Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Philadelphia Museum of Fine Art exhibition "Discover Matisse" tickets are on Sale Now Opens Oct. 20

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Philadelphia Museum of Art
 
Colorful painting of a woman in a blue dress
 
Matisse in the 1930s

Tickets on Sale Now
Opens Oct. 20

Discover a decade of exploration, innovation, and renewal in the work of
acclaimed artist Henri Matisse. 

This major exhibition tells the story of Matisse as he worked his way through a long creative block at the beginning of the 1930s. Sparked by a commission to decorate the main gallery of the Barnes Foundation, Matisse entered a decade of renewed artistic exploration that forever changed his approach to easel painting. 

See it at the exhibition's only U.S. venue: The Philadelphia Museum of Art. 
 

Buy Now
 
Photo of visitors under gold statue of Diana the Huntress in the Museum's Great Stair Hall
 

Free for Members 

No reservations required for museum Members. Enjoy a year’s worth of free admission, discounted guest tickets, exclusive members-only events, and more.

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Matisse in the 1930s is organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris, and the Musée Matisse Nice.

 
L'O Musée de l’Orangerie
Musée Matisse
 

In Philadelphia, the exhibition is made possible by the Annenberg Foundation Fund for Major Exhibitions, The Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation, The Women’s Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Gloria and Jack Drosdick Fund for Special Exhibitions, the Harriet and Ronald Lassin Fund for Special Exhibitions, the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Fund for Exhibitions, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Christopher H. Gadsden, Mrs. Henry F. Harris, Independence Blue Cross, the Robert Lehman Foundation, The Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation, Barbara A. Podell and Mark G. Singer, Katie and Tony Schaeffer, Robbi and Bruce Toll, Constance and Sankey Williams, and other generous donors.

Support for the accompanying publication was provided by The Davenport Family Foundation and The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation.

Promotional support has been provided by PHLCVB and Visit Philadelphia.

Matisse in the 1930s is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.

Woman in Blue, 1937, by Henri Matisse (Philadelphia Museum of Art: Gift of Mrs. John Wintersteen, 1956-23-1) © 2022 Succession H. Matisse/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

 

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Helicline Fine Art exhibition is extended through October 31, 2022

EXHIBITION EXTENDED THROUGH OCTOBER 31



ADDITIONAL WORKS ADDED



YOU'LL BE SWELL!

YOU'LL BE GREAT!



THE FINE ART OF PERFORMANCE



You’ll Be Swell! You’ll Be Great! The Fine Art of Performance, the current exhibition from 


EXHIBITION EXTENDED THROUGH OCTOBER 31



ADDITIONAL WORKS ADDED



YOU'LL BE SWELL!

YOU'LL BE GREAT!



THE FINE ART OF PERFORMANCE


TO DOWNLOAD IMAGES CLICK HERE

You’ll Be Swell! You’ll Be Great! The Fine Art of Performance, the current exhibition from Helicline Fine Art is extended now through October 31. Additional works have been added. More than three dozen works of art depicting theatre, film, dance, music and circus, will be available for sale on the Helicline siteartsy.net and 1stDibs.com. In person viewings can be arranged by appointment at our midtown Manhattan gallery.


Featured works include paintings, costume and set design drawings, illustrations, photographs and more from iconic Broadway shows and films. They include: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, My Fair Lady, Cabaret, Follies The King & I, Cabaret, On The Town, Bye Bye Birdie, Day and Night, The Defiant Ones I Could Go On Singing, portraits of Josephine Baker and Carmen Miranda, as well as works depicting dancers, film sets, performers, playwrights, audiences, backstage, Times Square and more. The works were created between the 1920s – 1990s.

Cabaret Clapper Board 

from the movie “Cabaret” Directed by Bob Fosse in 1972.

Paper insert “Cabaret”

Provenance: From the estate of Liza Minelli’s 

former stage manager

9 1/2 x 11 x 2 1/4

Dennis Burlingame (1901 – 1964)

Congress of Wonders

18 x 24 inches

Oil on canvas, c. 1930

Signed verso

Some of the artists in the new exhibition are beloved American and European modernists as well as iconic Tony® Award winning designers, including: Boris Aaronson, Leon Bibel, Cecil Beaton, Jean Chassaing, David Fredenthal, William Gropper, Edith Head, Al Hirschfeld, Hilary Knight, Michael Loew, Roddy McDowall, Paul Meltsner, Jo Mielziner, Hugo Scheiber, Miles White, Richard Whorf, Louis Wolchonok, and others.


“While I have operated Helicline Fine Art since 2008, my life-long work has been, and continues to be, running a Times Square communications firm. From day one of my professional life, I have been working in entertainment, primarily the theatre, selling two hours of magic in a dark room. Some of these artists were friends, even clients. Their work has great significance to me, and I believe it will resonate deeply with those who love entertainment and the arts. These works are fine art.” said Keith Sherman, proprietor of the gallery.

Boris Aronson (1898 – 1980)

Day and Night

17 ½ x 13 inches

Gouache and watercolor on paper, 1924

A design for the Yiddish Theatre

Exhibited: Royal Shakespeare Company, Label verso

Cecil Beaton (1904 – 1980)

My Fair Lady

Pen and ink on paper

Sight: 12 1/2 x 11 1/2 inches

Signed Beaton, lower right; inscribed My Fair Lady coster costumes, lower left.

Label verso indicating that the work was in the collection of D. Maximilian Brightmore, and that it was exhibited at the Redfearn Gallery (London), June 1958, a few months after the musical opened on London’s West End

Artworks are available at a wide price range for beginning as well as established collectors who love all things entertainment.

