View allAll Photos Tagged soutine
Huile sur toile, 116 x 81 cm, 1924, Institute of Arts, Minneapolis.
Soutine a grandi pauvrement dans une petite ville lituanienne et a continué à lutter en tant qu'artiste affamé à Paris. Ses années de privation lui ayant donné des ulcères à l'estomac, il s'est abstenu de manger de la viande et d'autres aliments riches. Commençant à connaître le succès en tant qu'artiste, il se retrouva, ironiquement, à acheter de la viande, mais pas à la manger. Il exprime son rapport ambivalent à la nourriture à travers des peintures d'animaux abattus.
Carcasse de bœuf montre l’influence de celle du Bœuf abattu de Rembrandt, peinture représentant une carcasse de bœuf pendue dans un abattoir. Soutine achète une carcasse de bœuf et l’installe dans son atelier. Alors qu'elle pourrissait, ses voisins ont remarqué l'odeur et appelé les autorités sanitaires, qui lui ont suggéré d'injecter du formaldéhyde dans la carcasse. Il l’a fait, mais à mesure que la chair séchait, elle perdait sa couleur vive. En conséquence, Soutine a acheté du sang à l'abattoir et l'a appliqué sur la carcasse (cf. Institute of Arts de Minneapolis).
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Huile sur toile, 41 x 64 cm, 1918, Moma, New York.
A son arrivée à Paris en 1913, Soutine travaille aux côtés de Modigliani et Chagall dans un groupe d'ateliers d'artistes appelé La Ruche. Dans cette première nature morte, la bouche ouverte des harengs crée l'illusion que les poissons sont à bout de souffle, préfigurant l'intensité dramatique du travail ultérieur de l'artiste. A La Ruche, Soutine expérimente également le travail au pinceau expressionniste, comme en témoigne l'application épaisse et énergique de la peinture (cf. Moma).
Brown appropriates images by living, working artists, such as Frank Auerbach and Georg Baselitz, as well as paintings by historical artists, such as Guido Reni, Diego Velázquez, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Eugène Delacroix, John Martin, Gustave Courbet, Adolph Menzel, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh, Chaim Soutine and Salvador Dalí. He claims that the references to these artists are not direct quotations, but alterations and combinations of several works by different artists, although the artists whose work is appropriated do not always agree. As art critic Michael Bracewell states, Brown is less concerned with the art-historical status of those works he appropriates than with their ability to serve his purpose – namely his epic exploration of paint and painting. In most cases, the artist uses reproductions printed in exhibition catalogues, found on the internet or ordered through print-on-demand companies. By scanning and changing the image with programmes like Photoshop, Brown playfully alters the image to his specific needs. He distorts, stretches, pulls, turns the image upside down and changes the colour, usually based on other found images, as well as the background setting. Describing his working practice in an interview, Brown stated: I‘m rather like a Dr Frankenstein, constructing paintings out of the residue or dead parts of other artist‘s work. I hope to create a sense of strangeness by bringing together examples of the way the best historic and modern-day artists have depicted their personal sense of the world. I see their worlds from multiple or schizophrenic perspectives, through all their eyes. Their sources of inspiration suggest things I would never normally see – rocks floating in far-off galaxies, for example, or a bowl of flowers in an 18th-century room, or a child in a fancy-dress costume. It‘s those fictions that I take as subject matter. The scenes may have been relatively normal to Rembrandt or Fragonard but because of the passage of time and the difference in culture, to me they are fantastical.
w.p.
Chaïm Soutine's Le Bœuf. Oil on canvas. 31 7/8 x 23 5/8 in. (Photo credit: CHRISTIE'S IMAGES LTD. 2015)
www.forbes.com/sites/wellsfargo/2017/10/02/keeping-it-all...
MAY 9, 2015 @ 10:16 AM 2,144 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets
What Makes This Painting of Beef Worth More Than $20 Million?
Eustacia Huen , CONTRIBUTOR
I cover food, luxury, and occasionally tennis (when Nadal is playing).
