Agnes Denes: Absolutes and Intermediates

Introspection I–Evolution, 1968-71 [details]
Monoprint, 41-1/2 x 17 feet
Collection of George Washington Library Center,
Chicago, Illinois

Portrays evolutionary developments from the Psychozoic Era and the separation of man and ape to the development of intelligence and the beginnings of knowledge, science, and art.

Investigations: comparative anatomy, genetics, physics, biology, cytology, heredity, anatomy, mutation, environmental awareness, geneaology, cartography, communication, astronomy, time studies, linguistics, x-ray technology, time measurements, and art.

Colors of the Week, 1969 [last image]

From a retrospective of the work of Agnes Denes, at The Shed.

January 11th, 2020

Hope

In Lower Manhattan

January 5th, 2020

In Pursuit of Fashion: The Sandy Schreier Collection

”The Costume Institute’s fall 2019 exhibition featured promised gifts from Sandy Schreier, a pioneering collector, who over the course of more than half a century assembled one of the finest private fashion collections in the United States. The show explored how Schreier amassed a trove of twentieth-century French and American couture and ready-to-wear, not as a wardrobe, but in appreciation of this form of creative expression.” [source]

Sandy Schreier, a fashion historian and private collector from Detroit owns more than 15.000 couture items and accessories from France, American ready-to-wear, and early twentieth-century Italian designs. She also owns Hollywood costumes such as Rita Hayworth’s dress from ‘Gilda’, Zsa Zsa Gabor’s dress from ‘Moulin Rouge’, or the metal-mesh mini dress by Roberto Rojas that Twiggy wore in Richard Avedon’s photograph (second image, below). The Met exhibition featured just 80 of these collection items, and they took up the entire Costume Institute’s show space… makes you think of the size of storage room needed to house the entire collection, doesn’t it!

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

January 2nd, 2020

Félix Vallotton: Painter of Disquiet

First steps into a new year – with Art

From an exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

January 2nd, 2020

“Baptized by Beefcake: The Golden Age of Hand-Painted Movie Posters from Ghana”

Raw, imaginative, larger-than-life original art and an absolute treasure of a collection.

‘In 1957, Ghana became the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to gain independence from its colonial power, the United Kingdom. As the world’s leading exporter of cocoa and provider of one-tenth of the world’s gold, its economy was one of the strongest on the continent; however, the complex and unstable political climate that came after independence threw Ghana into decades of economic collapse. Government corruption and financial mismanagement caused established agricultural businesses to fail, and the currency was continuously devalued. Ghanaians needed new, creative ways to make money.

One surprising industry that emerged to meet this need during the 1980s and 1990s was an independent, unregulated network of video distribution that presented pop-up movie screenings in ad hoc movie halls around the country. Many of these spaces had also been used as open-air places of worship for decades. To introduce an audience to this new form of entertainment, posters were hand-painted by local artists on cotton flour sacks and traveled with the films across the countryside.

Baptized by Beefcake presents the work of 22 artists whose posters tell the story of how Western movies not only became symbols of modernity, but also vehicles for religious experience. Each artist’s signature style reflects Ghana’s rich tradition of painting, as well as the influence of Western commercial graphics portrayed on VHS and PAL box covers. The eye-catching, sometimes shocking graphics reference a hybrid of indigenous and Pentecostal symbology, where Rambo and the Terminator become messengers of moral ideologies in a larger-than-life mashup of pop culture and religion” [source]

Poster House

December 28th, 2019