Showing posts with label Fine Art Magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fine Art Magazine. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2024

The Glass House 75th Anniversary tour season is open through December 15, 2024. All tours include access to the newly restored Brick House (1949

The Glass House 75th Anniversary tour season is open through December 15, 2024. 

All tours include access to the newly restored Brick House (1949).

Upcoming Events + Programs

Glass House Presents: New Canaan Modern

Monday, September 9, 2024

New Canaan Library

151 Main Street, New Canaan, CT

6:30 p.m.

INFO + REGISTER


Join writer and Glass House educator Gwen North Reiss at New Canaan Library for a free talk about her recent book, New Canaan Modern: A Preservation History. 


In the 1990s and early 2000s, when New Canaan’s historic modern houses were quietly being demolished, preservationists, architects, and other residents who understood their significance, worked together to try to save them. Historic listings, educational programs, a change to the zoning regulations, and several other initiatives helped these houses survive. New Canaan Modern: A Preservation History is a record both for and about the New Canaan community, focusing on its efforts to rescue modern houses and reset the course of their history.



Glass House Presents: Glass Etudes at a Modernist Landmark

Sunday, October 20, 2024

First Presbyterian Church

1101 Bedford Street, Stamford, CT

4:00 p.m.

INFO + TICKETS


On the occasion of The Glass House’s 75th Anniversary, join three renowned pianists — Timo AndresAaron Diehl, and Jenny Lin — for an hour-long concert of a selection of Philip Glass’ Etudes in Stamford’s extraordinary modernist First Presbyterian Church designed by Wallace K. Harrison, a grantee of the National Fund for Sacred Places, and a National Historic Landmark.


One of the most influential artists of our time, Philip Glass has transformed how we listen to music. His most personal work is a series of 20 piano etudes. Majestic and intimate at the same time, these compositions for solo piano have been performed and recorded by dozens of artists and streamed over 100 million times. Longtime interpreters of The Glass Etudes, this program’s three featured pianists each bring a unique approach to their instrument and to Glass’s work.



Through Your Looking Glass

Student Art Showcase

November 16 - 24, 2024

Carriage Barn Arts Center

681 South Ave, New Canaan, CT

INFO + REGISTER


Stand Together Against Racism (S.T.A.R), in partnership with The Glass House and the Carriage Barn Arts Center, will present its third annual Through Your Looking Glass student art showcase that seeks to recognize the role of art, design and/or architecture in advancing social justice related to inclusion, equity and diversity. Fairfield County, CT students of all ages, including college, are invited to create and submit art that reflects how social justice impacts their lives. S.T.A.R seeks art submissions that inspire the viewer to think about social justice explored using art of any medium for expression. Submissions can include paintings, drawings, photography, mixed media, sculpture, videos/film (including TikTok style) or architectural renderings. This is a true showcase, not a competition, and all student art will be exhibited at the Carriage Barn Arts Center in New Canaan with an opening reception to be held on November 16th.


Glass House Presents: Modern Origins

Monday, November 18, 2024

New Canaan Library

151 Main Street, New Canaan, CT

6:30 p.m.

INFO + REGISTER


Join architects William EarlsAlan Goldberg, and Fred Noyes for a free conversation at New Canaan Library about the origins of modern architecture in New Canaan, CT.



Image Credits:

  1. Photo by Robin Hill
  2. Breuer House I (1947-48). Photo: Estate of Pedro E. Guerrero
  3. Photo by Bob Gregson
  4. Poster courtesy of S.T.A.R.
  5. Photo by Michael Biondo


Facebook  Twitter  Instagram








#theglasshouse#fineartmagazine#fineartfun  

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Good Morning from Fine Art Magazine!!! Sun Rise at 6:55! See what's happening on the Creek.

Sun Rise on the Senix, 1/25/2023/ © Jamie Ellin Forbes

Blue Heron,  and Seagulls, resting before the rain, Senix Creek. 2/23/2024. © Jamie Ellin Forbes

This Black & White Ducks maybe the  Tufted Duck, an Arctic native to Ice Land. I am not sure. 2023 is the second winter I have seen them. © Jamie Elin Forbes
enviornmentalwinterfun#fineartmagazine#fineartfun



 

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Tripoli Gallery exhibits a presentation of new paintings by Miles Partington. On view from May 28th through June 27th.


Miles Partington
Tam Lin: May 28 – June 27, 2022

Opening Reception:
Sunday, May 29, 5 – 7pm

 

Wainscott, NY – Tripoli Gallery is pleased to invite you to Tam Lin, a solo presentation of new paintings by Miles Partington. On view from May 28th through June 27th, 2022, Join us for the opening reception on Sunday, May 29th from 5 – 7pm at Tripoli Gallery in Wainscott, NY.
 