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
It’s no news that people are willing to spend a great deal of money for art or steak. Millions of dollars are poured into paintings, while $350 can only get you 12 ounces of Japanese Kobe Beef at The Old Homestead Steakhouse in New York City. So when you put the two together in Chaïm Soutine’s Le Boeuf (circa 1923), which is due for auction at Christie’s New York on May 11 at 7pm, the selling price could be anywhere between $20 to $30 million.
Now I understand that there’s no limit to the pursuit of status symbols. As a baker who is drawn to seemingly "happy" artwork, I could see why Wayne Thiebaud’s Pies (1961) sold for $4 million at Sotheby’s in 2011. And while I love beef carpaccio, I can’t help but wonder why someone would spend so much for an image of raw beef.
Chaim Soutine's Le Bœuf. Oil on canvas. 31 7/8 x 23 5/8 in. (Photo credit: CHRISTIE'S IMAGES LTD. 2015)
Chaïm Soutine's Le Bœuf. Oil on canvas. 31 7/8 x 23 5/8 in. (Photo credit: CHRISTIE'S IMAGES LTD. 2015)
“That’s because Le Boeuf is one of the three remaining original paintings from this series and it’s arguably one of the grandest, largest, most imposing, museum-quality piece by Soutine,” said Derek Gillman, Chairman of Impressionist & Modern Art in the Americas and Senior Vice President at Christie’s. With Soutine's other artworks such as Le Boeuf Écorché (circa 1924) and Le Petit Pâtissier (circa 1927) sold at Christie’s for more than $13 million in 2006 and more than $18 million in 2013 respectively, it only makes sense that a canonical piece like Le Boeuf could command more.
According to Gillman, this visceral painting evoking crucifixions embodies many of the intriguing qualities of Chaïm Soutine (1893-1943). Born into a poor, Orthodox Jewish family in Minsk, Soutine became known as a daring Expressionist artist in Paris after art collector Albert Barnes purchased 52 of his works in 1922. Unlike his contemporaries such as Marc Chagall and Henri Matisse who were more commercially conscious and focused on the exterior, Soutine explored more existential subjects pertaining to anxiety.
As the art expert elaborated on the “extraordinary explosion of colors and the loose, Expressionist elements” of the painting, I wondered what else makes Le Boeuf so monumental. Is it because of the technique, the size or might this particular slab of beef be the best cut of its time?
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“The key lies in the backstory and how the artist kept the beef in his studio,” said Gillman. When Soutine was working on this piece, he poured blood all over the hanging carcass to maintain its color. He developed a habit of fasting while eyeing the meat and painted ferociously when he became hungry. Over time, the beef started to decompose and Soutine’s neighbors called the police about the smell. Acting like a person who had co-existed with a hanging beef for a long time, “the artist completed his painting, injected the beef with formaldehyde and buried it in a deep hole,” noted the expert.
Given the trouble Soutine went through for this painting, I sheepishly asked if the artist could have created something equally valuable with a subject that's lower maintenance like fish, rabbit or chicken.
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Au centre du Marais, au cœur du vieux quartier juif de Paris. "On y retrouve les saveurs et les senteurs qui ont charmé l'enfance de Chagall, Soutine, Freud, ou Woody Allen."
Up and down rue des Rosiers between rue Malher and rue des Hospitalières-St.-Gervais, as well as on the streets off rue des Rosiers, you will find Jewish restaurants, bookshops, boulangeries and charcuteries along with synagogues and shtiebels (small prayer rooms – Oratoire in French).
49.9 x 34.9 cm.
Antonio Scialoja was born in Rome on December 16, 1914. In the late 1930s he joined the artistic and literary circles of the Galleria La Cometa. Having given up his law studies in 1937, he devoted himself entirely to painting and produced his first Expressionist paintings, in which his use of thick textural brushstrokes was clearly influenced by French painting, in particular Soutine. In 1939 he exhibited at the third Quadriennale of Rome and in 1941 had a private show at the Società Amici dell’Arte in Turin. The following year he took part in a group show at the Galleria Lo Zodiaco in Rome, along with Emilio Vedova, Giulio Turcato, and Leoncillo Leonardi. He was actively involved in the Resistance, and he worked for the theater, designing his first stage sets in 1943. At the end of the war, along with the artists Stradone, Ciarrocchi, and Sadun, he founded the group “I quattro fuori strada”. During the late 1940s he went to Paris, where he became increasingly immersed in European artistic culture; this environment strongly affected his investigation into tone and Neo-Cubism. In the 1950s Scialoja gradually broke free from Expressionism, turning to Analytical Cubism and then to abstraction. His contacts with the group Origine, who were against the decorative aspects of abstract art, together with his trip to the U.S. in 1956, where he met the protagonists of American Abstract Expressionism, pushed the artist to thoroughly explore color, texture, and gestural painting. His first Impronte date back to 1957; in these works traces of deposited color are printed from one surface onto the other, and onto diverse materials ranging from paper to canvas. Meanwhile Scialoja toock part in important national and international shows; in 1960 he moved first to New York and then from 1961 to 1963 to Paris. Back in Italy he exhibited in the 1964 Venice Biennale. His artistic production ceased for a prolonged period during the 1970s, and he only resumed painting in 1983. Scialoja was also a poet, writer, and set designer. He taught at the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome and served as its director for many years. He died in Rome on March 1, 1998.
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Brown appropriates images by living, working artists, such as Frank Auerbach and Georg Baselitz, as well as paintings by historical artists, such as Guido Reni, Diego Velázquez, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Eugène Delacroix, John Martin, Gustave Courbet, Adolph Menzel, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh, Chaim Soutine and Salvador Dalí. He claims that the references to these artists are not direct quotations, but alterations and combinations of several works by different artists, although the artists whose work is appropriated do not always agree. As art critic Michael Bracewell states, Brown is less concerned with the art-historical status of those works he appropriates than with their ability to serve his purpose – namely his epic exploration of paint and painting. In most cases, the artist uses reproductions printed in exhibition catalogues, found on the internet or ordered through print-on-demand companies. By scanning and changing the image with programmes like Photoshop, Brown playfully alters the image to his specific needs. He distorts, stretches, pulls, turns the image upside down and changes the colour, usually based on other found images, as well as the background setting. Describing his working practice in an interview, Brown stated: I‘m rather like a Dr Frankenstein, constructing paintings out of the residue or dead parts of other artist‘s work. I hope to create a sense of strangeness by bringing together examples of the way the best historic and modern-day artists have depicted their personal sense of the world. I see their worlds from multiple or schizophrenic perspectives, through all their eyes. Their sources of inspiration suggest things I would never normally see – rocks floating in far-off galaxies, for example, or a bowl of flowers in an 18th-century room, or a child in a fancy-dress costume. It‘s those fictions that I take as subject matter. The scenes may have been relatively normal to Rembrandt or Fragonard but because of the passage of time and the difference in culture, to me they are fantastical.
w.p.
111 first street from paris to jersey city they showed no love
movie premiere
Jersey City Free Public Library
Biblioteca Criolla
“Who remembers the building owners or politicians in 1920’s Paris, where artists such as Modigliani, Chagall, Lipchitz, Soutine, Brancusi, Rivera, Man Ray, Kisling, Picasso, Juan Gris, Matisse, Apollinaire, Braque, and the rest..., made their art flourish?”
“Nobody”
“The same will happen, as the legend of the artists of 111 First Street grows. Their art quality, will make them eternal.”
