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- The Hermitage Amsterdam ~ A Satellite Branch of The State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg ~ Toured By AKN Editor
- National Gallery of Victoria announces Exhibition from the Stadel Collection
- Legendary Painter Grace Hartigan Bequeaths More Than $1 Million to Maryland Institutions
- Large Selection of Old Master, American & European Prints at Swann Galleries
- Silkscreens from LeRoy Neiman's Archives at Franklin Bowles Galleries
- The Tibor de Nagy Gallery exhibits Paintings & Paste-Ups of Jess
- The Hague Museum of Photography exhibits Man Ray ~ 'Unconcerned, But Not Indifferent'
- Philadelphia Museum of Art opens Major Exhibition "Cézanne & Beyond"
- Hanart TZ Gallery to show " The Revolution Exhibition "
- Corcoran Gallery of Art hosts 'Wild Choir: Cinematic Portraits by Jeremy Blake'
- SFMOMA SHOWCASES PICASSO AND AMERICAN ART
- Julian Schnabel was Elected Honorary Royal Academician
- George Krevsky Gallery Opens Exhibition from the Estate of Gordon Cook
- Art Knowledge News Presents "This Week In Review"
Posted: 10 Jan 2011 08:09 PM PST The Hermitage Amsterdam is a satellite branch of one of the largest and most renowned museums in the world, the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. In June 2009, the museum opened in its current location on the Amstel River with much fanfare and an official visit by Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands and President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev.The building in which Hermitage Amsterdam is currently housed was for 324 years a home for the elderly. The entirely renovated new space, a 17th-century former home for the elderly, spans 10 times the size of the museum's original Amsterdam home (the former building now houses Hermitage for Children educational center). In 1988 Ernst Veen was awarded a prize for economic development in Amsterdam, the IJ Prize, and the money that came with it was used to fund a feasibility study for a Hermitage branch in Amsterdam. The results of this study proved favourable so the Stichting Hermitage aan de Amstel was founded. Because of the future destination of the Amstelhof as Hermitage Amsterdam museum the Reformed Congregation transferred the property to the City of Amsterdam in 1999. In the space of two years, between June 2007 and June 2009, a metamorphosis took place on the River Amstel: Amstelhof nursing home was transformed into a modern museum: Hermitage Amsterdam. Various architects were involved in this comprehensive building project: Hans van Heeswijk for the building itself, Merkx+Girod for the interior and Michael van Gessel for the garden. It is a modern museum interior which meets current standards with regard to climate control and public facilities. On the ground floor there is a museum shop and a café flanking the entrance. The first and second floors each have three exhibition galleries with a total floor space of 500 square metres. In the attic there will be a large educational studio for children. As a branch of a museum whose collection comprises more than three million objects -- including artworks from Rembrandt, da Vinci and Matisse, as well as thousands of items from the Russian aristocracy -- the Hermitage Amsterdam has a palatial treasure chest from which to choose for its rotating exhibitions. The state-of-the-art interior, inner courtyard garden and old chapel of the meticulously renovated Amstelhof space make for an even more rewarding visit. Website at : www.hermitage.nl/en/ There are two permanent presentations, one about Netherlands–Russia relations and the other about the history of the building Amstelhof. In the rest of the museum is a temporary exhibitions. The Hermitage Museum of Saint Petersburg has one of the finest collections of French painting from the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. This remarkable part of the collection comprises hundreds of masterpieces by artists regarded as pioneers of Modernism, including Matisse, Van Dongen, De Vlaminck, Derain and Picasso. The exhibition places the concept of Modernism in a historical perspective and looks at how artists took part in this revolutionary movement. This collection originated with the renowned Russian collectors Morozov and Shchukin. For the first time highlights of this 'modern' collection of French art from the Hermitage was seen in the Netherlands, in an exhibition unequalled among Dutch museums. In the future a second exhibition will go into the origins of this modern art on the basis of a rich selection from the famous Impressionists in the Hermitage. The guest curator is Henk van Os, University Professor at the University of Amsterdam and chairman of the Specialists Council of the Hermitage Amsterdam. Currently on view "The immortal Alexander the Great The Myth, The Truth, His Journey, His Legacy" until 18 March 2011. No ruler in antiquity appeals to the imagination