-cooked lunch on wheelbarrows in a rapidly changing urban environment.

Edouard Malingue Gallery will premiere a new performance by Cho Yu-Cheng (b. 1976) titled ‘Refresh, Sacrifice, New Hygiene, Infection, Clean, Robot, Air, Housekeeping, www.agentbong.com, Cigarette, Dyson, Modern People’ (2017). Blurring the boundaries between public and private spaces, Cho Yu-Cheng explores the concept of hygiene, technology and the distribution of labor through sculpture, performance and recital.

Lisson Gallery will showcase ‘Potent motif of ambition (Dramaturgical framework for structure and stability)’ (2018) by British artist Ryan Gander (b. 1976), which considers technology and mechanics to rethink the body through new anthropomorphic forms.

Exposing invisible forces, Japanese artist Shinji Ohmaki’s (b. 1971) ‘Liminal Air Space-Time’ (2018), presented by Mind Set Art Center, takes a once solid object and dissolves it into kinetic sculpture, creating an illusion of air as form.

‘Left Wing Project (Belok Kiri Jalan Terus)’ (2017-2018), a new large-scale, site-specific installation by the artist duo Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan (b. 1965, b. 1962 respectively) will be presented by Yavuz Gallery. Also activated by air, Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan’s installation is concerned with the mass migration of people and the complex social and political realities of contemporary agrarian societies in Asia.

‘Gäna (self)’ (2018) by Nyapanyapa Yunupingu (b. 1945), one of Australia's most celebrated Aboriginal artists, will be presented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery. This sculptural installation comprises powerful and totemic bark paintings and larrakitj poles, which were traditionally used as hollow coffins created to hold the bones of the dead.

Sydney-based Sri Lankan artist Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran (b. 1988) will create 'Mud Men Volume II' (2017) for this year’s show. Presented by Sullivan+Strumpf, Nithiyendran’s large-scale ceramic works are rough-edged New Age symbols that reference Hindu and Christian imagery and gender fluidity.

Presented by SCAI The Bathhouse, Mona-ha artist Toshikatsu Endo (b. 1950) will display ‘Void – Wooden Boat, Hong Kong’ (2009-2018), an 11-meter-long boat carved out of a single timber soaked in tar. Born to a family of shrine architects, Endo is interested in ritual involving the classical elements fire, water, earth and air.

Paul Kasmin Gallery will debut New York-based Chilean artist Iván Navarro's (b. 1972) ‘Compression’ (2018). The new work transforms the globe of the Earth’s surface into a cube, essentially rendering its surfaces flat, challenging the notion that the globalisation offers a level playing field and that all things are equal.

The Encounters sector is supported by MGM Resorts Art & Culture. More information on the sector is available at artbasel.com/hongkong/encounters

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Monday, January 29, 2018

Pablo's Birthday at artgenève 2018

Opening reception: Wednesday, January 31, 2-9pm
Booth B37 
Henrik Eiben
Pius Fox
Frank Gerritz
Eckart Hahn
Tessa Perutz
Michael Rouillard
 57 Orchard Street | New York, NY | 332.201.4112 | pablosbirthday.com
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LESLEY DILL
 Wilderness: Words are where what I catch is me

Opening Reception for the artist:  
Tuesday, February 13th from 6 to 8 p.m.

February 14 - March 17, 2018
 
DATES: February 14 - March 17, 2018
RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST: Tuesday, February 13th from 6 to 8 p.m.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Leslie Garrett at gallery@nohrahaimegallery.com or 212-888-3550

image: UNREDEEMED REGIONS (detail), 2017, thread, ink, horse hair on fabric, 96 x 30 x 3 in. 


Nohra Haime Gallery, 500 West 21st Street, New York, NY 10011
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