Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Arte Laguna Prize , Venice, SAVE THE DATE OPENING NIGHT 11.03.2023, 5pm CET

Magazzino Italian Art's 2023 Program Highlights

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Magazzino Italian Art's 2023 Program Highlights

Magazzino Italian Art campus. Photo by Jacobo Mingorance.

Magazzino Italian Art is pleased to announce a new slate of programs for the upcoming year. The calendar will highlight a program series curated by Ilaria Conti on diversity in art and culture across Italy and the United States, a lecture series on new scholarship in the study of the Arte Povera movement curated by Dr. Roberta Minnucci, Magazzino Italian Art 2022-23 Scholar-in- Residence, a project by Arcangelo Sassolino in collaboration with The Art Newspaper, a cross-genre concert by Jog Blues, and the sixth iteration of the Cinema in Piazza film series presented in partnership with the Cold Spring Film Society and Artecinema, Naples. Magazzino’s summer programs will culminate in the September opening of the museum’s second building: the Robert Olnick Pavilion.

The Robert Olnick Pavilion is designed by the renowned Spanish architects Alberto Campo Baeza and Miguel Quismondo. The pavilion will expand the extensive facilities of the main building, providing an additional 13,000 square feet of exhibition space, a wing devoted to decorative arts, ceramics, and jewelry, a multipurpose room with auditorium capabilities, and a combined cafe and bookshop on the mezzanine.

Magazzino Italian Art will present two inaugural exhibitions and a special project in the new pavilion about Mario Schifano, Carlo Scarpa, and Ettore Spalletti. 
Expanding public programs into the new space, the museum will host three study days at the pavilion dedicated to Mario Schifano, Carlo Scarpa, and Ettore Spalletti.

This year marks a milestone for Magazzino with the opening of the Robert Olnick Pavilion, allowing the museum to host more temporary exhibitions, expand educational initiatives for younger visitors, and continue to offer a wide range of both indoor and outdoor events across both spaces on campus. Magazzino's programming leading up to the opening of the Robert Olnick Pavilion in the fall will include important collaborations with international artists and institutions to highlight the diversity of Italian culture, not just in its visual identity, but also in the realms of music, film, research, and performance. The museum’s community has been growing since the opening in 2017 and Magazzino is excited to build an even larger platform to welcome everyone to the newly expanded campus.

Pensiero Plurale
Present Memories: On the Politics of Image-Making

February 25, 2023 at 12:00 p.m.
Magazzino Italian Art

Dawit Petros, Istruzioni (Transits, Trajectories, Invisible Networks), Part III, Serigraph on Arnhem paper, 22x30 in. (56x76 cm), 2021. Courtesy the artist.

In conjunction with Black History Month, Magazzino presents Present Memories: On the Politics of Image-Making, the fourth iteration of Pensiero Plurale, a series of programs conceived and curated by Ilaria Conti centered on issues of cultural and social justice, intersectional thinking, and the arts across Italy and the United States.

Present Memories explores the politics behind some of the incomplete or fictitious narratives that continue to shape historical memories and present-day identities in connection to Italy. The invited speakers will discuss strategies to question and critically rethink such processes of knowledge-formation through visual and material culture.

The full-day, in-person event features a morning program with artist Dawit L. Petros and scholar Teresa Fiore and an afternoon session with curator Mistura Allison.


Tickets can be purchased here.

Arte Povera: Artistic Tradition and Transatlantic Dialogue
Lecture Series

March 18 – April 30, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art 

The Politics of Labor in Postwar Italian Art lecture series, curated by Katie Larson, Magazzino’s 2021-22 Scholar-in-Residence. Photo by Alexa Hoyer.

The fifth annual spring lecture series brings together some of the leading scholars of Arte Povera who present new perspectives on postwar Italian art. The 2023 Lecture Series, curated by Dr. Roberta Minnucci, Magazzino’s 2022-23 Scholar-in-Residence, will address research topics which are strictly interconnected with Arte Povera’s relationship with the past and its artistic exchanges with the United States. Participants for the 2023 season will feature Dr. Laura Petican, Dr. Marin R. Sullivan, Dr. Raffaele Bedarida, and Dr. Roberta Minnucci.

