Archive for March, 2012

Andrea Ebener – Zurich – Switzerland

Andrea Ebener, Hi, 2011, 70 x100 cm, unique Cyanotype on Torchon Watercolor Paper © Andrea Ebener


Until May 5th 2012 – Galerie Walter Keller

Young Swiss artist Andrea Ebener (*1987) has created a group of self-portraits that she first took with her digital camera. At the same time she has started to discover for herself old techniques like photogelatine printing or buying the necessary chemical components to create cyanoprints.

She produces them herself on watercolor papers. Each of the image that literally „goes through“ her hands is unique, no other person is involved. This way the notion of the often abused declaration „vintage print“ comes back to life, as each print is created by the artist herself shortly after the original image was taken digitally.

Andrea Ebener, unique Cyanotype on Torchon Watercolor Paper © Andrea Ebener


I
am very interested and magically taken by her images, which are the result of combining technological innovation („the digital“) and traditional craftmanship. And I believe that this combination will be a way out for some of the young creative photographers who are sitting in front of their screen asking themselves: „What can I add to the creation of photographic art that has not been done yet? How can I develop my very own, distinctive handwriting?“

And, there is one thing to add: Images like those created by Andrea Ebener can only be made photographically, not through any other technique. Which is – apart from the always given criteria of artistic quality – another very important aspect when judging fine art photography: Could the images have been done better than by using photography? In the case of Ebner’s cyanoprints and photogelatine prints the answer fortunately is a clear „no“, they could not have. (Walter Keller)

Gallery Hours


Renoir, The Early Years – Basel – Switzerland

Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) En été, 1868 Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie bpk / Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie / Jörg P. Anders


From April 1 2012 to August 12, 2012  – Kunstmuseum Basel

The spectacular exhibition Renoir. Between Bohemia and Bourgeoisie: The Early Years at the Kunstmuseum Basel will focus on the underappreciated early work of the great painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919).
Fifty paintings—portraits, landscapes, and still lifes, among them masterworks from the collections of major museums such as the Musée d’Orsay, Paris, the National Gallery, London, the Metropolitan Museum, New York, and the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as virtually unknown works from private collections, form a magnificent panorama of the formative years of Renoir’s art.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was among the French painters who founded Impressionism. With a light palette, loose brushwork, and motifs from modern urban life and leisurely amusements in natural settings, he and his fellow innovators wrote art history. The painter’s Impressionist period and his late work have subsequently tended to eclipse other parts of his oeuvre. He has been celebrated as the “painter of happiness,” but that has also been a cliché to which he was reduced..

Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) Café concert ou La première sortie, 1876 ©The National Gallery, London. Bought, 1923


Th
e Kunstmuseum Basel now presents a grand survey exhibition, the first show ever to emphasize the artist’s outstanding and surprisingly complex early work, up to and including the eminent Impressionist paintings of the 1870s.
Renoir’s most important model during these first years of his career was his lover, Lise Tréhot. Their relationship lasted from 1865 to 1872. Lise sat for a series of important early works in which he staged her in a wide variety of roles and pictorial genres. This group of paintings constitutes a highlight of the exhibition. The two illegitimate children who issued from the relationship with Lise were given up for adoption—a fact that the artist kept secret throughout his life and that puts a new complexion on the ostensibly perfect idylls in his pictures of pairs of lovers and mothers with children.
Portraits of his friends and fellow artists Claude Monet, Frédéric Bazille, and Alfred Sisley form another distinct group. Renoir’s own contribution to Impressionism is most clearly apparent in his landscapes, especially those of the countryside around Paris, and in his scenes of la vie moderne. The period from the mid-1860s to the late 1870s is defined by extraordinary social, political, and artistic developments. The tensions between bohemia and the bourgeoisie, two milieus in which Renoir moved, are readily apparent in his oeuvre. He experienced the political sea changes from the conservative climate of the Second Empire to the revolution of the Paris Commune and hence to the Third Republic, even as he avoided involvement in these conflicts whenever possible. A young artist’s chances of achieving visibility depended on his work being shown in the Salon. Renoir and his fellow Impressionists rebelled against that institution by organizing exhibitions of their own. In the late 1870s, however, as his work slowly found official recognition, his attitude toward the Salon grew friendlier as well. Renoir’s early work lets us trace his evolution as an artist in fascinating paintings. Paintings from this period reflect the growing range of his pictorial imagination as he spent many days studying the paintings at the Louvre, but also took in the revolutionary innovations of his time: the realism of Gustave Courbet, the Barbizon school’s en plein air painting, and the inspirations he received from Édouard Manet and Claude Monet, his closest artistic associates at the time.

Museum Hours


Saint Anne, Leonardo da Vinci’s ultimate masterpiece – Paris – France

Léonard de Vinci, La Vierge à l’Enfant avec sainte Anne. Après restauration. 1503-1519. Huile sur bois. 168 x130 (largeur initiale : 112) cm. Paris, musée du Louvre, Inv. 776 © RMN, musée du Louvre / René Gabriel Ojéda


From March 29, 2012 to June 25, 2012 – Musee du Louvre

Leonardo da Vinci’s masterwork The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, restored with the aid of the C2RMF (Center for Research and Restoration of the Museums of France), is the centerpiece of an exceptional exhibition that reunites all surviving related works for the first time.

