Saturday, January 31, 2015

Last Call: Masterpieces from the Scottish National Gallery, February 1st

John Singer Sargent, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, 1892 
Oil on canvas 49 ½ x 39 ½ inches Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh 
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland
Acquired in 1925


Doesn't Lady Gertrude [nee Vernon] look delicious!  Better known as Lady Agnew, she was the wife of Lord Andrew, 9th Baronet of Lochnaw,who commissioned the portrait from one of the great society painters of the era.   John Singer Sargent, an "American" artist, was born in Florence in 1856 to an American couple, studied in Paris with Carolus-Duran, and traveled extensively in Europe, the Middle East and the US.  His portraits capture the look and feel of  late 19th High Society (equal to those created in prose by his pal Henry James): at ease, in charge and rich - very rich.

Alas, Lady Agnew will leave us very soon.  The exhibition "Masterpieces from the Scottish National Gallery" closes on Sunday, February 1st.   To see the painted mauve sash alone is heaven. Worth venturing into the deep freeze for the last viewing.

And we mustn't forget the incomparable  El Greco, Velasquez, Ramsay and Reynolds paintings:


El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos), An Allegory (Fábula), c. 1585–95
Oil on canvas 26 ½ x 35 inches Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland


Diego Velázquez, An Old Woman Cooking Eggs, 1618
Oil on canvas 39 ½ x 47 inches Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland


Allan Ramsay, Margaret Lindsay of Evelick, Mrs. Allan Ramsay, c. 1758–59 
Oil on canvas 29 ¼ x 24 ¼ inches Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh 
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland

Sir Joshua Reynolds, The Ladies Waldegrave, 1780–81
Oil on canvas 56 ¼ x 66 ¼ inches Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh 
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland

Here at the Frick, these masters of the bravura brush techniques inform the study of the Frick's own James McNeill Whistler portraits placed in the oval room outside the Scottish collection, and down the hall.  All the better to admire these "guests" with the local "residents."  

Sandro Botticelli, The Virgin Adoring the Sleeping Christ Child, c. 1485 
Tempera, oil, and gold on canvas 48 x 31 ¾ inches 
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland


In this crowd, Alessandro Botticelli's Virgin Adoring the Sleeping Christ Child and John Constable's landscape stand out as consummate examples of controlled delicacy and precision.



John Constable, The Vale of Dedham, 1827–28 
Oil on canvas 57 x 48 inches 
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh 
© Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland

It's bitter cold, I know.  And another snowstorm is on the way.  So - take advantage of the warmth and beauty inside these walls.  You don't want to miss it.

Happy Groundhog's Day,
Beth New York

aka Beth S. Gersh-Nesic
Director
New York Arts Exchange

Thursday, January 8, 2015

France in Tears

Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, 1830


We wish to express our sincerest sympathies to the survivors of the victims gunned down at Charlie Hebdo in Paris on January 7, 2015.  Our hearts go out to France as they suffer the shock and cope with the sadness of this event.  

I have chosen this painting by Delacroix in which Marianne, symbol of French liberty, leads the way to a higher ground.  You may notice that in the background the Cathedral of Notre Dame stands tall behind a cloud of artillery smoke.  Charlie Hebdo is in the 11th Arrondissement, not far from Notre Dame where demonstrations have taken place in the square outside the church.   

We know that Charlie Hebdo directed its satire toward all religious groups. I do not condone religious satire and have never been a fan of any publication that bases its satire on anti-religious content.

Nevertheless, I wish to note that terrorist tactics are a disturbing trend which deserve universal condemnation.  May Liberty lead the way out of this lethal mess before it destroys us all.

Dutch political cartoonist Ruben L. Oppenheimer tweeted this image.


Beth New York
aka Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, Ph.D.
Director
New York Arts Exchange

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Miljan Suknovic at Catherine Ahnell and 7 WTC; Color Theory Classes


Miljan Suknovic, Constellations II, 2013
7 World Trade Center


Where did the time go?!   Miljan Suknovic's exhibition Constellations II, installed in the lobby of 7 World Trade Center, will close at the end of this month.  It opened in September 2013.  

Miljan Suknovic, Constellations III, 2014
Executed at Catherine Ahnell Gallery, still on view

And Miljan's other installation Constellations III, 2014,  at Catherine Ahnell Gallery, at 66 Grand Street in Soho,  closed in December 2014.  His new piece Sambre opens there on Wednesday, January 14, 2015. 


For aspiring artists, Miljan's class on Color Theory at the Educational Alliance Art School in the Manny Cantor Center, 197 East Broadway, begins on Wednesday, January 14. through March 18, 2015, 6:30 - 8:30 pm.  (A nice gift for your Valentine.)

Miljan Suknovic, Frida [Kahlo], Red Painting and Me, 2010
30 x 23 inches, digital print on canvas

Happy New Year!
Beth New York

aka Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, Ph.D.
Director