Contributions from the selected scholars will shed light on crucial aspects of postwar Italian art including: the legacy of the Baroque and the influence of the Italian artistic tradition on more recent practices (Dr. Laura Petican, Independent scholar); the role exhibitions of Italian art in the U.S. had in influencing the way Italian art was interpreted at home (Dr. Raffaele Bedarida, Associate Professor of History of Art at the Cooper Union, New York); sculptural projects made by foreign and Italian artists during the 1960s and 1970s (Dr. Marin R. Sullivan, Lecturer, Department of History of Art and Architecture DePaul University, Chicago); the reinterpretation of classical antiquity and art history in Arte Povera (Dr. Roberta Minnucci, art historian specializing in Italian art of the 1960s and 1970s, with a PhD from the University of Nottingham).

Please find the lecturers and dates below.

March 18, 2023 at 12:00 p.m.
Dr. Marin R. Sullivan | Lecturer, Department of History of Art and Architecture DePaul University, Chicago

Tickets

April 1, 2023 at 12:00 p.m.

Dr. Roberta Minnucci | Magazzino Italian Art 2022-23 Scholar-in-Residence 

Tickets

April 15, 2023 at 12:00 p.m.
Dr. Laura Petican | Independent scholar

Tickets

April 30, 2023 at 12:00 p.m.
Dr. Raffaele Bedarida | Associate Professor of History of Art at the Cooper Union, New York

Tickets

Arcangelo Sassolino
A Project in Collaboration with The Art Newspaper
May 13, 2023 

Magazzino Italian Art 

Arcangelo Sassolino. Photo by Agostino Osio.

This talk and presentation, in collaboration with The Art Newspaper, will present the work of artist Arcangelo Sassolino whose sculptures and installations explore mechanical behaviors and properties of force. The event, culminating in a lunch, will feature curators and critics including Chiara Parisi, Hans Ulrich Obrist, and Francesco Manacorda, and both indoor and outdoor sculptures and installations on loan to Magazzino. 

Artists' Writings: The Case of Salvo and Barbara T. Smith
May 24, 2023
Online Event

Benedizione di Lucerna, 1970/75, black and white photograph on aluminium, 43.3x34.6 in. (110×88 cm). Courtesy Gerd De Vries Collection, Berlin.

On the occasion of the publication of IO SONO SALVO (NERO Editions, 2023), Lisa Andreani, member of the Archivio Salvo, will be in dialogue with Pietro Rigolo, Associate Curator at the Getty Research Institute and co-editor of the newly published memoir of performance artist Barbara T. Smith (The Way to Be, Getty Research Institute 2023). The conversation will focus on artists’ autobiographical writings and their significance, and will be moderated by Magazzino Italian Art 2022-23 Scholar-in-Residence Roberta Minnucci. This project is supported by the Italian Council (10th edition, 2021), a program to promote Italian contemporary art in the world by the Directorate-General for Contemporary Creativity of the Italian Ministry of Culture.

Jog Blues
June 10, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art

 

Jog Blues at Magazzino Italian Art, June 11, 2022. Photo by Alexa Hoyer.
 

The second iteration of the Jog Blues concert at Magazzino will bring together masters of jazz, blues, and Indian classical music in a 21st-century mix; creating an experience drawing from deep traditions while also swinging towards the future. The band, featuring Andy Biskin (clarinet, bass clarinet), Ikhlaq Hussain (sitar), Jake Charkey (cello), Joel Bluestein (electric guitar), Jonathan Rose (bass, harmonica), Mir Naqibul Islam (tabla), and Siddartha Mukherjee (vocals), is named after the Indian midnight raga and the blues.

Cinema in Piazza
July 22-23, 2023 | August 19-20, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art

Cinema in PiazzaDesign is One: Lella & Massimo Vignelli, screening, June 18, 2022. Photo by Alexa Hoyer.

Cinema in Piazza is the sixth iteration of Magazzino Italian Art’s annual outdoor film series, presented in partnership with the Cold Spring Film Society and Artecinema, Naples, coinciding with Upstate Art Weekend. Each screening will feature a speaker related to the film program—speakers to be announced later this spring.

Mario Schifano
Exhibition
September 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Mario Schifano in his studio in New York, 1964 © Archivio Mario Schifano.

On the occasion of the inauguration of the Robert Olnick Pavilion in September 2023, Magazzino Italian Art will open an exhibition dedicated to the Italian artist Mario Schifano, presented in partnership with the Archivio Mario Schifano, Rome and the participation of several important private collections. The solo exhibition, curated by Alberto Salvadori, will shed light on one of Italy’s most significant artists.