The beginning of the slow and complex genesis of the painting dates back to 1501, when it was first mentioned in Isabella d’Este’s correspondence. Leonardo da Vinci continuously worked to perfect this ambitious composition, left unfinished upon his death in 1519.

Compositional sketches, preparatory drawings, landscape studies and the National Gallery of London’s magnificent cartoon are brought together for the first time since the artist’s death to illustrate his lengthy meditation and expose the succession of solutions he had envisioned.

Léonard de Vinci, Sainte Anne, la Vierge et l’Enfant Jésus bénissant saint Jean Baptiste. Vers 1500. Pierre noire, rehauts de blanc. 141,5 x 104,6 cm. Londres, The National Gallery, NG 6337 © The National Gallery, Londres, Dist. RMN / National Gallery Photographic Department

Other painted artworks by Leonardo are also used to show how the Saint Anne is the true culmination of the artist’s numerous and varied explorations on nature and art.
To reveal the full scale of the artwork’s innovative nature, the exposition also strives to reposition the Saint Anne in the iconographic tradition of its subject (the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne) and demonstrate its considerable influence on Italian art in the early 16th century.

More recent tributes to the artist by Eugène Delacroix, Edgar Degas, and Max Ernst bear witness to the masterpiece’s longstanding influence.

Museum Hours


Cartier, Joailler des Arts – Paris – France

Beatriz Milhazes, Aquarium Philippe Gontier © Cartier


From April 3 to April 22, 2012 – Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain

An exceptional presentation of four unique artworks commissioned by Cartier since 2009.
To create a work of art using precious or semi-precious stones that have been pierced, engraved, unmounted or even damaged, and can therefore no longer be used in classic jewelry; to bestow new life on these pearls, emeralds, sapphires, mandarin garnets, moonstones, paved diamonds, chalcedonies, rubies… This was the mission that the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain and Cartier entrusted to four internationally renowned contemporary artists, well known to the Fondation.

Alessandro Mendini, The Cartier Column Philippe Gontier © Cartier


D
avid Lynch, Alessandro Mendini, Takeshi Kitano and Beatriz Milhazes each met and worked with the Cartier master jewelers; from this passionate exchange four exceptional art works were created – extraordinary unique materials for the artists and a new life for these stones that no longer corresponded to the jeweler’s high standards.

The development and execution of this veritable précis of gemology was the work of Cartier Joaillerie, while each artist and their creation revived the soul of these stones and symbolized their eternity in their own special way. Together, artists and master jewelers have crafted a precious story of gemstones.

Foundation Hours


Dora Gordine. Sculptor, Artist, Designer – Tallinn – Estonia


Dora Gordine - Chinese Head - Chinese Philosopher


From April 14 to August 5, 2012 – Adamson-Eric Museum

The work produced between 1924 and 1933 by Dora Gordine (1895(?)–1991), an artist with a fascinating destiny who was also linked with Estonia, is presented together with interior views of Dorich House, which she designed.

A major exhibition celebrating the colourful life and times of a woman once hailed as one of the finest female sculptors in the world o. This retrospective lifts the lid on sculptor, artist and designer Dora Gordine’s creative genius and flamboyant personality, giving members of the public unparalleled access to her work

Dora Gordine - Seated Female


D
escribed as fearless, feisty and with a voice like Zsa Zsa Gabor, Latvian-born Gordine first rose to prominence in Paris during the 1920s. Known in her heyday as much for her love of the high life as she was for her phenomenal talent, Gordine travelled the globe before eventually marrying into the aristocracy and settling in Kingston upon Thames in South West London in 1936. She quickly established herself as a darling of the capital’s cultural set, famous for her nude sculptures and stylish dinner parties. All that changed, however, when her husband, scholar the Hon. Richard Hare died suddenly in 1966. Grief-stricken, Gordine withdrew from the social whirl of the capital’s arts scene to become a virtual recluse until her own death in 1991.

Museum Hours


Solo show: Fernando Toledo. Musas Pintura – Santiago – Chile

Euterpe - Musa de la música - Fernando Toledo - Acrylic on canvas - 100x120cm - 2012

Euterpe - Musa de la música - Fernando Toledo - Acrylic on canvas - 100x120cm - 2012


From March 2012 to April 2012 – Galeria de Arte, Montecani

In my work, I seek the vital force of color, pure and illuminated like the windows in the old colonial churches that surrounded my childhood in the streets of Habana Vieja, (Cuba). At the same time I touch upon present-day subjects such as nostalgia, solitude, or individual freedom. I attempt to find hope, light … digging into human and divine areas, from before and after, it is my life experience, my natural instinct, everything manifested in the woman as a starting point, as a source of all creation, undoubtedly a personal fascination of mine…

Erato - Musa de la Elegía - Fernando Toledo - Acrylic on canvas - 100x100cm - 2012


A
s a path, I am interested in spontaneity, passionate and free execution, figurative art, the uninhibited strokes of the paintbrush, choosing the lines and the color almost emulating stained-glass windows to consecrate the ordinary daily life represented, to make sacred those moments where we are truly ourselves, without social pressures or forming a self image, as simple as life itself.

Gallery Hours


  • Check for promotions on the followings:
  • Categories

  • March 2012
    M T W T F S S
    « Feb   Apr »
     1234
    567891011
    12131415161718
    19202122232425
    262728293031  
  • Archives

  • Copyright © 1999-2012 International Art News. All rights reserved.
    iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress