Art Lovers discussion
Questions from the Met



Linda, maybe your granddaughter could look into medical illustration? I had one friend who changed careers mid-life (from photography) and went back to school for medical illustration because when she researched it (about 5 years ago), it was a good way to make money. Just a thought.
Or she could go get a job at a non-profit. I worked for many, always had a full time job, got to wear many different hats so I learned a lot, but made the tiniest salaries. But it's a good place to start for young people.


I know the 2 interns at the museum got their permanent positions as other people moved on (due to a better job in another museum or left due to personal reasons.)
I wish you the best.




I think I'd prefer the one in Russia. Here's an article comparing the two: The Dance


So, I see The Met is celebrating Spring,too! Here's the next question:
Curator of nineteenth-century painting Rebecca Rabinow finds a way to get a taste of the outdoors inside the galleries.
[There are paintings that] brim with depictions of flowers and foliage. Which ones most capture your attention?


The Swing

The Pond

The See-Saw

The Shepherdess




"Irises" 1889

Pollard Willows with Setting Sun, Vincent van Gogh, 1888

I went yesterday but I didn't get to the MET . . . not enough time.
At Sotheby's I saw the Indian works on paper early in the am and later went to the auction. Really interesting, the highest price paid was 2 million. I think at least ½ of their staff are young beautiful, women between the ages of 20-30, and the rest are older men.
In the afternoon went to the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum and saw a wonderful exhibit called “Color Moves – Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay, 1885-1979 (March 18 through June 5, 2011). It’s her first major U.S. exhibition in 30 years. There was everything from sketches, to materials, to hats, to swimsuits, to dresses, to rugs, to furniture. Most impressive was the Gloria Swanson coat. It looked much better than this image because it was on a mannequin, had a high color and the pattern on the body was amazing.
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coat for Gloria Swanson, 1923-24
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Dress, 1925–28
Beginning with Delaunay’s “poem dresses” of the 1910s, synthesizing word, body and movement, and moving into the Simultaneous Boutique (1925) where driving caps, bathing suits and coats from this period are displayed, the garments are “pure geometric forms in rhythmic patterns and brilliant colors.”

Bathing suit (tunic), 1924–25, silk embroidery on wool jersey, Musée de l’Impression sur Étoffes, Mulhouse, 980.629.1 © L & M SERVICES B.V. The Hague 20100623

wool swimsuit
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of three fabric samples, Design 198, 1927
The second part of the exhibition surveys Delaunay’s textile work for the Metz Co department store in Amsterdam and includes initial sketches, process design and finished products.






“Rythme Coloré (Colored Rhythm),” oil on canvas work from 1946 by Sonia Delaunay.





Curator of Korean art Soyoung Lee reflects on the appeal of abstraction.
Are you drawn to abstract art? Do you prefer more "realistic" depictions?


However when docenting a Wexner Center exhibit of Mark Bradford's abstract art last year, I found that his style of abstract painting was very appealing.
A few of his abstract paintings were unbelievably beautiful and were a combination of abstract and realistic styles.
Also Katy Moran's abstract works were exhbited this year and many of her abstract paintings had a realistic aspect to them and were great to view.

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Mary Ann Wakeley http://www.maryannwakeley.com/
and
Jeane Meyer's work is lovely. I can't get an image of her's to upload, but here's her website. Very evocative art work.
http://www.jeanemyers.com/large-view/...

Matthew Harris's work is very appealing to me as well.
http://www.matthewharriscloth.co.uk/c...



I love so many different artworks. I believe that no matter what period of art, I am always drawn to artwork that is innovative in some way.
Whether it's using ordinary objects and creating a new environment like Tara Donovan; exploring material/medium (wood/wire) to create non-conventional items like Martin Puryear; or things that totally surprise you & require more of your attention like Lee Bontecou's work. I like a variety of mediums (not just paint) like the glass work of Josef Albers or Anni Alber's cloth work or Maya Lin's earth project. I'm a big fan of texture.
Tara Donovan (she received the MacArthur "Genius" Grant.)

Martin Puryear,

Lee Bontecou


Josef Albers

Anni Albers, City
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Maya Lin
I also love still life of the 17th century which I would say was innovative by depicting objects in a still life that could remind viewers of worldly vanity or temperance. And their painting skills were amazing.

Willem Claesz Heda


I can appreciate some abstract art and it can move me according to my mood and the emotions it evokes. When talking about abstract art, I keep in mind that every century movement has 'abstract' art during that time. For example, Matisse could be considered Abstract.
"Henri Matisse (1869 to 1954) was one of the most famous of abstract artists working during the twentieth century".
Read more: What Is Abstract Artwork? | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/facts_4911752_wha...
Matisse is one of my favorite artists anyway.


Agree, Tara Donovan is great. Mostly she makes her stuff out of surprising components, like styrofoam cups and such.
Martin Puryear is a genius.


Donovan's medium is transparent polyester film. "For a piece she made especially for the ICA Boston show (above), Donovan simply looped and folded translucent plastic sheeting inside a long rectangular slot cut into a wall of the museum. It forms a kind of deep, fluid window that people on either side can look through." -- Time magazine
Currently, The Pace Gallery in New York is presenting a Large-Scale Installation by Tara Donovan -- her mylar artwork.

video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUn0TO...
And her straight pin drawings at at 510 West 25th Street, NYC. There is a great video (which I can't find) shows much more than the image below.
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detail

He exhibited at MoMA in 2007; SFMOMA in Jan. 2009 and I have not seen any other exhibits. Only this work --
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Untitled bronze, 2010
http://www.donaldyoung.com/puryear/ma...

Not sure I like the bronze you found. Looks too much like mid 20th century stuff. His earlier work was unique.

I really like his wood, wicker & wire work. But since he does it by hand, it might be too much. He turns 70 in May.

Displayed in the galleries of the VMFA's new contemporary wing, this is the only East Coast venue for Picasso's masterpieces from the Musee National, Paris. And what an exhibit!
Representing his academic style, the stunnng 1917 portrait of his wife Olga, the Russian ballerina and mother of their son Paulo, is a personal favorite. This is exacty the way in which Picasso was painting at age 14 when his father realized what extraordinary ablity his son possessed.
I can't say I've ever been particularly enamoured of abstract art but this exhibit was an eye-opener! Abstract portraits of Picasso's lovers exemplify both his mastery of cubism and his rapacious sexual appetite. Picasso admitted that his love of particular females accounts for much of his creativity. Then, I'm dumbfounded by his mesmerizing 1954 abstract depiction of Jacqueline, Picasso's second wife, that reduces her to a series of intense lines and planes.
I could go on indefinitely, but suffice it to say that this exhibit changed my mind about abstract art. If you live othe East Coast, make an effort to see this.
Books mentioned in this topic
Leaving Van Gogh (other topics)Point and Line to Plane (other topics)
Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling (other topics)
Yes indeed, I traveled to Florence to see an exhibit by Caravaggio and I would go back again in a heartbeat. Also a few years back there was a wonderful Monet exhibit in the Bellagio, Las vegas. I tried to win enough money to purchase one but only fell short by about fifty million.