Selasa, 08 Maret 2011

Art Knowledge News - Keeping You in Touch with the World of Art...

Art Knowledge News - Keeping You in Touch with the World of Art...


The National Gallery London ~ One Of The Best Collections Of European Art In The World

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:54 PM PST

artwork: The National Gallery in London, located on the North side of Trafalger Square. The building designed by William Wilkins opened in 1838. Subsequent extensions have increased the floor area to 46,396 metres squared and the National Gallery is visited by more than 4 million people every year.

Unlike comparable art museums such as the Louvre in Paris or the Museo del Prado in Madrid, the National Gallery in London was not formed by nationalizing an existing royal or princely art collection. The History of London's National Gallery dates back to April 1824 when the House of Commons agreed to pay £57,000 for the picture collection of the banker John Julius Angerstein. His 38 pictures were intended to form the core of a new national collection, for the enjoyment and education of all. The pictures were displayed at Angerstein's house at 100 Pall Mall until a dedicated gallery building could be constructed. Angerstein's house was small and unsuited to becoming an art gallery (it had to close for a while due to subsidence) and was compared unfavorably with other national art galleries, such as the Louvre in Paris, and ridiculed in the press. So, in 1831 Parliament agreed to construct a dedicated building for the National Gallery at Trafalgar Square. There had been lengthy discussion about the best site for the Gallery, and Trafalgar Square (at the time being constructed on the site of the King's Mews in the Charing Cross district) was eventually chosen as it was considered to be at the very centre of London. Trafalgar Square could be reached by the rich driving in their carriages from the west of London, and on foot by the poor from the East End. It was felt that in this location the paintings could be enjoyed by all classes in society. The new building designed by William Wilkins finally opened in 1838. There was a lot of public criticism of the Wilkins' building, King William IV (in his last recorded utterance) thought the building a "nasty little pokey hole", while the novelist William Makepeace Thackeray called it "a little gin shop of a building". Some of these criticisms were addressed through the landscaping of Trafalgar Square, the steps in front of the National Gallery serving to increase its height and prominence, but in 1869 the architect E.M. Barry was asked to submit designs for rebuilding the entire Gallery. After much discussion, it was decided that the existing building should remain, and instead, a new wing should be added. This was completed in 1876, and added seven new exhibition rooms at the east end, including the impressive dome. The Royal Academy of Arts which had also been housed in the National Gallery building moved out in 1869, leaving extra space for the National Gallery. Continuing expansion of the collection led the trustees to campaign long and hard for additional space. Eventually, in 1907, barracks at the rear of the Gallery were cleared and work began to construct five new galleries. Further expansion was carried out in 1975, when the 'Northern Extension' was completed, providing 9 large rooms and 3 smaller 'cabinet' rooms of additional exhibition space. In 1985 Lord Sainsbury and his brothers agreed to finance the construction of a new wing on a site next to the Gallery which had been vacant since the Second World War, when a furniture shop was destroyed by bombing. The new Sainsbury Wing, designed by Pritzker Prize winning architect Robert Venturi and his wife, Denise Scott Brown, was opened in 1991, to display the entire early Renaissance collection. With a commitment to free admission, a central and accessible site, and extended opening hours the Gallery has ensured that its collection can be enjoyed by the widest public possible, and not become the exclusive preserve of the privileged. From the outset the National Gallery has been committed to education. Students have always been admitted to the Gallery to study the collection, and to make copies of the pictures. A vibrant education program continues today for school children, students, and the general public. The program includes free public lectures, tours and seminars. Following the completion of the Sainsbury Wing, the Gallery has a total floor area of 46,396 metres squared and is visited by more than 4 million people every year. Visit the National Gallery's website at … http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/

artwork: Georges-Pierre Seurat - "Bathers at Asnières", 1884 - Oil on canvas - 201 cm × 300 cm. Collection of the National Gallery, London

