Saturday, March 11, 2023

The Heckscher Museum of Art New update!!

March 10, 2023

On View



Viewfinders: Photographers Frame Nature


Raise the Roof: The Home in Art


Three Paintings by Richard Mayhew, 

Betty Parsons, and Jane Wilson

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Miriam Schapiro, Berthe Morisot & Me, c. 1976, mixed media with collage. Gift of Drs. Constance and Lee Koppelman [detail].

Art in a Minute Celebrating Women's History Month Berenice Abbott's West Street

Berenice Abbott (1898-1991) is one of the most accomplished artists in the history of American photography, and is best known for her powerful images of New York City. West Street belongs to the series “Changing New York,” in which Abbott documented the city for the Federal Works Progress Administration as part of FDR’s New Deal. Abbott composed an image of the interplay of geometric forms and condensed space in the Financial District. Eventually, these buildings on West Street and adjacent buildings were demolished in the 1970s for the construction of the World Trade Center complex and today is the site of the 9/11 Memorial.

Watch the video and learn more about Berenice Abbott on the Museum's TikTok!

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Museum Educator Alyssa Matthews with Berenice Abbott, West Street, 1936, gelatin silver print. Gift of Mr. Morton Brozinsky.

Dinner with the Director

Special Guests SEPA Mujer Executive Director 

Martha Maffei and Curator Karli Wurzelbacher, Ph.D.

Thursday, March 30, 5:30 – 7:30 pm

Join us for this empowering and engaging dinner during Women's History Month with Heckscher Museum Executive Director & CEO Heather Arnet, SEPA Mujer Executive Director Martha Maffei, and Heckscher Museum Curator, Karli Wurzelbacher. SEPA Mujer is a Long Island based organization of Latina women and girls building the power of the immigrant community towards advancing equity and justice. Over dinner, guests will have the opportunity to learn about the women whose artwork is included in the Museum's collection and whose artwork will be on view at the Museum in 2023. Ms. Maffei will share information about SEPA Mujer's advocacy efforts on behalf of Latinx women and girls on Long Island and how we can all become more involved. A three-course chef tasting menu, with wine pairing, will be specially designed by Naheed Mawjzada, co-owner of Afghan Kitchen 44.

 

$100 per person (10 person limit)


All proceeds will support The Heckscher Museum’s role as a leading source of artistic inspiration for Long Island and beyond. The Museum increases public accessibility to art and art education by connecting the visual arts with the changing needs and interests of current and future generations.


Dinner sponsored by Bette and Paul Schneiderman.

Wine service sponsored by Greg Wagner.


Questions? Contact Daneris Ortega Lara at Ortegalara@Heckscher.org.

Register Now
See Future Dates

Exclusive Preview Day Friday, April 14, 12 - 6 pm

General Admission Saturday & Sunday, April 15 & 16, 12 - 5 pm


2023 Art in Bloom is sponsored by Robin T. Hadley

The Heckscher Museum is proud to announce the fourth annual Art in Bloom! This year, Art in Bloom will feature 12 floral arrangements that draw inspiration from artworks on view in Viewfinders: Photographers Frame Nature and Raise the Roof: The Home in Art. These exciting exhibitions will provide a diverse array of artworks to inspire designers from the Museum’s four garden club partners: Asharoken Garden Club, Dix Hills Garden Club, North Suffolk Garden Club (Stony Brook), and South Side Garden Club (Bay Shore).


Museum Members, donors, and special guests will receive the link to register for the exclusive Preview Day. 


Questions? Contact Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org.

Learn More

Art in Bloom Virtual Lecture 

Sustainable Native Landscape Design, with 

Rusty Schmidt, Landscape Ecologist

Wednesday, April 19, 5:30 - 6:30 pm on Zoom

The Museum is pleased to present this virtual program in celebration of Earth Day and coinciding with Art in Bloom. Join guest speaker Rusty Schmidt, Landscape Ecologist at Nelson, Pope & Voorhis, LLC and President of the Board of the Long Island Native Plant Initiative, as he discusses the beautiful, versatile, and ecologically friendly ways that you can use native plants in your own home landscape design. 


