Friday, March 10, 2006

Reminder: Training on Monday, March 13 at 10:30 am

The next training session is on Monday, March 13 from 10:30 am – 12:30 pm, and it is a hands-on workshop with clay, so please wear clothes that you don’t mind getting dirty.

 

Thanks for your time!

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Cubic Roots : How Asians transformed a European movement


Hello Fellow Docents,
FromNewsweek ...
Sanjeev

Cubic Roots
How Asians transformed a European movement
By Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop
Newsweek International
Updated: 1:15 a.m. ET March 5, 2006

Malaysian painter Syed Ahmad Jamal can still remember when he
discovered cubism. It was in 1951 in a bookshop in London, where the
then 22-year-old bought his first art book on the work of Georges
Braque. "I didn't even know the word existed," he recalls. "In those
days, cubism hadn't really spread in Asia."

Eventually, it did. Just how widely—and uniquely—Asians adapted the
movement is the fascinating subject of "Cubism in Asia: Unbounded
Dialogues," a new show at the Singapore Art Museum (through April 9).
With more than 120 modern works from 11 countries, the exhibition
brings together some of Asia's most famous 20th-century artists,
including Jamal, Anita Magsaysay-Ho from the Philippines, Thawan
Duchanee from Thailand and F. N. Souza from India. "The idea for the
exhibition was not to show what Asian cubism is, but to look at ways
Western ideas permeate within the Asian space," explains Singapore Art
Museum (SAM) curator Ahmad Mashadi, who co-organized the show.

Indeed, when it first began in Paris in the early 20th century, cubism
was viewed as a radical way of redefining space in paintings. The
movement quickly revolutionized European art, but spread slowly in
Asia. And even then, the "buffet mentality" of Asian artists meant
cubism never became more than one of the many Western styles expressed
in their art. "Some like [the late Singaporean artist] Chen Wen Hsi
thought nothing of switching from cubist painting one day to
traditional Chinese inkwork the next," says SAM director Kwok Kian
Chow.

Japan was the first Asian country to embrace cubism, around 1910. The
style took another decade to appear in China —and Korea, and did not
really penetrate Southeast Asia until the 1950s—ironically, at a time
when many nations were gaining independence. Part of its appeal
stemmed from the fact that cubism marked a rejection of Orientalism,
the exoticized representation of Asian cultures that had contributed
to the colonial project.

While references to Pablo Picasso's work in particular regularly
cropped up in Asian cubism—most obviously in Yamamoto Keisuke's
"Hiroshima" (1948), which echoes "Guernica"—the region's artists
quickly developed their own distinct take on the movement. Where
European cubists had adopted a razor-sharp approach to the human
anatomy, artists like Sri Lanka's George Keyt ("Reflection," 1947),
China's Qu LeiLei ("Youth," 1980) and Malaysian Chuah Thean Teng
("Lady Musician," c. 1950s) preferred curvilinear forms. And if in the
West cubism demanded total objectivity of the subject matter, Asian
cubists produced self-portraits. Korean artist Ha In-du's
"Self-Portrait" (1957) reconstructed his crouched figure with
geometric forms to express his feeling of oppression from the Korean
War. Filipino artist Vicente Manansala even developed his own cubist
movement, Transparent Cubism, replacing the shaded flat planes of the
European cubists with a similar network of semitransparent planes, as
in "Conquistador" (1979).

Thematically, Asian cubists also ventured in new directions. Where the
West had more or less abandoned religious themes in the development of
modern art, Asian artists continued to explore them. Acknowledging the
region's many faiths, the exhibit presents a deconstructed
"Avalokitesvara" (1921)—the most popular of all Buddhist deities—by
Japanese artist Koga Harue, as well as "Crucifixion" (1980) by
Filipino artist Ang Kiukok and "Mother and Child" (1954) by his
compatriot Cesar Legaspi.

Asian cubists portrayed stronger narratives and expressed more emotion
than the Europeans, says Choi Eunju, director of the National Museum
of Contemporary Art in South Korea, which cosponsored the show along
with SAM, the National Museum of Modern Art of Tokyo and the Japan
Foundation. So it is striking to note that cubism, so important to the
development of modern art in the West, remained a relatively minor
form in Asia. "The technique was useful to understand the form and its
relation to space, but I rapidly became more interested in fauvism,"
says Jamal. Still, the show is a compelling example of how Asians
borrowed something from the West and made it their own.
(c) 2006 Newsweek, Inc.

(c) 2006 MSNBC.com

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11675825/site/newsweek/

--
Regards,
Sanjeev Narang

***

email: ask {*at*} eConsultant dot com
<a href="http://www.eConsultant.com">www.eConsultant.com</a>

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Wednesday, March 08, 2006

GAT: other related exhibitions

At her lecture on Feb. 4 (I think), Wanda Corn mentioned that there have been several other recent and important exhibitions about American Modernism. Here is some info about two of those exhibitions.

 

 

In The American Grain: The Stieglitz Circle At The Phillips Collection

February 19 - May 8, 2005

http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/5aa/5aa75.htm

(includes short biographies of several artists, as related to The Phillips Collection specifically)

 

 

Musée d'Orsay (even Europeans are interested in American Modernism!)