as much as Alexander the Great (356 BC – 323 BC, king from 336 BC). From his youth he inspired the people around him. During his campaigns in the East, Alexander went in search of the origins of Dionysus, who, according to the ancient Greeks, came from the exotic East, possibly India. Alexander followed in Dionysus's footsteps and reached many countries: Egypt, Syria, Bactria, Persia, India and Mongolia. Everywhere he founded new capitals and named them all Alexandria. He left behind a legacy of Greek culture in the form of Hellenism. His fame lived on, long after antiquity. He was an example to many European, Russian and Islamic rulers. Paintings, tapestries and decorative art depicted Alexander's life and history. The exhibition covers all these aspects, with objects from classical antiquity to the modern age, of Western and non-Western origins. Splendour and Glory ~ Art of the Russian Orthodox Church on exhibition 19 March – 16 September 2011
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National Gallery of Victoria announces Exhibition from the Stadel Collection Posted: 10 Jan 2011 08:07 PM PST
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Legendary Painter Grace Hartigan Bequeaths More Than $1 Million to Maryland Institutions Posted: 10 Jan 2011 08:05 PM PST
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Large Selection of Old Master, American & European Prints at Swann Galleries Posted: 10 Jan 2011 08:03 PM PST
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Silkscreens from LeRoy Neiman's Archives at Franklin Bowles Galleries Posted: 10 Jan 2011 08:00 PM PST | |
The Tibor de Nagy Gallery exhibits Paintings & Paste-Ups of Jess Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:56 PM PST | |
The Hague Museum of Photography exhibits Man Ray ~ 'Unconcerned, But Not Indifferent' Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:55 PM PST | |
Philadelphia Museum of Art opens Major Exhibition "Cézanne & Beyond" Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:51 PM PST | |
Hanart TZ Gallery to show " The Revolution Exhibition " Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:46 PM PST
HONG KONG - REVOLUTION was the watchword of 20 th - century China. It brought new outlook in every aspect of life, culture and politics, and severed links with the civilization of scholar officials and dynasties. The "Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution" has profoundly affected all aspects of Chinese life and society, not just during the ten years of the Revolution but up to the present, and was the formative life experience for a generation of Chinese writers and artists. On exhibition 7 January through 31 January, 2009. | |
Corcoran Gallery of Art hosts 'Wild Choir: Cinematic Portraits by Jeremy Blake' Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:44 PM PST Washington, DC - Jeremy Blake's (1971–2007) lush digital videos combine representational and abstract imagery in the service of visual narratives that are dreamy, historical, and richly psychological. Renowned for his shimmering, hallucinogenic "moving paintings," which loop seamlessly without beginning or end, Blake was influenced as much by Hollywood culture as by the history of modernism. His coolly expressive digital and painted abstractions are slick, non-linear ruminations on topics as wide-ranging as reality television, vernacular architecture, mid-century Colorfield painting, the megamall, and the superchurch. | |
SFMOMA SHOWCASES PICASSO AND AMERICAN ART Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:40 PM PST San Francisco, CA - From February 23 to May 28, 2007, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) will present the exhibition Picasso and American Art. The exhibition examines the fundamental role that Pablo Picasso's artwork played in the development of American art during the 20th century. Beginning with the artist Max Weber, who developed a friendship with Picasso in the early 1900s, many American artists came to both acknowledge Picasso as the central figure of the modern movements and define their own artistic achievements through the absorption, critique, or rejection of his example. While unmistakably pervasive during the first half of the last century, Picasso's catalytic influence continued to be of great importance in the second half, sparking some of the most searching work from our most significant artists. | |
Julian Schnabel was Elected Honorary Royal Academician Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:36 PM PST
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George Krevsky Gallery Opens Exhibition from the Estate of Gordon Cook Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:34 PM PST
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Art Knowledge News Presents "This Week In Review" Posted: 10 Jan 2011 07:33 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 . |
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