111 First Street (film) - Wiki
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/111_First_Street_(film)
111 First Street (a Branko Film), Trailer
111 Jam Band (a Branko Film). Unedited
Faizulla Khamraev (a Branko Film)
Maria Benjumeda, Flamenco and Bulerias at 111 First Street
American Watercolor Movement, Live at Coney Island. A Branko Film (Unedited)
© branko
Branko: Entrevista TV Español
Movies:
Books:
West Indian Parade (Photo Book)
Cecilia Mamede, Times Square NYC (Photo Book)
1926 "WOMAN OF COLOR" by LEON INDENBAUM 1890-1981. Bronze sculpture 19.7 in. - 50 cm. This Russian sculptor lives in LA RUCHE in Paris where he hosted Soutine and Modigliani. He works for Bourdelle and Maillol. He participated in the movement ECOLE DE PARIS with his friends: Foujita, Matisse, Orloff, Rivera, Giacometti, Valadon, Hepworth ... Gets in 1968 the prestigious Wildenstein prize. One of his sculptures beats the world record for 1964 for a 20th century decorative artwork at $ 4.6M
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Brown appropriates images by living, working artists, such as Frank Auerbach and Georg Baselitz, as well as paintings by historical artists, such as Guido Reni, Diego Velázquez, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Eugène Delacroix, John Martin, Gustave Courbet, Adolph Menzel, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh, Chaim Soutine and Salvador Dalí. He claims that the references to these artists are not direct quotations, but alterations and combinations of several works by different artists, although the artists whose work is appropriated do not always agree. As art critic Michael Bracewell states, Brown is less concerned with the art-historical status of those works he appropriates than with their ability to serve his purpose – namely his epic exploration of paint and painting. In most cases, the artist uses reproductions printed in exhibition catalogues, found on the internet or ordered through print-on-demand companies. By scanning and changing the image with programmes like Photoshop, Brown playfully alters the image to his specific needs. He distorts, stretches, pulls, turns the image upside down and changes the colour, usually based on other found images, as well as the background setting. Describing his working practice in an interview, Brown stated: I‘m rather like a Dr Frankenstein, constructing paintings out of the residue or dead parts of other artist‘s work. I hope to create a sense of strangeness by bringing together examples of the way the best historic and modern-day artists have depicted their personal sense of the world. I see their worlds from multiple or schizophrenic perspectives, through all their eyes. Their sources of inspiration suggest things I would never normally see – rocks floating in far-off galaxies, for example, or a bowl of flowers in an 18th-century room, or a child in a fancy-dress costume. It‘s those fictions that I take as subject matter. The scenes may have been relatively normal to Rembrandt or Fragonard but because of the passage of time and the difference in culture, to me they are fantastical.
w.p.
Le Village (1923)
Chaïm Soutine (1893-1943)
Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris
Soutine was of Belarusian Jewish origin. He emigrated to Paris and developed a highly personal vision and painting technique.
Soutine once horrified his neighbours by keeping an animal carcass in his studio so that he could paint it (Carcass of Beef). The stench drove them to send for the police, whom Soutine promptly lectured on the relative importance of art over hygiene. There's a story that Marc Chagall saw the blood from the carcass leak out onto the corridor outside Soutine's room, and rushed out screaming, 'Someone has killed Soutine'.
In February 2006, an oil painting of his controversial and iconic series Le Boeuf Ecorche (1924) sold for a record £7.8 million ($13.8US million).
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Huile sur toile, 81 x 49 cm, 1923-1924, musée de l'Orangerie, Paris.
Dans cette nature morte, toute la composition bascule vers la gauche. La volaille est pendue selon une diagonale que rien ne peut expliquer. Le seul élément horizontal est le linge blanc lumineux posé sur un plan indéterminé perdu dans le fond sombre, presque noir du tableau. Les tomates entassées en une pyramide improbable et instable font le lien entre le plan horizontal du linge et la diagonale du dindon. Elles viennent en quelque sorte asseoir la composition. Des touches rouges, orangées et jaunes tourbillonnent sur la chair de l’animal. Les tomates d’un rouge éclatant ponctué de taches lumineuses blanc crème, traitées en touches larges et moins nerveuses, font contrepoint. Le linge blanc est parsemé de taches rouges projetées et de coulures de peinture. Les pâtes violacées et la tache noire figurant sans doute les plumes du volatile font planer l’ombre de la mort et de la putréfaction (cf. Paul Guillaume et Domenica Walter, musée de l'Orangerie).
La ciutat de Ceret (en francès Céret) és coneguda per les estades de grans pintors i escultors: el 1910 s'hi establí Manolo Hugué, amic de Pablo Picasso, el qual hi va estar el 1911, i més tard s'hi va unir Georges Braque, i el poeta Max Jacob. Del 1911 al 1914 Picasso hi va pintar moltes obres cubistes. Pel mateix temps també varen estar a la vila Juan Gris i Auguste Herbin. El 1919 els lituans Chaïm Soutine i Pinchus Krémegne, expressionistes, i el cubista André Masson. Més tard, Marc Chagall, Raoul Dufy, Albert Marquet i Jean Cocteau. El 1950 Pierre Brune, instal·lat a Ceret des del 1916, hi va fundar el Museu d'Art Modern, al qual Picasso i Matisse van donar diverses obres. El 1953, Picasso va tornar a Céret, i va donar al museu més obres. El 1983 hi va anar a pintar Antoni Tàpies i se li va dedicar una sala del museu. El 1990 es va portar a Ceret un llenç de Picasso del període blau (el Retrat de Corina Pere Romeu). Aquest passat artístic és molt present a la ciutat gràcies a la seva quantitat de museus, galeries d'art i exposicions, així com en qualsevol terrassa no és especialment difícil trobar-se algú posant a prova les seves capacitats artístiques.
Els ceretans tenen el sobrenom d'els sac-i-corda. A més a Ceret se la coneix popularment com a la capital de la cirera.
Coe was born in Tamworth, Staffordshire. For a quarter century she has explored factory farming, meat packing, apartheid, sweat shops, prisons, AIDS, and war. Her commentary on political events and social injustice is published in newspapers, magazines and books. The results of her investigations are hung in museum and gallery exhibitions and form an essential part of personal fine print collections by artists and activists alike. Coe's paintings and prints are auctioned as fund raisers for a variety of progressive causes and, since 1998, she has sold prints to benefit animal rights organizations.
Her major influences include the works of Chaim Soutine and José Guadalupe Posada, Käthe Kollwitz, Francisco Goya and Rembrandt. She is a frequent contributor to World War 3 Illustrated, and has seen her work published in The Progressive, Mother Jones, Blab, The New York Times, The New Yorker, Time Magazine, Newsweek The Nation[1] and other periodicals.
In the 1980s, Coe was featured on the cover of Art News and her artwork has appeared in numerous museum collections and exhibitions. In 2002, Brown University staged an exhibition of her work titled Commitment to the Struggle: The Art of Sue Coe.[2]
Recent projects include 9-11, on the collapse of the World Trade Center and her publication Bully: Master of the Global Merry-Go-Round (2004), a critique of the Bush administration. Her latest book Sheep of Fools… a song cycle for 5 voices was published in September 2005.
She taught courses at Parsons School of Design about social awareness in art. Coe was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician in 1993, and became a full Academician in 1994.
Her work is represented by Galerie St. Etienne in New York City.
White Box presents
Hyman Bloom
Paintings and Drawings 1940–2005
(“The Rabbinical Series”)
July 17 through September 23
Hyman Bloom (1913–2009) was a Latvian-born painter influenced by Eastern European Jewish heritage, Middle Eastern
and South Asian music, and mortality. Bloom and his family immigrated to Boston in the 1920s where he was discovered at
14, and received a scholarship to study drawing under famed Harvard art professor, Denman Ross.
The Rabbinical paintings presented in this exhibition, permeated by historical influences ranging from Grünewald and
Rembrandt, to Redon and Soutine, to Indian tantric art and Chinese painting, reflect the mystical and macabre with vivid
intensity: sordid subjects depicted in sensual, jewel-like colors. According to the artist, his works serve as “an attempt to cope
with one’s destiny and become master of it.”
Art critic, Thomas Hess, hailed Bloom in Art News as “one of the outstanding painters of his generation”. Bloom’s
“successors” Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning considered him the first Abstract Expressionist. His first public showing
contained thirteen paintings in the Museum of Modern Art exhibition “Americans 1942”, curated by Dorothy C. Miller. Bloom
represented the United States at the 1950 Venice Biennale alongside Gorky, Pollock, and de Kooning. In 1954, a traveling
retrospective of his work appeared at the Whitney Museum of American Art, to critical and press acclaim. In the mid-50s, he
participated in an experiment recording the effects of LSD in his drawings.
Bloom was a key figure in the Boston Expressionist movement. His shy, reclusive nature did not allow for joining arms
with the Abstract Expressionist explosion in the art world of the mid-20th century in New York. Rather, uninterested in fame,
Bloom veered off in his own direction, evoking the spiritual and the metaphysical, and not succumbing either to the pop art
movement that became ubiquitous later. Nonetheless, he remains an important link in American post-war art history, and his
work has been increasingly revisited since his death at the age of 96.
139 x 207 cm.
Antonio Scialoja was born in Rome on December 16, 1914. In the late 1930s he joined the artistic and literary circles of the Galleria La Cometa. Having given up his law studies in 1937, he devoted himself entirely to painting and produced his first Expressionist paintings, in which his use of thick textural brushstrokes was clearly influenced by French painting, in particular Soutine. In 1939 he exhibited at the third Quadriennale of Rome and in 1941 had a private show at the Società Amici dell’Arte in Turin. The following year he took part in a group show at the Galleria Lo Zodiaco in Rome, along with Emilio Vedova, Giulio Turcato, and Leoncillo Leonardi. He was actively involved in the Resistance, and he worked for the theater, designing his first stage sets in 1943. At the end of the war, along with the artists Stradone, Ciarrocchi, and Sadun, he founded the group “I quattro fuori strada”. During the late 1940s he went to Paris, where he became increasingly immersed in European artistic culture; this environment strongly affected his investigation into tone and Neo-Cubism. In the 1950s Scialoja gradually broke free from Expressionism, turning to Analytical Cubism and then to abstraction. His contacts with the group Origine, who were against the decorative aspects of abstract art, together with his trip to the U.S. in 1956, where he met the protagonists of American Abstract Expressionism, pushed the artist to thoroughly explore color, texture, and gestural painting. His first Impronte date back to 1957; in these works traces of deposited color are printed from one surface onto the other, and onto diverse materials ranging from paper to canvas. Meanwhile Scialoja toock part in important national and international shows; in 1960 he moved first to New York and then from 1961 to 1963 to Paris. Back in Italy he exhibited in the 1964 Venice Biennale. His artistic production ceased for a prolonged period during the 1970s, and he only resumed painting in 1983. Scialoja was also a poet, writer, and set designer. He taught at the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome and served as its director for many years. He died in Rome on March 1, 1998.
Chaim Soutine
(1893 - 1943)
Woman in Red on Blue Background
Oil on Canvas
circa 1928
Richard Nagy Ltd
Beracasa: Frieze Masters 2019 - Not Quite Frozen in Brexit
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.
Cagnes-sur-Mer French Riviera
is a common presenting the form of a well-wooded and park-covered urban settlement in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur Region in southeastern France. Economically it forms a suburb to the city of Nice.
Geography
It is the Largest suburb of the city of Nice and lies to the west-southwest of it, about 15 km (9.3 mi) from the center. It is a town with no high rise buildings with PARTICULARLY Many woods and parks, as to MOST icts of urban homes, in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
History
It was the retreat and final address of the painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Who Moved there in 1907 in an Attempt to Improve His arthritis, and Remained up to His death in 1919. In the late 1920s, Cagnes-sur-Mer est devenu a residence for Many renowned American literary and art figures, Such as Kay Boyle, George Antheil and Harry and Caresse Crosby. Author Georges Simenon (1903-1989), creator of the fictional detective Commissioner Jules Maigret Lived at 98, mounted of the Village in the 1950s with His third wife and Their three children; initial his "S" may still be seen in the wrought iron on the stairs.
Belarusian-French artist Chaim Soutine created Powerful, fanciful landscapes of southern France. A friend of Amedeo Modigliani, Soutine left colorful landscapes from Cagnes from 1924 on. Fauvist painter Francisco Iturrino aussi resided in the town Where he deceased.