New York and Modern Art : Alfred Stieglitz and His Circle (1905-1930)

from October 19, 2004 to January 16, 2005

http://www.musee-orsay.fr/ORSAY/orsaygb/HTML.NSF/By+Filename/mosimple+programm+expo+124expo?OpenDocument

 

New York and Modern Art: Alfred Stieglitz and His Circle (1905-1930)

The city of New York underwent incredible development during the early 20th century, which favoured an intellectual and artistic boom. Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946), a charismatic figure, was to play a central part in the elaboration of American Modern art. His gallery, located 291, Fifth Avenue, at first devoted to photography, became the centre of the European avant-garde from 1908 onwards. There he exhibited drawings by Rodin, Cézanne, Picasso and Matisse, before the 1913 Armory Show, the first major contemporary art fair in the United States. The latter soon attracted artists from overseas, such as Picabia and Duchamps: artistic life in New York then gained momentum and galleries multiplied. Stieglitz and his group were no longer centre stage but went on creating events, defending not only Picasso, Bracque, Picabia and Brancusi, but also 'Negro' art and Dada, whose review 291, inspired by Apollinaire, gave premonitory signs.

After the First World War, Stieglitz was to indulge more intensively his passion, photography, while continuing to defend a group of painters, including Arthur Dove, Georgia O'Keeffe and Charles Demuth. Their intention was to create a typically American modern art.

This is the first time in Paris that Stieglitz and his circle's action is the object of a monographic exhibition; the first time also that the work of this major photographer is shown comprehensively.

 

 

And I found this too (maybe some of you saw this show?):

The Stieglitz Circle exhibition @ the Seattle Art Museum

http://archives.thedaily.washington.edu/1996/032896/steiglitz032896.html

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

the other Max Weber

Today, on a school tour, I learned that there is more than one famous Max Weber!

 

Maximilian Weber (1864 – 1920), a German political economist and sociologist …

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Weber

 

Max Weber [Polish-born American Expressionist Painter, 1881-1961]

http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/weber_max.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Weber_%28artist%29

 

There are also several other Max Webers:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Weber_%28disambiguation%29

 

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

Duchamp's Fountain attacked with hammer

 

Duchamp's Fountain attacked with hammer

http://www.boingboing.net/2006/01/06/duchamps_fountain_at.html

 

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Chihuly: info about the floats

Here’s an excerpt from an article on Chihuly that gives some info about the Floats series.

Who knows, if you look hard enough, maybe you’ll find a Chihuly float washed up on a beach some day…

Heide.

 

 


Man of Glass

Liz Seymour
Attaché, November 1998

http://www.chihuly.com/essays/news_seymour.html

… Chihuly came up with the Float Project last year [1997] when he was in Japan. "When I was growing up in Tacoma you could find Japanese fishing floats on the beach after every big storm," he explains. Most Japanese fishermen have switched to plastic, but Chihuly found the last remaining traditional float maker on the island of Hakkaido in northern Japan. The float maker, Mr. Kanamori, joined Chihuly and his team in Niijima, a glass center south of Tokyo for a frenzied eight days of glassblowing. Some of the floats they made were tossed into the Pacific; future floats might be launched with labels inviting people to add their messages to a Web site.

Chihuly returned to Seattle from Japan with 1,200 of Mr. Kanamori's floats. "What will you do with them?" I ask. "Do?" He sounds puzzled by the question. "I don't know, I might hang them from a bridge. Or string them together with stainless steel wire and put them out on Lake Union. It's one of those projects that . . ." the cell phone transmission erupts in static " . . . or maybe we'll . . ." his patchy, distant voice breaks up and the phone goes dead.

Later that day I visit his second Seattle studio, a 40,000-square-foot cinderblock building on a street of modest houses. A team there is experimenting with blowing and molding Chihuly works in plastic. If they succeed, the lightweight plastic will allow Chihuly to work on an even grander scale. He has reached the physical limit on glass floats at three feet across, but polymer floats could be much larger. There are many problems still to be overcome, including the fact that polymer can't be blown like glass, so many of the components must be molded, leaving an obvious seam. Nonetheless, enormous plastic pods like upended barracudas fill a gallery at the new studio; overhead, wide plastic Persians float against the ceiling, each one secured with a single Philips-head screw. It's an intriguing sight, but clearly no match yet for Chihuly's glass work. "It's early," he says. "We'll see." …

Copyright © 1998 Attaché

 

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 

 

Dale Chihuly Makes His Own Weather

This was a follow-up to the other Chihuly article, and Jen Graves gives her opinion on Tacoma’s Bridge of Glass, among other things.

 

 

Heide Fernandez-Llamazares

Assistant Museum Educator and Docent Coordinator

hllamazares@TacomaArtMuseum.org

 

TACOMA ART MUSEUM

1701 Pacific Avenue

Tacoma, Washington 98402

T: 253.272.4258 x3018

F: 253.627.1898

www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

Become a Member Today!

 


 

 

 

The Stranger

Feb 16 - Feb 22, 2006

Dale Chihuly Makes His Own Weather

Although He Doesn’t Make His Own Glass

web exclusive

This week in The Stranger, visual art editor Jen Graves writes about a lawsuit brought by Chihuly Inc. against a glassblower and a glass dealer accused of making and selling knockoffs of Dale Chihuly’s art. But is it Dale Chihuly’s if Dale Chihuly didn’t actually make it? And is it art if it’s made in a factory? What happens to an artist when he becomes a corporation? These are the questions Graves addresses in "Glass Houses." Here online, Graves talks to Stranger arts editor Christopher Frizzelle about the personalities involved in these lawsuits, the blight that is Tacoma’s Bridge of Glass, and the way that Chihuly’s best work is similar to a really good synchronized swimming movie.

Frizzelle: Dale Chihuly strikes me as sort of creepy. Is he creepy?