The first paintings in the National Gallery collection came from the banker and collector John Julius Angerstein. They consisted of Italian works, including a large altarpiece by Sebastiano del Piombo, "The Raising of Lazarus", and fine examples of the Dutch, Flemish and English Schools. In 1823 the landscape painter and art collector, Sir George Beaumont, promised his collection of pictures to the nation, on the condition that suitable accommodation could be provided for their display and conservation. In 1826, they went on display alongside Angerstein's pictures in Pall Mall until the whole collection was moved to Trafalgar Square in 1838. Initially, the Gallery had no formal collection policy, and new pictures were acquired according to the personal tastes of the Trustees. By the 1850s the Trustees were being criticised for neglecting to purchase works of the earlier Italian Schools, then known as the Primitives. Following the reform of Gallery administration in 1855, the new Director travelled throughout Europe to purchase works for the Gallery. In the 10 years that he was Director, Sir Charles Eastlake ensured that the Gallery's collection of Italian painting expanded and widened in scope to become one of the best in the world. Eastlake's purchases included Botticelli's "Adoration of the Kings" and Uccello's "The Battle of San Romano". In 1871 the Gallery's collection was broadened yet further, when 77 paintings were bought from the collection of the late Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel. These consisted mainly of Dutch and Flemish paintings, and included Meindert Hobbema's "The Avenue at Middleharnis". From the very beginning, the National Gallery's collection had included works by British artists. By the mid-1840s, the rooms of the National Gallery had become overcrowded. When Robert Vernon presented a large gift of British works to the Gallery in 1847, they had to be displayed elsewhere, first at Vernon's private house, and later at Marlborough House. Not long afterwards, the artist Joseph Mallord William Turner bequeathed over 1,000 paintings, drawings and watercolors. When they came into the collection in 1856, they had to be displayed at South Kensington, along with the Vernon collection, which was moved from Marlborough House. In 1876 the National Gallery was enlarged, and the paintings were returned to Trafalgar Square. However, by this time a precedent had been set for exhibiting British works in separate premises. In 1889 the wealthy industrialist, Henry Tate, offered his collection to the nation and subsequently offered to fund the construction of a separate Gallery for British works of art. After lengthy negotiations, a site was selected a mile away from Trafalgar Square, at Millbank, and the Gallery opened in 1897. The new gallery was officially known the National Gallery of British Art, changing its name to the National Gallery, Millbank in 1917. However, it soon became known as the Tate Gallery. The majority of the British pictures were transferred to the Tate Gallery, and only a selection of works remained at Trafalgar Square.

artwork: William Hogarth - "Marriage à-la-mode : The Marriage Contract" - Oil on canvas. The first of six paintings (all in the National Gallery in London) in the 'Marriage à-la-mode' series pointedly skewering upper class of18th century society.

Amongst some of the highlights of the collection of French painting are 15 paintings by Edgar Degas, 19 works by Claude Monet and famous works by Philippe de Champaigne ("Cardinal de Richelieu), Claude Lorrain ("Seaport with the Embarkation of Saint Ursula"), Nicolas Poussin ("A Bacchanalian Revel before a Term"), Pierre-Auguste Renoir ("The Umbrellas") and Edouard Manet. The Italian collection includes 12 paintings by Canaletto (including "The Stonemason's Yard"), 10 by Raphael (including "Portrait of Julius II"), 10 Titians (including "Bacchus and Ariadne") and works by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio ("The Supper at Emmaus" and others), Giovanni Bellini ("The Doge Leonardo Loredan"), Sandro Botticelli ("Venus and Mars", Leonardo da Vinci ("The Virgin and Child with St Anne and St John the Baptist"), Michelangelo ("The Virgin and Child with Saint John and Angels"), Giovanni Battista Tiepolo ("An Allegory with Venus and Time"), Tintoretto ("The Origin of the Milky Way") and Paolo Veronese ("The Family of Darius before Alexander"). Amongst the Spanish works held by the National Gallery are paintings by El Greco ("Christ Driving the Traders from the Temple "), Francisco Goya ("Doña Isabel de Porcel"), Bartolomé Esteban Murillo ("The Heavenly and Earthly Trinities"), Diego Velázquez ("Christ in the House of Martha and Mary") and Francisco Zurbarán "Saint Francis in Meditation". Dutch and Flemish artworks include a selection of 20 Rembrandt works (including "Belshazzar's Feast") alongside works by Aelbert Cuyp ("Peasants and Cattle by the River Merwede"), Meyndert Hobbema ("The Avenue at Middelharnis"), Pieter de Hooch ("The Courtyard of a House in Delft"), Jan Steen ("Skittle Players outside an Inn"), Johannes Vermeer ("A Young Woman seated at a Virginal"), Anthony van Dyck ("The Emperor Theodosius is Forbidden by Saint Ambrose to enter Milan Cathedral"), Jan van Eyck ("The Arnolfini Portrait"), Peter Paul Rubens ("The Judgement of Paris") and David Teniers the Younger ("Peasants at Archery"). The majority of the British pictures in the national collection were transferred to the Tate Gallery (originally under the administration of the National Gallery), and only a selection of works remained at Trafalgar Square. However, the remaining works include some of the most famous British paintings, such as John Constable's "The Hay Wain", J. M. W. Turner's "The Fighting Temeraire", Thomas Gainsborough's "Mr and Mrs Andrews" and William Hogarth's six pictures of "Marriage à-la-mode", pointedly skewering upper class 18th century society.

artwork: George Wesley Bellows- "New York", 1911 - Oil on canvas - 115 x 160.5 cm. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. - The National Gallery London is showing "An American Experiment: George Bellows And The Ashcan Painters" exhibition.

"An American Experiment: George Bellows and The Ashcan Painters" until 30th May 2011, features 12 paintings never before seen in the UK. This exhibition introduces visitors to the American artist George Bellows and his artist friends, the Ashcan Painters: William Glackens, George Luks, John Sloan and their teacher Robert Henri. The Ashcan School was formed at the beginning of the 20th century, when American painters, principally in New York City and Philadelphia, began to develop a uniquely American view on the beauty, violence and velocity of the modern world. 'An American Experiment' contains seven paintings by the most prominent member of the group, George Bellows. He is largely known as a painter of urban scenes. The exhibition includes 'Excavation at Night', one of a series of images Bellows made of the building work at the site of Pennsylvania Station. However, Bellows and his contemporaries also enjoyed painting landscapes away from the metropolis. 'The Palisades', 1909 shows his engagement with the natural world as its main subject. It also reveals Bellows as a master of snow, alongside his work in 'Blue Snow, The Battery'. Later works such as the 'Big Dory', 1913 see him absorbing avant-garde influences from Europe and anticipating the Art Deco style. The Ashcan painters were part of a widespread interest in the quality of life in modern cities during the early 20th century. Along with British artists like Walter Sickert, they represent a strong analysis of their contemporary urban experience while owing much to Old Masters such as Velázquez and Manet. Also currently showing at the National Gallery are "Jan Gossaert's Renaissance" (until 30 May 2011), featuring over 80 works, including works on loan from the Prado in Madrid and Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Birmingham. It also features drawings and contemporaneous sculptures of the Northern Renaissance. "Bridget Riley: Paintings and Related Work" (until 22 May 2011) focuses upon Bridget Riley's most recent paintings. Two of Riley's works have been made directly on to the walls of the exhibition space. Riley and her studio have created a new wall drawing, 'Composition with Circles 7', especially for the longest wall of the Sunley Room. In addition a version of the wall-painting, 'Arcadia' (last seen at the major 2008 retrospective in Paris) has been recreated on a larger scale.



ANNOUNCEMENT: Our Editor has been invited to visit Museums and cultural sites worldwide, and they are featured on our Home Page (center). Because of the Editor's travel we will be posting many interesting articles from our archives, some of the BEST Articles and Art Images that appeared in your magazine during the past six plus (6+) years . . and we are publishing current art news articles on the left hand side under RECENT NEWS .. Enjoy




The Getty Museum opens Captured Emotions ~ Baroque Painting in Bologna, 1575-1725

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:53 PM PST

artwork: Marcantonio Franceschini (Italian, 1648-1729) - Birth of Adonis, about 1685-1690 - Oil on copper, 48.5 X 69 cm.   Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden, Germany - Photographers: Estel/Klut

Los Angeles, CA - Ludovico Carracci (1555–1619) and his two cousins, the brothers Agostino (1557–1602) and Annibale (1560–1609) Carracci, together brought about a revolution in the study and practice of painting that forever changed the history of art. The repercussions on European painting—a measured classicism and the expression of genuine emotion that characterized Baroque art—lasted for the next 250 years. On view at the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center, December 16, 2008 through May 3, 2009.

RISD Museum to Present an Installation by Sculptor Arnie Zimmerman & Architect Tiago Montepegado

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:52 PM PST

artwork: Arnie Zimmerman - Inner City, detail, 2006-2009, stoneware clay, glaze, epoxy - Courtesy of the artist

PROVIDENCE, RI.- The RISD Museum of Art presents Inner City, an epic narrative of urban growth, decay, change, and life itself, realized in clay by one of the most significant contemporary artists working in ceramics today—Arnie Zimmerman (American, b. 1954). Comprised of more than 150 figurative and architectural glazed stoneware elements, the installation is adapted to the Museum's Chace Center galleries by architect Tiago Montepegado and Zimmerman. Installed within a structural framework designed by Montepegado (in response to José Rafael Moneo's architecture for RISD), Inner City's diminutive tenements, skyscrapers, scaffolding, and construction workers evoke a whimsical, mythical world.

Virginia Miller Galleries Debuts Nine Emerging Chinese Artists

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:50 PM PST

artwork: He Zubin - Guess + Surmise - 39 3/8 x 47 1/4 inches (100 x 120 cm) - Oil on Canvas, 2007 Courtesy of ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries, Coral Gables (Miami), Florida USA 

Coral Gables, FL - "Under the Radar: First Florida Exhibition—Nine Chinese Artists Interpret the Figure," the new exhibition at ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries in downtown Coral Gables, might as well be called "U.S. Debut of  Contemporary Chinese Artists."  It's the first show in the United States for eight of the nine artists, mostly in their 20s and 30s with only a handful of exhibitions in their biographies. "We thought it was the first U.S. show for all the artists until we found out that Lu Qi Ming was in two group exhibitions in New York and at the Smart Museum of the University of Chicago," says gallery owner Virginia Miller.
 

At the Louvre, Many Stop to Snap but So Few Stay to Focus

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:49 PM PST

artwork: Observing visitors at the Louvre: some engage directly with the art . . while others only take pictures of pictures. Photo by Valerio Mezzanotti for The New York Times

PARIS - Spending an idle morning watching people look at art is hardly a scientific experiment, but it rekindles a perennial question: What exactly are we looking for when we roam as tourists around great museums? As with so many things right in front of us, the answer may be no less useful for being familiar. At the Louvre the other day, in the Pavillon des Sessions, two young women in flowered dresses meandered through the gallery. They paused and circled around a few sculptures. They took their time. They looked slowly. The young women were unusual for stopping. Most of the museum's visitors passed through the gallery oblivious.

MOCA Receives Gift from Photographer Max Yavno's Estate

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:45 PM PST

artwork: Max Yavno - Untitled from Los Angeles Documentary Project, 1979 - Gelatin silver print - 32.4 x 49.5 cm. - Smithsonian American Art Museum Transfer from the National Endowment for the Arts through the Photography Museum of Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), announced a generous gift of $435,000 from the estate of renowned Los Angeles photographer Max Yavno, nearly 25 years after his death. Yavno, who died in 1985, was an accomplished fine art and commercial photographer known for his social documentation and sensitive depiction of urban realism. Said Stephen McAvoy, successor executor of the estate of Max Yavno and retired controller of City National Bank, "I am amazed and pleased that 25 years after Max's death, these funds are still able to benefit the museum, and are eligible to be matched by the generous grant given to the museum by The Broad Foundation."

Oklahoma City Museum of Art shows American Impressionism from The Phillips Collection

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:44 PM PST

artwork: Theodore Robinson - Giverny. c.1889 - Oil on canvas 16 x 22 in.- The Phillips Collection, acquired 1920.

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - The Oklahoma City Museum of Art plays host to fifty-four works from the golden age of American impressionism, through January 18, 2009. American Impressionism: Paintings from The Phillips Collection includes celebrated American artists Childe Hassam, Maurice Prendergast, John Henry Twatchman, and J. Alden Weir. During the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, these artists transformed the heroic American landscape into a modern idiom with a style of impressionism that blended European approaches to painting with American sensibilities and preferences. Organized by The Phillips Collection, the exhibition presents some of the finest examples of American impressionism from one collection.

40 Years of Fine Arts from the Mondstudio Collection at the Kunstmuseum Bern

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:43 PM PST

artwork: Gerhard Richter - Abstract painting 725-5, 1990 Oil on canvas - 200 x 200 cm - Mondstudio Collection © Gerhard Richter | Photo: Wolfgang Günzel 

Bern, Switzerland - The Mondstudio Collection has an international reputation as one of the most important collections of contemporary painting. Without following fashionable trends, it collects painting styles from the middle of the 20th century until the present. Andy Warhol, Robert Ryman, Gerhard Richter – these are only a few of the prominent names and fixed stars in the universe of painting that can be seen in the exhibition. On view January 25 to April 27, 2008 at the Kunstmuseum Bern.

Sotheby's New York to Offer Property from the Collection of Robert Isabell

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:40 PM PST

artwork: Johnny Swing -

NEW YORK, NY.- On December 17, 2009, Sotheby's will offer property from the collection of noted event planner, Robert Isabell (1952-2009). For more than twenty years, Mr. Isabell was at the helm of nearly every major event hosted by the upper echelon of society; lending his spectacular taste and creativity to charity galas, club openings, magazine launches, White House Christmases and society weddings, birthdays and funerals. His imaginative style always struck the right chord, whether the event was lavish or understated, and it was with that same level of refinement and care that he created a unique retreat for himself in Greenwich Village.

Danish Architect Joern Utzon, Who Designed Sidney Opera House, Dies

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:39 PM PST

artwork: Danish architect, Joern Utzon - The Sydney Opera House - Photo: Bjarte Sorensen 

COPENHAGEN.- Danish architect, Joern Utzon, who conceived the Sydney Opera House, has died aged 90, the director of the Utzon art and architecture centre in Denmark said Saturday to AFP. "He died overnight at a care centre north of Copenhagen after suffering a heart attack," Adrian Carter told AFP, adding that Utzon had undergone "major surgery" earlier this year which left him in a weakened state.

Wesleyan University's Ezra & Cecile Zilkha Gallery hosts Julika Rudelius: Projections

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:38 PM PST

artwork: Julika Rudelius - "Forever", 2006 - Video installation, detail. - Courtesy the artist.Julika Rudelius - "Forever", 2006 - Video installation, detail. - Courtesy the artist.