Members Free, Non-Members $8

Register Now

Free Art Fair Tickets for Museum 

Members & Donors: The 2023 Photography Show 

March 31 - April 2, at Center415

Current Members and Donors of The Heckscher Museum are invited to attend The Photography Show. One of the most highly anticipated annual art fairs, The Photography Show presented by AIPAD, now in its 42nd edition, is the longest running and foremost exhibition dedicated to the photographic medium. The fair will feature fresh-to-market and museum-quality photography including cutting-edge contemporary, modern, and exemplary 19th-century photographs, as well as photo-based art, new media, and NFTs. 


Contact Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org for information and to claim your complimentary tickets. Tickets are first come, first served. Early registration is encouraged.

Support the Museum by becoming a Business Member today!

A Heckscher Museum Business Membership entitles your company to a full suite of benefits for one year, renewable annually. Join today and share this cultural treasure with your employees and clients. 

 

Questions? Contact Caitlynn Schare at Schare@Heckscher.org

Join or Learn More

On View 


Viewfinders: Photographers Frame Nature


Raise the Roof: The Home in Art


Three Paintings by Richard Mayhew, Betty Parsons, and Jane Wilson


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The Bronx Museum Gala & Art Auction, April 24, 2023

General eVite 2
  
***

Daniel Bruce "Art Is Entertainment"

Friday, March 10, 2023

Stephanie DeManuelle Retrospective at Urban Studio, Yonkers NY

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Please join me at the
Opening Reception for my Retrospective

Saturday, March 18th
6-8pm


Urban Studio Unbound/Warburton Galerie
16 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10701

Metro North train from Grand Central to Yonkers (26 minutes)
walk one block up the hill from the station to the gallery
Driving - Warburton Parking Garage at 45 Warburton Ave
or street parking with meter until 8pm
Shell Game XI, 65” x 42”, Oil on Canvas, 2003

*Header Images
Riverbank #1, 42” x 30”, Oil Stick & Charcoal on Paper, 2021 (left)
Riverbank #6, 42” x 30”, Oil Stick & Charcoal on Paper, 2021(right)


Go to www.urbanstudiounbound.org/gallery-hours to plan your visit.
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Copyright © 2023 Stephanie DeManuelle Artist, All rights reserved.


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Wednesday, March 8, 2023

The Minil Foundation Collection: The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hoops,





















The Menil Collection Opens The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps March 24

 

Exhibition features recent and promised gifts that spotlight the Houston museum’s history of deep relationships with artists, highlighting the career of the Menil’s Founding Director Walter Hopps

 

Thursday, March 23, 10–11:30 a.m.: Press preview with Clare Elliott, Associate Research Curator, Rebecca Rabinow, Director, and special artist guests

 



 

HOUSTON—March 8, 2023—The Menil Collection is pleased to announce the opening of The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps on March 24, 2023. The exhibition features some 130 artworks by seventy artists, many of which are recent or promised gifts to the museum from Caroline Huber and the Estate of Walter Hopps. The show will explore the influential curatorial vision of the Menil Collection’s Founding Director Walter Hopps (1932–2005) and his appreciation for art from the 1930s to the early 2000s. The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps will be on view at the Menil from March 24–August 13, 2023 and coincides with the publication of Artists We’ve Known: Selected Works from the Walter Hopps and Caroline Huber Collection, which highlights works by fifty artists with whom the couple was close.

 

Artists Larry Bell, George Herms, and Ed Ruscha will participate in an Artist Talk at the Menil on Friday, March 24, 6–7 p.m. The conversation will explore the artists’ pivotal role in the 1960s Los Angeles art scene and their engagement with Hopps during these years. The following month on Thursday, April 13, 7–8 p.m., artist Robert Longo will visit to speak about his large-scale work Master Jazz, 1982-83, on view in the exhibition.

 

Once dubbed “the marvelous mad maven of modern art in America,” Hopps estimated that he had curated some 250 exhibitions in his fifty-plus year-long career. He started out in Los Angeles where, in 1952, he organized his first shows while still in college and a few years later opened the Ferus Gallery with artist Edward Kienholz. He was appointed director of the Pasadena Art Museum (now the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena) in 1964 and went on to serve as the director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art and as the curator of modern art at the National Collection of Fine Arts (now the Smithsonian American Art Museum), both in Washington, D.C. Hopps met John de Menil while curating an exhibition on Jasper Johns for the Pasadena Art Museum in the late 1960s and met Dominique de Menil in 1971 at an opening for a Barnett Newman exhibition in New York City. In 1980, she invited Hopps to direct the museum she and John had built at Rice University and to join the board of the Menil Foundation. The following year, Hopps was appointed Founding Director of the Menil Collection, a museum that opened to public in 1987.

