30 January 2024
Berthe Morisot: Things You Can't See In A Painting
12 January 2024
Aymeric Fouquez: A Quiet Eye
Ebisu Catching a Goldfish
But perhaps the heart
Does not want to be understood.
Your shadow falls on its pond
and the small fish hurry away.
They have their own lives,
not yours, which they love.
And if to you it is anger,
bewilderment, grief,
to them it is simply life:
their mouths open and close,
their gills, they are fed, they breathe.
The gods are not large,
outside us, they are the fish,
going on wit their own concerns."
"The Gods Are Not Large" by Jane Hirshfield, from The October Palace, New York, Harper Perennial: 1994.
Image: Katsushika Hokusai - Ebisu Catching a Goldfish, circa 1830, Museum of Asian Arts, Berlin.
31 December 2023
Ocotillo Nocturne
24 December 2023
A Commedia del arte Christmas
18 December 2023
Eileen Agar: Water Sprite
10 December 2023
In the Footsteps of Dorothy Parker: Wendy Cope
"At Christmas little children sing and merry bells jingle,
The cold winter air makes our hands and faces tingle
And happy families go to church and cheerily they mingle
And the whole business is unbelievably dreadful, if you're single."
- Wendy Cope
Wendy Cope (b.1945) is a British poet, author of five published volumes, and the recipient of an OBE.
Image: Joel Meyerowitz - untitled,, from the Pack Series, 1977, kodachrome, Pompidou Center, Paris.
24 November 2023
Helen Torr: Little Boat
Helen Torr (1886-1967), a student of William Merritt Chase, married Arthur Dove who was friends with Georgia O'Keeffe. When Torr, whose nickname was 'Red', met Dove, both were married to others. But they soon left their respective spouses and, in 1924, set up home on a houseboat off the north shore of Long Island at Halesite. Throughout their life together, the couple suffered extreme financial hardships, basically living from hand to mouth.
Torr exhibited her work only twice, once at Alfred Stieglitz's American Place Gallery in 1933. Torr stopped painting after Dove died in 1946. Her wish to have her paintings destroyed after her death was ignored by her sister.
Image - Helen Torr - Houses on a Boat, 1929, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC.
13 November 2023
Diwali, Festival Of Candles And Light
the sun never says to the earth,
"You owe me."
Look what happens
a love like that
lights the whole sky."
- Hafiz (1325-1390), Persian lyric poet
Image: Frantisek Kupka - Ordonnance sur verticales et jaune, 1913, oil on canvas, Pompidou Center, Paris.
31 October 2023
Larger Than Life: The Flowers of Santido Pereira
15 October 2023
Two Women Crossing A Field: One Of van Gogh's Last Paintings
02 October 2023
Georgia O'Keeffe's Autumn Leaves
21 September 2023
Helene Schjerfbeck: Through My Travels, I Found Myself
Helene's father gave her a pencil and Helene began to draw at the age of four while she was recovering from a broken hip...at eleven she won a drawing scholarship to the Finnish Art Society, the youngest student to ever attend the school.
A grant from the Finnish government enabled her to visit Paris, launching her on extended travels around Europe, from Pont-Aven, Concarmeau in Brittany to Florence, limited only by her lameness and associated health problems.
In 1902 she moved to the village of Hyvvinka, twenty-five miles north of Helsinki. She died in a sanatorium in Helsinki in 1946.
Image: Helene Schjerfbeck (1862-1946) - Landscape at Hyvvinka, 1914, oil paint and charcoal on canvas board, Musee d'Orsay, Paris.
02 September 2023
Shaken, Not Stirred: The Retro Cocktail Hour
22 August 2023
Seongmin Ahn : An Artist Of The Diaspora
An immigrant, Ahn portrays the natural world, using Baroque ornamentation on familiar Asian subject matter like the waves and mountains here in Aphrodisiac. Joining the two cultures, Ahn combines her artistic training in Korean black ink wash and color painting with Western influences from abstract art and conceptual art. In bold compositions and areas of saturated color, her painting style also reflects the influence of minhwa Korean folk art that reached its greatest popularity during the 19th century of the Chosŏn dynasty (1392–1910).
Ahn was born in South Korea where she studied art at Seoul National University. She now lives in New York City, .
Image: Seongmin Ahn - Aphrodisiac,2019, ink, pigment, and wash on mulberry paper, Courtesy of the artist's website.