MIDDLETOWN, CT.- At Wesleyan University's Ezra and Cecile Zilkha Gallery, German artist Julika Rudelius will be represented in her third American solo exhibition by three video installations Adrift, Forever and Your Blood Is As Red As Mine. As with all her work, these works starkly and powerfully explore private experience within the public sphere. In addition, by combining documentary and staged events the artist intentionally confuses and reinforces a sense of what is real and what is fiction. Julika Rudelius: Projections runs Saturday, January 23 ­through Sunday, February 28, 2010. The public is invited to attend the opening reception on Friday, January 22 from 5–7pm, with an artist talk at 5:30pm. Gallery Hours: Tuesday–Sunday, noon–4pm; Friday noon­–8pm. The Ezra and Cecile Zilkha Gallery is located at 283 Washington Terrace in Middletown, Connecticut.

Mario Ybarra Jr. Presents Two Installations at Galerie Michael Janssen

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:37 PM PST

artwork: Mario Ybarra Jr. - 'Silver and Blacks', Installation view, 2010. - Courtesy: Galerie Michael Janssen, Berlin.

BERLIN.- Galerie Michael Janssen presents a selection of Mario Ybarra Jr.'s recent works. In his first solo exhibition at the gallery, the American artist will be presenting two installations. Born in Los Angeles in 1973 and a graduate of the University of California, Irvine, Ybarra's biography is key to understanding his work, which draws attention to forms of culture on the fringe of the mainstream revealing hidden histories within their contexts. His Mexican roots permeate his engagement with the phenomena of contemporary art, street culture and social reality. On view April 30 through June 19, 2010.

DesignPhiladelphia & Please Touch Museum Invite "Design of the Dollhouse of Your Dreams

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:35 PM PST

artwork: All selected entries will be on display in Please Touch Museum's North Foyer gallery during DesignPhiladelphia week, October 7–13, 2009.

PHILADELPHIA, PA. -  Please Touch Museum, the Children's Museum of Philadelphia, is partnering with DesignPhiladelphia on a unique city-wide project bringing together artists, architects, children and their caregivers, designers and students. "Design the Dollhouse of Your Dreams" lets participants unleash their inner Frank Lloyd Wright or Frank Gehry by creating their own version of the ideal dollhouse. Selected entrants will be notified the week of August 17th.

Max Protetch New York Gallery Announces Change in Leadership

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:20 PM PST

artwork: Betty Woodman - Ceramic Pictures of Korean Paintings, 2001 - 37 1/2 x 10 feet Installation view at Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, 2002

NEW YORK, NY.- Today Max Protetch Gallery announced that ownership of the Gallery has been transferred to Edwin Meulensteen, formerly of Eindhoven, the Netherlands. The Gallery will remain in New York, with Protetch continuing as artistic advisor and Josie Browne as director. The Max Protetch Gallery represents established and emerging artists, including David Reed, Betty Woodman, Siah Armajani, Byron Kim, Oliver Herring, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, Marjetica Potrč, Tobias Putrih, Mike Cloud, Hai Bo, Ren Jian, Tim Hyde, Chen Qiulin, Siebren Versteeg, Ann Pibal, Gao Shiqiang, Saul Chernick, Zach Harris, Sun Xun, Keita Sugiura, Katayoun Vaziri, Tun Win Aung & Wah Nu, the Estate of Richard DeVore, and the Estate of Scott Burton.

Art Knowledge News Presents "This Week In Review"

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:19 PM PST

This is a new feature for the subscribers and visitors to Art Knowledge News (AKN), that will enable you to see "thumbnail descriptions" of the last ninety (90) articles and art images that we published. This will allow you to visit any article that you may have missed ; or re-visit any article or image of particular interest. Every day the article "thumbnail images" will change. For you to see the entire last ninety images just click : here .

When opened that also will allow you to change the language from English to anyone of 54 other languages, by clicking your language choice on the upper left corner of our Home Page.  You can share any article we publish with the eleven (11) social websites we offer like Twitter, Flicker, Linkedin, Facebook, etc. by one click on the image shown at the end of each opened article.  Last, but not least, you can email or print any entire article by using an icon visible to the right side of an article's headline.

This Week in Review in Art News

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