To experience Miles Partington’s work, is to enter a world that is as timeless as it is rooted in the present. Animals, his ever present subjects, are ubiquitous and anthropomorphic. His imagination emerges through his fingertips, whether sculpting or painting. Medieval knights are bisected by an unknown horizon line, melting away into the background of the canvas. There is a joust between two paintings, only evident by the lances their subjects yield, that break the edge of one canvas, only to be continued on another. In Tam Lin, it’s impossible to question the world present. It is so thoughtful and well executed, that it is believable. Why can’t an owl ride on the back of a horse? The horse’s body glistens as if after a long run, and an owl sits atop its back, solemn, unyielding, the moon behind its head, a halo.
 
The animal kingdom is much different from our own —outside of the urban city centers, unruly, not manicured. But Partington’s animal kingdom is somehow welcoming even if fantastical. The work in Tam Lin almost exudes a childlike wonder, if only it weren’t so well crafted. There is a strangeness and a precision to the paintings and sculptural forms that come with a skilled hand, repetition, practice, and even trial and error. In Seaford, Long Island, Seamans Neck Park not far from the Atlantic Ocean, is home to hundreds of beautiful emerald green Monk parakeets. The birds are native to South America, and it isn’t officially known how they ended up on the South Shore of Long Island, surviving and thriving. Seeing the birds fly from branch to park lights, perching high above the reach of children below, is surreal, but akin to Partington’s vision, that which is as likely as it is impossible.
 
Paint is applied to the surface with the utmost care and intention, Partington relies on representation mixed with the fantastical. His proportions, in one case a figure hiding behind an elephant on a farm, are incongruous but in the best way. The figure identified wearing a hat, has his arm around the neck of the elephant which appears quite small in comparison. The gesture is loving if not concealing, as parrots with red and blue wings outstretched, fly above in an early morning sky. A nearby building in this particular painting (After Unknown Artist, 2022), has dark brown paneling, and a pointed green roof, not unlike the barn where Partington has his Southampton studio. In the same place where peacocks, elephants, toucans, and knights roam, there is an artist waiting to bring his visions to life.

Looking at historical paintings by Delacroix, George Stubbs, Théodore Géricault, and Pieter Boel, Partington took liberties loosely referencing Lady Godiva and Joan of Arc, introducing them to a timeline all his own (including one of the heroines donning a shirt that features musician Patti Smith!). The title, Tam Lin, was derived from Scottish folklore about a mythical man, part fae, who wooed young maidens after they’d picked roses he declared to be his. Early versions of the story often in song, stem from 1549, and tell a tale similar to that of the Pied Piper. The story is said to have a moralistic component, warning humans of what could happen should they lay eyes on a fairy. It is a warning as much as it is a dream, an excuse to explore the unknown…never knowing what lurks between fantasy and reality.

For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715

26 Ardsley Road, Wainscott, NY 11975
(Enter via East Gate Rd.)

Hours: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 12 – 5pm
Closed Tuesday
Copyright © Tripoli Gallery Inc. 2022, All rights reserved.
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Website
Email
Image above:
Miles Partington
Cave Painter, 2022
oil on linen, 24 x 48 inches (60.96 x 121.92 cm)
 #tripoligalleryart#fineartmagazine#summerartfun

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Vilcek Foundation Partners With Native American-Focused Organizations on 'Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery'



 




Partners With Native American-Focused Organizations on 'Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery'

The Vilcek Foundation worked with the Indian Arts Research Center at the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe to develop the exhibition with the Pueblo Pottery Collective, an organization made up of more than 60 artists, historians, and community curators representing 22 Native American Pueblos



The Vilcek Foundation has partnered with the Indian Arts Research Center at the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe, New Mexico, to develop a new exhibition, Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery. The exhibition opens July 31, 2022, at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture situated on the traditional lands of the Tewa people, O'gah'poh geh Owingeh (White Shell Water Place), or Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery was curated by the Pueblo Pottery Collective, a group of more than 60 Native American community members convened from the 22 Pueblo communities in the Southwest. The Collective was established in 2019 specifically to develop an exhibition that centers the voices of Native American people in the curation and display of Native American art. The collective is a diverse group that includes potters, designers, writers, poets, community leaders, and museum professionals amongst themselves. A small number of non-Pueblo museum professionals worked as facilitators and writers for this project and are also part of the collective. 

"Grounded in Clay emphasizes the underlying, multifaceted, and nuanced understandings that the Pueblo Indian people of the American Southwest have of one of the more ubiquitous and resilient forms of our material culture—pottery," writes curator Joseph Aguilar. "Historical memories and our understanding of pottery and other cultural patrimonies are tantamount to a form of Indigenous intellect—a physical, spiritual, and intellectual worldview that is inextricably linked to land, people, and history."