Ettore Spalletti
Project
September 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Ettore Spalletti. Photo by Werner J. Hannappel.

This project, dedicated to the work of Ettore Spalletti, has been conceived and organized in close collaboration with the artist’s Estate on the occasion of the opening of the Robert Olnick Pavilion. Conceived by Fondazione Ettore Spalletti, Benedetta Spalletti, and Alberto Salvadori in collaboration with the architect Alberto Campo Baeza, the special project emerges from a deep dialogue with the architectural space: it will feature four large works installed in a room designed to take in natural light in a unique way, dynamically framing the pieces on view.

Carlo Scarpa
Exhibition
September 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Carlo Scarpa.

A selection of Murano glass designed by Carlo Scarpa from the Olnick Spanu Collection will be on display in the design gallery of the Robert Olnick Pavilion and will be curated by Marino Barovier.

Arte Povera
Exhibition
September 2023
Magazzino Italian Art

Arte Povera, ongoing exhibition at Magazzino Italian Art, Cold Spring, N.Y. Photo by Marco Anelli/Tommaso Sacconi.

A new display of the works from the Olnick Spanu Collection will also extend to all the galleries of the warehouse building via an annual rehanging, with a focus on the work of Michelangelo Pistoletto. Artists from the Olnick Spanu Collection include Giovanni Anselmo, Alighiero Boetti, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Luciano Fabro, Jannis Kounellis, Marisa Merz, Mario Merz, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Giuseppe Penone, Pino Pascali, Giulio Paolini, and Gilberto Zorio.

Carlo Scarpa Study Day
Lecture
October 14, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Carlo Scarpa with the glass master Arturo Biasutto saying “Boboli,” Murano, 1943. Photo Archivio Storico Luce.

This Study Day will include a selection of presentations and conversations in conjunction with the exhibition on Carla Scarpa’s Murano glass from the Olnick Spanu Collection.

Ettore Spalletti Study Day
Lecture
October 28, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Ettore Spalletti. Photo by Azzurra Ricci.

This Study Day will include a selection of presentations and conversations in conjunction with the special project dedicated to Ettore Spalletti in the Robert Olnick Pavilion.

Mario Schifano Study Day
Lecture
November 18, 2023
Magazzino Italian Art - Robert Olnick Pavilion

Mario Schifano © Archivio Mario Schifano.

The Study Day will include a selection of presentations and conversations in conjunction with the Mario Schifano exhibition in the Robert Olnick Pavilion.

Monday, February 13, 2023

ArtistsExplore The Far North

 

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EXHIBITION PANEL NOW STREAMING
ON THE ARCTIC EDGE — ARTISTS EXPLORE THE FAR NORTH
MARION BELANGER, CLARE BENSON & STEVE GIOVINCO
NOW EXTENDED THROUGH SAT—MARCH 4

New York—Now extended through March 4 at Scandinavia House, On the Arctic Edge — Artists Explore the Far North presents three contemporary photo-based artists whose work traverses the regions of the Arctic Circle to probe themes ranging from time and memory, to landscape and the built environment, to science and mythology, to our changing climate. Since opening in October, the exhibition has been chosen as a "Must See" by Artforum and acclaimed in a fall review by Musée Magazine as inviting viewers "to step into the silence ofan endless winter."

On February 4, artists Marion Belanger, Clare Benson, and Steve Giovinco discussed their work in an Artist Panel moderated by photographer Erika Larsen. The panel examined the individual experiences and work of each artist, as well as the broader perspective the exhibition brings as a collective reflection on the rapidly changing landscape of the Arctic region; the talk was recorded and is now available to stream.

