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In reply to the discussion: Welcome to the Friday Afternoon Challenge! Today, “Did you say something?” [View all]pinboy3niner
(53,339 posts)4. #3: Van Gogh - The Road Menders
On special exhibit in D.C. at the Phillips Collection:
Van Gogh
Repetitions
October 12, 2013 - January 26, 2014
Van Gogh Repetitions takes a fresh look at the artistic process of Vincent van Gogh (18531890). While recognized for the intensity and speed with which he painted, the artist could also work with careful deliberation, creating numerous versions of some of his most famous subjects. The first exhibition in Phillips Collection history devoted to the artist, Van Gogh Repetitions goes beneath the surface of some of his best-known paintings to examine how and why he repeated certain compositions during his 10-year career, inviting viewers to look more closely than ever before at van Goghs celebrated works.
Featuring 35 paintings and works on paper and examples of 13 repetitions, the exhibition is the first to focus on van Goghs repetitionsa term the artist used to describe his practice of creating more than one version of a particular subject. He often began by sketching a person or landscape rapidly from life. Back in the studio, he would repeat the subject, reworking and refining his idea on a fresh canvas, in some cases many times, to extract the essence of a motif.
Van Gogh Repetitions is inspired by The Road Menders (1889) in The Phillips Collection and a painting of the same subject, The Large Plane Trees (1889), in The Cleveland Museum of Art. The exhibition reunites the two masterpiecesnever before seen together in Washingtonand invites deep, focused study of the similarities and differences between them, revealing some surprising facts about van Goghs process and motivation. Changes among repetitions are also explored in van Goghs series of portraits of his friend Joseph Roulin and Roulins family. The exhibition also highlights the artists practice of repeating work by other artists, including Paul Gaugin. Created in significant locales in the Netherlands and in France, including Paris, Arles, Saint-Rémy, and Auvers, the works in the exhibition reveal the vitality and persistence of this method across van Goghs career.
The exhibition brings together portraits and landscapes from some of the worlds most renowned collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Philadelphia Museum of Art; The Art Institute of Chicago; Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo; and the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. Masterpieces from the Musée dOrsay, Paris, including The Bedroom at Arles (1889), are also showcased alongside paintings from the Phillipss permanent collection by artists van Gogh admired, including Gaugin, Honoré Daumier, and Rembrandt van Rijn, to create a richer, more meaningful picture of his personal life and artistic production.
The exhibition is organized by The Phillips Collection and The Cleveland Museum of Art.
Gallery at link:
http://www.phillipscollection.org/exhibitions/2013-10-12-exhibition-van-gogh-repetitions.aspx
Repetitions
October 12, 2013 - January 26, 2014
Van Gogh Repetitions takes a fresh look at the artistic process of Vincent van Gogh (18531890). While recognized for the intensity and speed with which he painted, the artist could also work with careful deliberation, creating numerous versions of some of his most famous subjects. The first exhibition in Phillips Collection history devoted to the artist, Van Gogh Repetitions goes beneath the surface of some of his best-known paintings to examine how and why he repeated certain compositions during his 10-year career, inviting viewers to look more closely than ever before at van Goghs celebrated works.
Featuring 35 paintings and works on paper and examples of 13 repetitions, the exhibition is the first to focus on van Goghs repetitionsa term the artist used to describe his practice of creating more than one version of a particular subject. He often began by sketching a person or landscape rapidly from life. Back in the studio, he would repeat the subject, reworking and refining his idea on a fresh canvas, in some cases many times, to extract the essence of a motif.
Van Gogh Repetitions is inspired by The Road Menders (1889) in The Phillips Collection and a painting of the same subject, The Large Plane Trees (1889), in The Cleveland Museum of Art. The exhibition reunites the two masterpiecesnever before seen together in Washingtonand invites deep, focused study of the similarities and differences between them, revealing some surprising facts about van Goghs process and motivation. Changes among repetitions are also explored in van Goghs series of portraits of his friend Joseph Roulin and Roulins family. The exhibition also highlights the artists practice of repeating work by other artists, including Paul Gaugin. Created in significant locales in the Netherlands and in France, including Paris, Arles, Saint-Rémy, and Auvers, the works in the exhibition reveal the vitality and persistence of this method across van Goghs career.
The exhibition brings together portraits and landscapes from some of the worlds most renowned collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Philadelphia Museum of Art; The Art Institute of Chicago; Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo; and the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. Masterpieces from the Musée dOrsay, Paris, including The Bedroom at Arles (1889), are also showcased alongside paintings from the Phillipss permanent collection by artists van Gogh admired, including Gaugin, Honoré Daumier, and Rembrandt van Rijn, to create a richer, more meaningful picture of his personal life and artistic production.
The exhibition is organized by The Phillips Collection and The Cleveland Museum of Art.
Gallery at link:
http://www.phillipscollection.org/exhibitions/2013-10-12-exhibition-van-gogh-repetitions.aspx
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Welcome to the Friday Afternoon Challenge! Today, “Did you say something?” [View all]
CTyankee
Oct 2013
OP
Unfortunately, my iPhone wont let me copy/paste the text for input to Babelfish.
longship
Oct 2013
#11
Ha, now you are thinking like I do! It means are doing more research on art these days!
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#8
Oh, you can do google translate easily...and get the clue. You are getting there with #6...
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#10
yes. The sculpture is definitely part of this exhibition. How could they not be?
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#64
a reference to "and here we are all together again." Reference to their previous "life."
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#85
But the question is: what is Calatrava talking about? Why did his architecture "say" this?
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#17
Calatrava’s showcase Ciudad de las Artes appears to be aging rapidly
Benton D Struckcheon
Oct 2013
#23
BTW, based on what I read in that story, I wouldn't be a fan of Calatrava.
Benton D Struckcheon
Oct 2013
#28
Calatrava's mosaic of tiles "skin" was to recognize another Spanish architect
pinboy3niner
Oct 2013
#29
It's a matter of aging on this project that Calatrava designed. His critics have honed in on
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#35
I was referring to the "best" of the two he painted on the same scene...a little joke...
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#76
You go it exactly right! It was all about that purchase by Lauder and his subsequent gift to the
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#86
and my reference is to Boston's clam chowder...sorry,I am being culturally east coast indifferent...
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#78
You are so right. My aim is to make MORE accessible, not less. This is a masterpiece of early
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#70
I started my art hunt with the early Italian Renaissance, thinking it would be a piece of cake...
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#82
It is not an acquisition as much as it is a coup! They got themselves a really nice piece for
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#54
A wonderful coup by the Kimball, which is a fabulous museum in Fort Worth, Tx.
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#80
Longship, I am incredibly flattered that you stuck by this effort with just an iPhone!
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#91
yes, Benton, so sad. It is among the first pieces to be appraised by Christie's experts and would be
CTyankee
Oct 2013
#96