Vilcek Foundation President Rick Kinsel worked with Curator Emily Schuchardt Navratil and Seamus McKillop on the coordination of the exhibition in partnership with Elysia Poon, Indian Arts Research Center Director at SAR, and with the community curators from the Pueblo Pottery Collective.

Kinsel has steered the development of the foundation's collection of Native American pottery since 2000; he describes the development of Grounded in Clay as a transformative experience. "Our foundation is based in New York, on the unceded land of the Lenape people, and we acknowledge the sovereignty of Native American peoples is a present and ongoing concern," he says. "By engaging curators from Native American communities in the development of this exhibition, we hope to provide a model for other cultural institutions in supporting the autonomy and independence of Native American nations." 

"Grounded in Clay is not just a project that was developed over three years of dedicated work," says Poon. "It is the result of years—and, in some cases, decades—of relationships and built trust between staff, community curators, and each other. My hope is that we've done justice to the brilliant minds and experiences that were so generously shared throughout this project."

Following the exhibition at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery will travel through 2025, starting with a joint presentation in New York City by the Vilcek Foundation and the Metropolitan Museum of Art from July 13, 2023-June 4, 2024. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalog, Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery, available from Merrell Publishers. 

Learn more about the exhibition: Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery

The Vilcek Foundation

The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation for the arts and sciences. The foundation was established in 2000 by Jan and Marica Vilcek, immigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. The mission of the foundation was inspired by the couple's respective careers in biomedical science and art history. Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over $6.4 million in prizes to foreign-born individuals and has supported organizations with over $5.6 million in grants.

The Vilcek Foundation is a private operating foundation, a federally tax-exempt nonprofit organization under IRS Section 501(c)(3). To learn more, please visit vilcek.org

#groundedinclay#fineartmagazine#vilcekartfun


Wednesday, May 18, 2022

From 20 May, the Van Gogh Museum presents Colour as Language, a retrospective of work by artist Etel Adnan (1925-2021)

 

Image


Colour as Language: first retrospective exhibition of Etel Adnan alongside works by Vincent van Gogh 

From Friday, a wide range of Adnan’s works go on display in a new exhibition at the Van Gogh Museum
 

103_Adnan_1985_Mounttamalpais_LR.jpg

The painting Mount Tamalpais (1985) left the Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock Museum in Beirut for the first time to be displayed in Colour as Language. Oil on canvas, 126.5 x 149 cm. © The Estate of Etel Adnan. The Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock Museum, Beirut (donation of the artist, 2007). 

Amsterdam, 18 May 2022 - From 20 May, the Van Gogh Museum presents Colour as Language, a retrospective of work by artist Etel Adnan (1925-2021). The exhibition focuses on Adnan’s colourful paintings, which are presented alongside ten works by Vincent van Gogh, who was a source of inspiration for Adnan. Colour as Language was developed in close collaboration with the artist herself: before Adnan’s death in November 2021, the museum spoke with her on numerous occasions regarding her life, work, and Van Gogh. Her own words are a theme throughout the exhibition. Colour as Languageexplores the connection that both artists felt with nature, their intense use of colour as a form of expression, and the role of language in their lives and work. The exhibition opens this Friday, and is on display until 4 September 2022. 

 

An encounter with Van Gogh 
Adnan’s work is inextricably linked with her mixed cultural background and the fact that she lived in so many different places around the world: language and culture are essential concepts in her oeuvre. Adnan started her career passionately writing poetry and award-winning books about her native country of Lebanon. She had previously studied philosophy at Sorbonne University in Paris, which is where she had her first encounter with Van Gogh: ‘It was a big shock for me to see Van Gogh’s work for the first time. It must have been in Paris in the early fifties. Coming from Beirut, I had never even seen any reproductions of art – we had no museums in Lebanon. […] I remember his self-portraits. I was amazed that a person could look at himself with such precision, such intensity, to an unbearable degree. That shock never disappeared.

Adnan started painting around her 34th birthday. At the time, she was living in California and teaching the philosophy of art. Adnan’s poetry in French, and later English, often reflects on the horrors of war, yet she said that her visual work shows her cheerful side. It is in these works that Adnan found a universal language, with colours instead of words: ‘Colours make visible what the person is trying to say, but silent.’

The world in colour 
Colour as Language features 78 of Etel Adnan’s works, 72 of which have never before been on public display in the Netherlands. A number of untitled paintings, which Adnan made in the late 1960s, offer insight into the artist’s earlier work. Many of these paintings, from collections including those of the Lille Métropole Musée d’art moderne, d’art contemporain et d’art brut and the Centre Pompidou, are abstract combinations of areas of colour, and reveal how to Adnan, colour was an entity in itself. Her later works are smaller, and feature landscapes.