Other related programming includes a discussion this 
Thursday, February 16 at 7 PM with author Lisa E. Bloom about her new book Climate Change and the New Polar Aesthetics: Artists Reimagine the Arctic and Antarctica, out now from Duke University Press. In this new publication, Bloom considers the ways artists, filmmakers, and activists engaged with the Arctic and Antarctic represent our current environmental crises and reconstruct public understandings of them by engaging feminist, Black, Indigenous, and non-Western perspectives by artists such as Katja Aglert, Subhankar Banerjee, Judit Hersko, Roni Horn, Isaac Julien, Zacharias Kunuk, and others.
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
Photographer and interdisciplinary artist Clare Benson’s series Until There Is No Sun is a poetic investigation of the Arctic’s duality: the relationships between light and seeing, earth and sky, science and ancient myth. Created over nearly a year living in the far north of Arctic Sweden working in coordination with space physicists, Sami indigenous reindeer herders, and scientists studying the eyes of Arctic reindeer, her photographs, videos, and collected artifacts on view include the time-lapse capture video work A Thousand Suns. Marion Belanger photographs the cultural landscape, particularly where geology and the built environment intersect, exploring concepts of persistence and change and ways that boundaries demarcate differences. Her series Rift/Fault studies shifting land-based tectonic edges of the North American Continental Plate in Iceland and California, examining their unpredictable and uncontainable behavior. NYC-based fine-art photographer Steve Giovinco’s lyrical night landscapes in the recent series Inertia look at the land, ice, and communities of Southern Greenland. Giovinco traveled to locations including Narsarsuaq, a small remote town lying in the shadow of glaciers, to capture vast scarred landscapes; shrinking icebergs and ice floes; desolate villages; and 400-year-old Norse ruins; all marked with minimal traces of human intervention.

Each artist is an ASF Fellow having received financial support from the American-Scandinavian Foundation from funds donated by Scandinavian Seminar. Over the last 100 years, ASF has awarded over 5,500 fellowships and grants to Americans  and Scandinavians, in the Foundation’s longest-standing commitment to cultural and educational exchange. 

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Affection and Romance in Contemporary Art at Lehman College Gallery



Saturday, February 11, 2023

Visionary Californian Art

 MutualArt

Magazine Interviews & Profiles
The Brangwyn Effect

The Brangwyn Effect: Frank Brangwyn and Visionary Californian Art

Chosen to be among an illustrious roster of painters to create monumental SF murals, Frank Brangwyn was the only non-American, influencing an entire genre of Californian art

Michael Pearce / MutualArt

Feb 08, 2023

The Brangwyn Effect: Frank Brangwyn and Visionary Californian Art

When the organizers of the Panama-Pacific Exposition of 1915 chose the muralists who would create the immense paintings that decorated the spectacular palaces dominating the San Francisco shoreline for the year of the great event, they tapped Childe Hassam, Charles Holloway, Arthur Mathews, Robert Reid, Milton Bancroft, Edward Simmons, Frank Du Monde, and William Leftwich Dodge as American painters at the peak of their careers, exemplifying the excellence of the nation’s artistic quality. But they bent the thumb of their nationalist rule to include Welshman Frank Brangwyn, the prolific muralist and artistic éminence grise, whose fame trumped his citizenship, and paid him to execute eight spectacular paintings, each twenty-five feet high and twelve feet wide.

Frank Brangwyn, British Empire Panels in the Brangywn Hall, Swansea. Photo by Nigel Davies

Once a teenage apprentice to William Morris, the great arts and crafts guru, by 1915 Brangwyn was one of the few artists whose prolific reputation matched the immense scale of the exposition. He was absurdly productive, producing thousands of paintings, drawings, murals, furniture and carpet designs during his lifetime. In Art in California, a lavish official tome produced to describe the exposition’s exuberant displays of paintings and sculptures, critic Hamilton Wright was overcome by the quality of Brangwyn’s murals and began his descriptions of the imagery with his compliments to the master. In his essay he “…marveled at the wonderful ornamental quality and brilliance of these great friezes of color,” and was so impressed that he included images of all eight as illustrations to his essay, to compare to the rough preparatory sketches of the other painters.

Jules Guérin, the art director of the exposition, enforced strict control over the color palette of every building and painting, and even ordered the sand that lined the pathways to be baked in ovens to precisely match the travertine of the extravagant palaces. His pastel greens and reds, balanced with salmon pinks and soft blue were a potent and popular combination which influenced Californian architects and decorators for generations. Guérin insisted that the muralists work in San Francisco so he could supervise their obedience and guide their labor, but made no attempt to enforce any control over mighty Brangwyn, who was allowed to paint without restraint in his London studio.

