Tag: Berlin

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


Pacific Standard Time – Art in Los Angeles 1950–1980 – Berlin – Germany

Hockney, David - A Bigger Splash - 1967; Acrylic on canvas, 242.5 x 243.9 cm (95 1/2 x 96 in)


15th of March to 10th of June 2012 – Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin

The exhibition project “Pacific Standard Time – Art in Los Angeles, 1950-1980” traces the development of the Los Angeles art scene during the post-war period, when the city on the Pacific hosted an impressively varied and versatile art scene, thus proving that it was more than Hollywood and a sprawling metropolis in the land of sunshine and palm trees. “Pacific Standard Time” features such internationally esteemed artists as John Baldessari, David Hockney, Edward Kienholz or Ed Ruscha as well as protagonists that are yet to be discovered like the abstract painters Helen Lundeberg and Karl Benjamin, the ceramicists Ken Price and John Mason, and sculptors such as De Wain Valentine.

Betye Saar: The Phrenologer’s Window, 1966


T
he mega show – over 60 institutions and galleries in Los Angeles were involved – is taking the two main core exhibitions of the Getty Museum and the Getty Research Institute to Europe. The sole European venue is the Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin.

What was the feminine element in the avant-gard movements of the West coast? This is an interesting filter to place on the exhibition “Pacific Standard Time” Whether we refer to performances to protest against the war in Vietnam (Suzanne Lacy and Leslie Labowitz-Starus), the vitality of the campuses as nests of creativity(with Martha Rosler in San Diego) or even the commitment of audacious collectors (in the footsteps of Betty Asher), a history of art in America after the war can surely not be drawn up in the masculine gender. But male chauvinists need not worry: with John Baldessari to Richard Diebenkorn, including Bruce Naumann and Edward Kienholz.

Judy Chicago: Big Blue Pink, 1971 - Sprayed acrylic lacquer on acrylic - Courtesy Tom Jancar Gallery, Los Angeles - © Judy Chicago, 1971 / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012, Foto: Donald Woodman


T
he section of the exhibition that was to be seen in Los Angeles’ Getty Museum under the title of “Crosscurrents in L.A. – Painting and Sculpture, 1950-1970”, presents painting and sculpture. In the second part that was to be seen in Los Angeles under the title of “Greetings from L.A. – Artists and Publics, 1950-1980”, posters, artists’ catalogues, postcards, invitation cards and other memorabilia are shown which offer a deeper insight into the networks of the Los Angeles art scene at that time. For Berlin the show has been supplemented to include photographs by Julius Shulman, whose architectural shots defined the image of the Californian lifestyle in the 1950s. His incomparable sensibility and intuitive feel for composition and the ‘critical moment’ established him as a master of his craft.

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Josef Fischnaller: PRÄCHTIG dudes, hustlers and other weirdos – Vienna – Austria

LUCRETIA 2011 , c-print on dibond, diasec 100 x 75 cm


From August 25 to September 23, 2011 – Galerie Ernst Hilger

A native of Vienna,  Photographer Josef Fischnaller sees himself as a perfectionist, his heart is in every detail, like his photo spread of the “old masters” that he made with his baroque stylisation sometimes with clothes made ​​of paper and gaffer tape. Josef constantly developed new visual ideas, always motivated by the desire to try new things. Joseph lives and works between Berlin and Vienna.

Gallery Hours


Hans Bellmer – Louise Bourgeois – Double Sexus – Berlin

Hans Bellmer 1902 - 1975

Until the 15th of AugustStaatliche Museen zu Berlin
Bodies morph and dissolve, limbs go missing, while others multiply; male and female sexual forms merge into each other and give birth to androgynous beings – the sexually charged work of Hans Bellmer (1902–1975) and Louise Bourgeois (born 1911, died aged 98 on 31 May 2010) bare many striking parallels to each other. Although their paths crossed in Paris during the Surrealist heyday, Hans Bellmer, who fled to Paris from Nazi Berlin in 1938, and Louise Bourgeois, who in the same year made the move from Paris to New York, never actually met each other in person. Both artists created their respective oeuvres in relative reclusion before subsequently becoming known to a wider audience in their later years. Now for the first time, the Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg has created a dialogue between over 70 sculptural, graphic and photographic works by the two artists. Entitled ‘Double Sexus’, the exhibition sees the meeting of dolls and prostheses, with inviting glances gazing back at ballooning forms. Female fantasies and male fears, the ambiguous nature of everything sexual and the links between eroticism and creativity form the central topics of the exhibition. In the show, a display case is also dedicated to Hans Bellmer’s illustrations for Georges Bataille’s ‘Story of the Eye’, accompanied by a series of Louise Bourgeois’s current works from 2009.
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