11 August 2023
Andre Devambez: Crepuscule
Procession at Dusk is a pastel by French artist Andre Devambez. A twilight procession of monks is observed from afar as they move towards the lighted windows of the monastery. This scene is both solemn and poetic. Its composition emphasizes the glow of candles in the distance, looking like fireflies, while the setting sun is mirrored by the tree trunks in the foreground. They contrast with the bluish tones of the evening landscape, rendered in sfumato. The summery cast of the landscape suggests a date near the Feast of the Assumption. It is possible that its conception dates from the time Devambez was resident in Italy.
This work sheds a new light on Devambez's early career. Known for his bird's-eye views and steep perspectives that earned him the nickname "painter of the 6th floor." However this pastel testifies to his predilection for gathering scenes that are observed in a detached mannerThis work is therefore unique in his oeuvre.
André Devambez was born in Paris and grew up in the world of Maison Devambez, the family engraving and publishing business founded by his father. Andre showed an early interest in drawing and soon enrolled in the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He was awarded the Prix de Rome which allowed him to perfect hiscraft at the Villa Medici in Rome. On returning to Paris, Devambez his bird's-eye views revealed his innovative framing. At the same time, he workedr as an illustrator for magazines such as Le Figaro illustré and l'Illustration. In 1910, he was invited to create decorative panels for the new French Embassy in Vienna. A true jack-of-all-trades, painter, engraver and illustrator his work includes serious and light subjects.
Purchased last year from a private collector by the Musée d'Orsay, Procession at Dusk is a large pastel on canvas by André Devambez (1867-1944). As one of the rare works from the beginning of the artist's career, this 1902 pastel will be included in the exhibition 'Pastels. From Millet to Redon.'
Image: Andre Devambez - Procession at Twilight, 1902, pastel on canvas, Musee d'Orsay, Paris.
23 July 2023
Ernest Chaplet: A Porcelain Life
15 July 2023
August Morisot: Cathedral of the Pines
02 July 2023
Mood Indigo: Firelei Baez
"I started early - Took my dog -
Firelei Baez was born in 1981 in the Dominican Republic and her family moved to Miami when Firelei was eight. She studied art at Hunter College and Cooper Union in New York City where she now lives in the Bronx.
Baez traces descent from Haiti and Dominica, two countries that share the island of Hispaniola. Haiti, on the western side was colonized by France while the Dominican Republic was controlled by Spain so there is no single narrative that encompasses these two very different variants of colonization. (Think of the contrast between the neighboring states of Georgia and Florida, the one settled by the British and the other colonized by the Spanish). The cultivation of indigo was key to the economic development of Haiti; tobacco and sugar were also extremely significant exports. The process to turn the plant into a dye was developed in West Africa, a history that Baez knows by heart. For her, the underwater world is blue, indigo blue.
Image: Firelei Baez - Haitian Mermaid - Describing the West Indian Navigation from Hudson's Bay to the Amazonas, 2023, oil and acrylic on archival printed canvas, 73 7/8 x 60 7/8 in., James Conan Gallery, NYC.
23 June 2023
Adam Zagajewski: And That Is Why
"And that is why I paced the corridors
Of those great museums
Gazing at paintings of a world
In which David is blameless as a boy scout
Goliath earned his shameful death
While eternal twilight dims Rembrandt's canvases,
The twilight of anxiety and attention
And I passed from hall to hall
Admiring portraits of cynical cardinal
In Roman crimson
Ecstatic peasant weddings
Avid players of cards or dice
Observing ships of war and momentary truces
And that is why we paced the corridors
Of those renowned museums those celestial palaces
Trying to grasps Isaac's sacrifice
Mary's sorrow and bright skies above the Seine
And I went back to a city street
Where madness pain and laughter persisted -
Still unpainted."
-"And That Is Why" by Adam Zagajewski, from True Life, New York, Farrar. Straus and Giroux: 2023.
For Adam Zagajewski, the past is always present in everyday life and, as this poem eloquently lays out, nowhere is this fact more visible than in museums. The past isn't dead; it may not even be past.
The poet Adam Zagajewski (1945-2021) was born in Poland and died in Poland; however he lived in Berlin, then Germany, moved to France in 1982 and later taught at universities in the United States.
Image: Sophie Crespy - photograph of a gallery at the Musee d'Orsay in Paris, courtesy of Grand Palais, Paris.