Frank Brangwyn, Mural, The Windmill, Courtesy of The Master's Light Photography

Brangwyn’s huge murals dominated the lavish Court of Abundance, a fantasy of Moorish and Gothic architecture set around the long arcades of a formal garden. Beautifully rendered figures dominated his elemental paintings, and he used the great height of the tall canvases to initiate fantastic images of weighty produce passed down, and raised spectators’ eyes up to the heavens. America, now united from shore to shore, was a wealthy land of fecund plenty. An extravagant harvest of fertile profusion was brought to ground in The Fruit Pickers, and bursting clusters of black fruit were gathered from high trellises in Dancing the Grapes. A windswept procession of laden travelers passed before joyful naked kite-flying boys beside the fragile tower and sails of The Windmill, the winged tower perched tilting on a boulder as if it was ready to fly away. The Hunters crouched over their arrows, muscle and tension hidden among tall thrusts of peeling eucalyptus. Fishermen hauled in a heavy load in The Net and brought huge baskets to fill with their unseen catch. In The Fountain jugs were carried on the heads of bearers, filled from an arc of spring water pouring from a breached crag. Pelicans passed among long purples and pink foxgloves. A high, thin helix of white and smoke twisted from a Primitive Fire, its small flames hidden by a cluster of absorbed men. In Industrial Fire active men pried open the door of a kiln, flames roared and a torrent of grey billowed into the air against a blue sky. Clusters of warm ceramics were the product of their sweating work. Brangwyn carefully avoided embodying air, earth, fire, and water as allegorical figures. He told the New York Times, "You will not find the usual girl flying in a cloud with a fish under her arm: or a woman sitting on a stage rock fanning herself with an eel and labeled 'Water.’ There is no blooming bit of allegory in the whole exposition – just an ordinary primal man and woman mixed up with the things of the earth. Not that I object to painting allegorical mural decorations generally; but I do object to allegory for America. I have always felt that it was incongruous to have allegory in a work destined for America. It is a strong, new country, and everything ought to be natural."

Frank Brangwyn's Air - The Hunters on site in the arcade of the Court of Abundance, Photo courtesy of UC Berkeley, Bancroft Library

After the exposition closed, Brangwyn’s superb murals were moved to the centerpiece gallery of the Palace of Fine Arts, the lavish Court of Ages, for the post-exposition exhibition. Visitors entered from a shady colonnade and placid lake through the main Eastern doors to be greeted by the lavish paintings, which were now the dominant decorative feature of the building, wrapped in the luxuriant frame of the exuberantly decorated architecture. They were accompanied by Charles Dickman’s repainted Bohemian Club seascape, Before the Storm, the original of which had been burned in the San Francisco fire of 1906, and Henry Fuller’s Carnegie-medal-winning allegory of Christian Science, The Triumph of Truth Over Error. Brangwyn exhibited thirty-nine prints in the international section a short walk away. Soon, when the nostalgic post-exposition exhibit closed, they were moved to the Herbst Theatre at the San Francisco War Memorial, where they still hang as glorious reminders of a generous golden age of civic gestures and grand gifts.

The influence of Brangwyn’s murals upon Californian art in particular was immense. His colleagues at the exposition created comparatively cautious images which did little to advance mural painting as an exciting, fresh field for creative exploration – but Brangwyn inspired artists who became giants of the burgeoning mural movement which lit up American art in the first four decades of the twentieth century.

Frank Brangwyn - Dance

The great American illustrator Dean Cornwell worked for Brangwyn in England between 1927 and 1930 on the second series of the Skinners Hall murals and the British Empire panels. Cornwell went on to paint spectacular panels in the Grand Rotunda of the Los Angeles Central Library – rich, fluid compositions of an idealization and vision of Californian history, and these had a profound influence on the direction of art in Southern California as it developed as a home to light, visionary aesthetics, with a deep appreciation for calm sentiment. His romanticized figures were relaxed and natural, and in harmony with the idealized dream of California as a utopia of healthy living in a perfect climate – as a sanctuary for the good life. At the Lincoln Memorial Shrine in Redlands, California, Cornwell painted two symbolic lunettes, one celebrating Lincoln’s preservation of the American Union, and the other his liberation of the slaves. Around the lunettes, he painted a formal series of eight imposing allegorical figures, capturing Wisdom, Strength, Justice, Patience, Courage, Faith, Tolerance, and Loyalty as aspects of Lincoln’s character. The gentle colors of the library murals and the Lincoln Memorial are faithful to the palette required by Guérin at the Panama-Pacific Exposition.

Frank Brangwyn, Mural, The Net, in the Herbst Theatre at the San Francisco War Memorial. Courtesy of The Master's Light Photography

Brangwyn’s assistant Allen Tupper True worked on the paintings at the exposition and supervised their installation. He worked for Brangwyn painting murals for Skinners Hall in London, and after 1918 he had a career in the United States as a prominent public painter, producing eight panels in the chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives within the Wyoming State Capitol. He created sixteen more panels for the Missouri State Capitol and eight for the State Capitol of Colorado, where he painted dozens of walls for civic buildings until his death in 1955. He was chosen to paint four domes above the murals by Brangwyn in Jefferson City because his style was so influenced by the master.