Adnan believed that nature expressed itself most powerfully in colour, and she considered Van Gogh to be the first artist to dare to apply this in his art. Adnan said that Van Gogh paved the way for subsequent generations of artists. In the exhibition, Orchards in Blossom, View of Arles (1889) is displayed alongside Adnan’s Landscape (c.1990), an extraordinary loan from a private collection in Lebanon. The painting has never before been exhibited in America or Europe. Works such as California #9 (2003) from Museum Voorlinden and Calm Landscape (2013) from the Musée de l’Institut du monde arabe show Adnan’s favourite way of capturing nature. 

 

‘I don’t know if you’ll understand that one can speak poetry just by arranging colours well.’ (Vincent van Gogh, 12 November 1888)
 

Mountains and the sun 
After Etel Adnan returned to California in 1980, Mount Tamalpais became the central to her oeuvre. In her drawings and paintings, she made countless new interpretations of this mountain, which she looked out on from her house in Sausalito. Colour as Language features more than 30 such works, including the painting Mount Tamalpais (1985), a remarkable loan from the Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock Museum in Beirut. This painting has never before been offered on loan. 


‘I love nature, particularly, it doesn't leave me, I'm in it all the time.’ (Etel Adnan, 2021)

In addition to this mountain, the sun plays a significant role in her work: one of her most vivid memories of her youth in Beirut. Adnan saw the sun as the ‘architect of the landscape’, in her own work and that of Van Gogh, as in The Sower (1888). The sun – depicted by Adnan as a crimson circle or square – frequently appears in paintings such as Landscape (2014) and other loans from the Centre Pompidou and Mudam Luxembourg.

Woven art 
There were no museums in the Lebanon of Adnan’s youth, but there were Persian carpets. Together with her father, she visited the carpet traders at the bazaars. The fabrics were Adnan’s first introduction to art. She came to see no difference between a painting, a carpet and a painted vase. It was all art and equally valuable. Three tapestries designed by Adnan will be on display in the exhibition. These colourful tapestries, which Adnan also called ‘hanging gardens’ will be presented alongside works by Van Gogh such as Garden of Saint Paul’s Hospital (‘Leaf-Fall’) (1889) and Tree Roots (1890).


Writing is drawing
Van Gogh and Adnan both had a masterful command of language. For Adnan, the 
leporello (a book with folded concertina-style pages) was the ideal means of uniting images and language. The exhibition features five leporellos, including Journey to Mount Tamalpais (2008), a vibrantly illustrated work to which Arabic text has been added. In a letter to his brother Theo on 28 May 1888, Van Gogh also mentioned leporellos. In the letter, which is on display in the exhibition, he outlined his burgeoning ideas for ‘albums of original Japanese drawings’ with scenes of the Southern French landscape near Arles. His drawing The Enclosed Wheatfield after a Storm (1889) reveals just how much his drawing style resembled handwriting. ‘Drawing is writing and writing is drawing’, in Adnan’s words. She said that you do both with the same movement of your hand and arm, and letters are actually drawn shapes.


‘To a degree, Van Gogh writes on his canvas, he is writing a landscape.’ (Etel Adnan, 2020)

Writer, artist, activist
In her written work, Adnan spoke out about war and violence in her native country of Lebanon and elsewhere in the world. Her visual work also sometimes hints at her preoccupation with existential concerns. The series The Weight of the World, from which five paintings will be on display in Colour as Language, and works such as Satellites 12 (2020), reveal Adnan’s fascination with the cosmos and the vulnerability of our planet. 

It was only at the age of 87 that Adnan received international recognition for her art, at the Documenta in Kassel in 2012. When she died in Paris nine years later, on 14 November 2021, she left behind an oeuvre that is now read and exhibited all around the world. Colour as Language is the first and only exhibition in which works by Van Gogh and Adnan can be seen side by side. The exhibition is only on display in Amsterdam.

Book 

The exhibition is accompanied by Etel Adnan – Vincent van Gogh. Kleur als Taal / Colour as Language, the first book in Dutch about Adnan’s work. The 144-page publication features exclusive interviews with Etel Adnan, which form the foundations of the exhibition. Van Gogh Museum curator Sara Tas wrote an essay on the artist in relation to Van Gogh, and Simone Fattal (Etel Adnan’s partner) also contributed to the book. Price: € 22.95, bilingual edition (Dutch/English).

Supporters  
Colour as Language was realised with the support of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science and the museum’s main partners: the VriendenLoterij, Van Lanschot and ASML. The exhibition was also supported by the Institut Français and the Rabbani Foundation.

 


Note for editors / not for publication: For more information, please contact the Van Gogh Museum Press Office by calling +31 (0) 20 5705 292 or by sending an e-mail to pressoffice@vangoghmuseum.nl

 

          
           Van Gogh Museum                                          Press images can be downloaded from the website 
           Museumplein 6, Amsterdam                                 
           www.vangoghmuseum.nl
           T +31 (0)20 570 52 92
 
 
 
#vangoughmuseum#adnan&vangogh#fineartmagazine