Showing posts with label moma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moma. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Chic in NY: Cindy Sherman at MoMA

Sometimes I wish we could discuss artists or anyone for that matter without having to mention their gender. In the case of photographer Cindy Sherman, being a woman is an integral part of her work and therefore, cannot be ignored. Just opened at The Museum of Modern Art is a new exhibit, Cindy Sherman, which chronicles her career from the 1970's up until the present with over 170 photographs. While I was already familiar with her photos, the show highlights some of her lesser known works including clowns, grotesque photos, her very early out out collage photos, and even films. It is her newer photos of older women that are the showstoppers.  Cindy herself is now in her late 1950's and her large scale "portraits" of aging society ladies is art imitating life at its finest. But as I noticed later on Madison Avenue, life also seems to be imitating art in regard to these photos. 

What impresses me the most about Cindy Sherman is that she still does everything herself.  The wardrobe styling, make up, modeling, and all photography is done without the help of assistants which is commonplace with most artists and photographers of her stature. She says that what she does is so private that she'd be embarrassed to have an assistant around the studio. Now that's dedication.  Cindy Sherman will be on exhibit through June 11, 2012 and would make an excellent activity for art lovers of any gender. 











Photos by Heather Clawson for Habitually Chic

Thursday, 22 September 2011

de Kooning: A Retrospective Preview

Tuesday, September 13th was my favorite day of Spring 2012 New York Fashion Week.  I started the morning at the first runway show ever for Tory Burch.  It was full of fun prints and pops of color.  Next up was J.Crew's first presentation at the tents which was also full of great shades for spring.  Afterward, I ran down to the Museum of Modern Art for the preview of the new Willem de Kooning exhibition.  It too was full of amazing colors but also bold brushstrokes, bronze sculptures and even a few drawings.  The amazing collection of almost 200 works spans over seven decades of the career of de Kooning.  You may think that I've posted the entire exhibition but I assure you that there is plenty more to see including his early work when his teens and the very last paintings made in the late 1980's when his health was in decline.  He died in 1997.

I stayed to listen to a conversation between the Director of the Museum of Modern Art, Glenn Lowry, and the Chief Curator Emeritus of Painting and Sculpture, John Elderfield.  If you have a chance to attend a lecture or hear them speak during the duration of the de Kooning exhibition, I highly recommend that you attend.  I learned so much about not only Willem de Kooning but how much work goes into a show of this magnitude.  John Elderfield said he hoped to have an exhbition like this for years and called it a "great adventure." It involved a lot of persuasive talking and traveling to borrow paintings, sculptures, and works on paper from over 100 lenders.

Willem de Kooning was born in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, in 1904 and was trained as a decorative artist. When he came to the United States in 1926, he worked as a commercial artist among other jobs.  He would be influenced by many artists who also became friends including Arshile Gorky with whom he shared a studio.  He reminds me of Picasso in the sense that he was a gifted artist from an early age.  One of the first works in the show is a Still Life from 1916/17 that was painted when he was just 12 years old.  They both seemed to set out to challenge themselves to new styles and de Kooning as we know became a master at Abstract Expressionism.  Unlike most of the other abstract artists, he kept the figure in many his works as we see in his series of Women paintings from the 1950's. These are probably the paintings that most people are familiar with but my favorites are the true abstract paintings from the late 1950's and early 1960's.

As is the case with many creative people, de Kooning had issues with alcohol and it was his estranged wife Elaine who helped him over it in 1980.  The thalo green paintings that are also a favorite of mine were some of the paintings he created right after. In the 1980's, his work moved to more flat ribbon forms and a striped down style. Sadly, he was declared in competent in 1989 due to dementia.  There has been some controversy over the paintings created in later years.  Some have suggested that assistants helped with them. John Elderfield has studied them extensively and believes that an artist of his level would still be capable of producing art at that level even with a disability in another part of his life. 

One interesting question that was asked at the end of the conversation was "How Dutch a painter do you consider de Kooning to be?"  John Elderfield said that the artist kept his accent his entire life and the experience of growing up near water was one of the reasons that he moved to Long Island in the 1960's. Even though he moved to International Modernism, he retained many of the traditions that grew up with as a Dutch painter.

de Kooning: A Retrospective will be on view until January 9, 2012 but I would definitely suggest seeing it soon.  It would be a perfect activity for the rainy weekend. 
































Photos by Heather Clawson for Habitually Chic

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

de Kooning: A Retrospective

If you live in New York, I suggest you don't look at the weather forecast for this week.  All the rain has me wishing that de Kooning: A Retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art was open now.  It would be a perfect rainy day activity but unfortunately it doesn't open until Saturday, September 18, 2011.  As I've mentioned many times before, I love abstract expressionism but I know not everyone feels the same.  I hope this exhibition that features over seven decades of the artist's work will open their eyes to the beauty that can be found in non-representational art.  Although, de Kooning was known to include figures of women in some of his works, they aren't exactly known to be beauties.  It's in these works that you can see his influence on contemporary artists such as Cecily Brown.  "This is the first major museum exhibition devoted to the full scope of the career of Willem de Kooning, widely considered to be among the most important and prolific artists of the 20th century." It will run through January 9, 2012.  

Woman I, 1950-52

Willem de Kooning in the studio 1953

Pink Angels, 1945

Willem de Kooning in his East Hampton studio,1977

East Hampton, 1968

Interchanged, 1955

East Hampton Studio


Orestes, 1947

East Hampton, 1952

Willem de Kooning in the studio, 1989

Willem de Kooning, 1950

East Hampton, 1968

East Hampton


East Hampton

Park Rosenberg, 1957

Water Mill, 1960

Woman, 1951

East Hampton, 1971

Rider, 1985