 

Rebecca Rabinow, Director, The Menil Collection, said, “The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps and the Menil Collection’s new publication Artists We’ve Known celebrate a promised gift of more than 500 works to the museum from Menil Foundation trustee Caroline Huber and the Estate of Walter Hopps. While Director of the Menil, Hopps worked with Dominique de Menil to curate landmark exhibitions of artists Joseph Cornell, Marcel Duchamp, Edward Kienholz, Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist, and Andy Warhol. She deeply valued his ‘infallible eye’ and ‘understanding of current trends.’ Two years after the museum opened, Hopps relinquished his directorial role so that he could return to his true love: working with artists and curating exhibitions.”

 

Clare Elliott, Associate Research Curator, The Menil Collection, said, “This exhibition explores the achievements of one of the most talented and influential curators of the 20th century. The wide scope of Hopps’s interests and his embrace of artworks across forms and styles are demonstrated in the range of movements and media on display. On view are artists like Jay DeFeo, Sam Gilliam, and William Eggleston, as well as figures who remain underrecognized today like Gretchen Bender, Louis Faurer, and Carroll Sockwell.”

 

The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps opens with a room dedicated to artwork showcased in the early years of the Los Angeles-based Ferus Gallery, a gathering spot for young Californian artists like Wallace Berman, Bruce Conner, and Jay DeFeo. Ferus also brought artists active in New York, such as Jasper Johns and Barnett Newman, to the West Coast and was the first gallery to show Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Can paintings. While still active at Ferus, Hopps began curating exhibitions at the Pasadena Art Museum, including New Paintings of Common Objects, the first museum survey of Pop Art in 1962, and the first museum exhibition of Frank Stella in 1966.

 

The exhibition celebrates Hopps’s lifelong interest in photography, which was reignited when he met William Christenberry, who in turn introduced him to two foundational figures in American photography, William Eggleston and Walker Evans. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Hopps drew attention to emerging artists such as Gretchen Bender, Robert Longo, and Haim Steinbach. Subsequent sections of the show highlight the retrospectives Hopps organized at the Pasadena Art Museum focused on three pioneering figures of Dada and Surrealism: Joseph Cornell, Marcel Duchamp, and Kurt Schwitters. It concludes with a selection of work by Robert Rauschenberg, a friend for nearly fifty years.

 

The Curatorial Imagination of Walter Hopps is organized by Clare Elliott, Associate Research Curator.

 

A related publication, Artists We’ve Known: Selected Works from the Walter Hopps and Caroline Huber Collection, highlights fifty works from the couple’s personal collection that have been gifted to the Menil, many of which will be on view in this exhibition. The book is available for purchase at the Menil Collection Bookstore and online atmenil.org/bookstore. 

 

About the Menil Collection

Philanthropists and art patrons John and Dominique de Menil established the Menil Foundation in 1954 to cultivate greater public understanding and appreciation of art, architecture, culture, religion, and philosophy. In 1987, the Menil Collection’s main museum building opened to the public. Today, the Menil Collection consists of a group of five art buildings and green spaces located within a residential neighborhood in central Houston. The Menil remains committed to its founders’ belief that art is essential to human experience and fosters direct personal encounters with works of art. The museum welcomes all visitors free of charge to its buildings and surrounding green spaces.menil.org

 

Funding

Major funding for this exhibition is provided by Lea Weingarten. Additional support comes from Henrietta Alexander; Eddie and Chinhui Allen; Anne Levy Charitable Trust; Suzanne Deal Booth; Clare Casademont and Michael Metz; Angela and William Cannady; Hilda Curran; Barbara Davis; Janet and Paul Hobby; John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation; Linda and George Kelly; Mary Hale Lovett McLean; Susan and Francois de Menil; Betty Moody; Carol and David Neuberger; Leslie and Shannon Sasser; Mark Wawro and Melanie Gray; Leslie Field and Morris Weiner; Nina and Michael Zilkha; and the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance.

 

The Artist Talk series is generously supported by the Cockrell Family Fund.

 

Image Caption

Jerry McMillan, Walter Hopps, Jerry McMillan Wants to See You, 1965. Photograph, 16 × 19 1/4 in. (40.6 × 48.9 cm). The Menil Collection, Houston, Promised gift of Caroline Huber and the estate of Walter Hopps. © Jerry McMillan. Courtesy of Craig Krull Gallery

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