Allen Tupper True standing in front of an unfinished Frank Brangwyn mural, 1913-1915. Allen Tupper True and True family papers, 1841-1987. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution

In 1911, American Edward Trumbull was Brangwyn’s assistant in London at his Temple Lodge studio. At the Panama-Pacific Exposition he painted two murals in the Pennsylvania Building – William Penn’s Treaty with the Indians, and The Steel Industries of Pittsburgh, and he went on to have an illustrious career as a muralist and illustrator in the United States, achieving international fame in 1930 for his overwhelming ceiling in the Chrysler Building, titled Transport and Human Endeavor, then the largest painting in the world, and prefiguring Diego Rivera’s efforts at the  Detroit Institute and the RCA Building.

Exuberant Brangwyn bound them together. It was Brangwyn who introduced the fresh idealism of natural health to Californian art. It was Brangwyn whose imagination leapt from the stiff formulas of nineteenth century neo-classical idealism into a new figuration incorporating the sensual physicality of art nouveau. It was Brangwyn who tied together the celebratory spirit of new America with the beauty and bounty of the land. Seven million citizens visited the Panama-Pacific Exposition to experience the drama and spectacle of murals and sculptures and architecture. Among the painters, Brangwyn was the undisputed star.


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Friday, February 10, 2023

61st Long Island Artists Exhibition Opens March 4th at the Art League of Long Island,


61st Long Island Artists Exhibition Opens March 4th at the Art League of Long Island

The Art League of Long Island’s 61st Long Island Artists Exhibition, a biennial event, features 2-D and 3-D works created by artists from Suffolk, Nassau, Brooklyn, and Queens. The exhibit will be on view in the Art League’s spacious Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery March 4 through April 7. The reception takes place Saturday, March 11, from 1:00pm to 3:00pm. A Gallery Talk with the exhibition juror, Neill Slaughter, takes place on Thursday, March 30, from 7:00pm to 8:30pm. The gallery, reception, and gallery talk are open to t
he public, and admission is free.

Exhibition juror Neill Slaughter, has selected 61 works out of the 675 submissions entered by 208 artists. The works selected for display in the gallery encompass a variety of artistic mediums and styles of art created by established and emerging artists.

About the Juror: Artist Neill Slaughter graduated with a BFA degree in 1975
from the University of Georgia and received his MFA in 1978 from Indiana University in Bloomington. From 1978 until his retirement four decades later, Professor Slaughter taught fine arts courses and art history at the university level (both in the US and England) as well as exhibiting his drawings and paintings nationally and internationally. In 1993 Professor Slaughter moved to Southampton NY from Los Angeles to begin teaching for Long Island University where he was chairperson of the Art Department twice during his quarter century tenure with LIU. Slaughter, now Professor Emeritus, resides in Southampton NY. During his forty years of teaching, Professor Slaughter spent a considerable amount of time traveling throughout the world to teach, conduct research and paint. His extensive travels have influenced what he paints, which often reflect the social conditions of his surroundings. Among his awards and honors, Professor Slaughter has received a Ford Foundation Fellowship in 1977-78, a Scottish Arts Council Grant in 1980, an LMU Research Grant to Africa in 1988 and a Fulbright Fellowship to India in 1992. In 2003 Professor Slaughter was the awarded the David Newton Award for Excellence in Teaching granted by Long Island University. In 2008 he mounted a thirty-year retrospective, which included a full color catalog funded by Long Island University. In 2017 he was granted Professor Emeritus status by Long Island University. He has presented live art
history lectures since his retirement including “A Triumphant Triad” at the Parrish Art Museum in August 2022 comparing and contrasting three great Gilded Age artists, Sargent, Sorolla, and Zorn. Neill Slaughter has had more than thirty solo exhibits and participated in more than ninety national and international group exhibitions. His artwork is in numerous public and private collections throughout the world.

Denise Abraham: Freeport Verna Amakawa: Huntington


Gabriella Grama: Ronkonkoma Jamie Kraft: Northport Margaret Minardi: Northport Alisa Shea: Northport

Derek Owens: Ronkonkoma

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