 

The title of the exhibition, “You’ll Be Swell! You’ll Be Great!” is a song lyric from arguably the greatest musical ever written, GYPSY, by Jule Styne, Arthur Laurents and Stephen Sondheim. 

 

Helicline Fine Art is. private art gallery specializing in modernism, American scene, social realism, mural studies, industrial landscapes, regionalism, abstraction and more. The artworks on the site represent a sampling of available works. 


Caption for Edith Head painting above: 

Edith Head (1897-1981)

Costume design for Judy Garland in the film “I Could Go On Singing,” 1963

Watercolor and pencil on paper

17 x 14 inches, full sheet

Inscribed “Garland”upper right and signed lower left


212-204-8833

is extended now through October 31. Additional works have been added. More than three dozen works of art depicting theatre, film, dance, music and circus, will be available for sale on the Helicline siteartsy.net and 1stDibs.com. In person viewings can be arranged by appointment at our midtown Manhattan gallery.


Featured works include paintings, costume and set design drawings, illustrations, photographs and more from iconic Broadway shows and films. They include: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, My Fair Lady, Cabaret, Follies The King & I, Cabaret, On The Town, Bye Bye Birdie, Day and Night, The Defiant Ones I Could Go On Singing, portraits of Josephine Baker and Carmen Miranda, as well as works depicting dancers, film sets, performers, playwrights, audiences, backstage, Times Square and more. The works were created between the 1920s – 1990s.

Cabaret Clapper Board 

from the movie “Cabaret” Directed by Bob Fosse in 1972.

Paper insert “Cabaret”

Provenance: From the estate of Liza Minelli’s 

former stage manager

9 1/2 x 11 x 2 1/4

Dennis Burlingame (1901 – 1964)

Congress of Wonders

18 x 24 inches

Oil on canvas, c. 1930

Signed verso

Some of the artists in the new exhibition are beloved American and European modernists as well as iconic Tony® Award winning designers, including: Boris Aaronson, Leon Bibel, Cecil Beaton, Jean Chassaing, David Fredenthal, William Gropper, Edith Head, Al Hirschfeld, Hilary Knight, Michael Loew, Roddy McDowall, Paul Meltsner, Jo Mielziner, Hugo Scheiber, Miles White, Richard Whorf, Louis Wolchonok, and others.


“While I have operated Helicline Fine Art since 2008, my life-long work has been, and continues to be, running a Times Square communications firm. From day one of my professional life, I have been working in entertainment, primarily the theatre, selling two hours of magic in a dark room. Some of these artists were friends, even clients. Their work has great significance to me, and I believe it will resonate deeply with those who love entertainment and the arts. These works are fine art.” said Keith Sherman, proprietor of the gallery.

Boris Aronson (1898 – 1980)

Day and Night

17 ½ x 13 inches

Gouache and watercolor on paper, 1924

A design for the Yiddish Theatre

Exhibited: Royal Shakespeare Company, Label verso

Cecil Beaton (1904 – 1980)

My Fair Lady

Pen and ink on paper

Sight: 12 1/2 x 11 1/2 inches

Signed Beaton, lower right; inscribed My Fair Lady coster costumes, lower left.

Label verso indicating that the work was in the collection of D. Maximilian Brightmore, and that it was exhibited at the Redfearn Gallery (London), June 1958, a few months after the musical opened on London’s West End

Artworks are available at a wide price range for beginning as well as established collectors who love all things entertainment.

 

The title of the exhibition, “You’ll Be Swell! You’ll Be Great!” is a song lyric from arguably the greatest musical ever written, GYPSY, by Jule Styne, Arthur Laurents and Stephen Sondheim. 

 

Helicline Fine Art is. private art gallery specializing in modernism, American scene, social realism, mural studies, industrial landscapes, regionalism, abstraction and more. The artworks on the site represent a sampling of available works. 


Caption for Edith Head painting above: 

Edith Head (1897-1981)

Costume design for Judy Garland in the film “I Could Go On Singing,” 1963

Watercolor and pencil on paper

17 x 14 inches, full sheet

Inscribed “Garland”upper right and signed lower left


212-204-8833
#heliclinefineart#fineartmagazine#artfuntoday

Sculpture Network Dialogues: Dialogue in Den Helder and Alkmaar, Netherlands Saturday, 24 September 2022

Dialogue in Den Helder and Alkmaar, Netherlands
Saturday, 24 September 2022 
Rudi van de Wint: a crossover journey between landscape, painting and sculpture
 

#sclupturnetworkdialogues#fineartmagazine#artinformationnow

We love Casey Chalem Anderson's "You Leave Me Breathless" series.


You Leave Me Breathless



In the 08/24/2022 edition: 
By casey on Aug 23, 2022 09:01 pm

Expanse at Towd Point 24″ x36″ oil on canvas By Casey Chalem Anderson

This is that moment right before we lose the light that allows us to see color. The day is turning into night but not before a spectacular show where the sky lights up and reflects all its glory into the water. There’s a thin and fragile dark strip of land running parallel to the sunlit line of bay water.

This is the first painting of my current project “36 Views of Towd Point”. I truly love to go down there and observe the water and sky as it is always different. Lately, I’ve been listening to some mellow jazz like John Coletrain, Ben Webster (one of my Dad’s favorites), and Dexter Gordon. The mood is rhythmic and upbeat but at the same time soft. The visual and the sound together make me feel just the way I want to feel.

Don’t forget the East End Hospice Cigar Box Auction is this Saturday. See my box “Swept Away” below.  Click here for all the info:https://caseyart.com/events/ 

Until next time,

Casey

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