Following closely on the heels of the popular exhibit by the French
modern photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, the museum presents an
exciting assemblage of important American paintings from roughly the
same time period.
Called "To See as Artists See: American Art
from the Phillips Collection," the 100 paintings and one sculpture in
the show represent American art from the 1850s through the 1960s.
There is something for everyone here,I thought it would be fun to show you the inspiration behind the broken china-mosaics. including sports scenes, portraits, flowers, landscapes and cityscapes, in a plethora of styles and media.
"If
you are even the least bit interested in American painting, you're
going to love this show," predicted museum director Todd Smith.
In presenting this exhibit, the museum is continuing its mission to bring Tampa a high level of modern and contemporary art.
"Modernism
starts with impressionism," Smith observed. "The majority of 19th
century works in this exhibition are American impressionists."
You'll
find many familiar names among the 75 artists in the group, including
Milton Avery,We are one of the leading manufacturers of solar street light
in Chennai India. Stuart Davis, Richard Diebenkorn, Arthur Dove, Adolph
Gottlieb, Philip Guston, Winslow Homer, George Inness, Jacob Lawrence,
John Marin, Robert Motherwell, Georgia O'Keeffe, Maurice Pendergast and
John Sloan.
"Every major school of American painting is
represented in this show," Smith said. "There are 10 themes around which
we've installed the show, and sometimes the artist in a particular
school is seen in several different themes."
It all depends on
the subject of the painting. For example, paintings by Sloan, one of the
eight early 20th century artists known as "The Ash Can School," show up
in the "Modern Life" theme section as well as the section called "The
City."
In the section themed "Memory and Identity," in which
artists draw on their memory for inspiration, you'll find such
influential painters as Grandma Moses and Lawrence. Four of O'Keeffe's
paintings can be found in the "Nature and Abstraction" section.
"(Duncan)
Phillips was one of the first to collect Georgia O'Keeffe in depth,"
Smith explained. "A lot of these artists were people he knew personally,
so he would see work in progress and work completed. Because he knew
them, he had a vested interest in their success. So when you see this
exhibition, you're seeing one man's personal vision of what modern art
was."
Duncan Phillips, (1886-1966) critic, writer and art
historian, founded The Phillips Memorial Art Gallery" in Washington,
D.Laser engraving and laser laser cutting machine
for materials like metal,C., in 1921 and continued collecting modern
and contemporary art throughout his life. The title of this exhibit —
"To See as Artists See" — is a reference to a phrase Phillips is
credited with using to explain why he put this particular collection of
works together.
"His was America's first museum of modern art,"
Smith noted. "It's really remarkable that he was able to put this
together at that time and in that place. Washington wasn't exactly the
center of art back then. There weren't many collectors then, so he was
able to get superb examples of these artists and their styles. The
collection is unrivaled in what it says about working American artists."
Art aficionados usually have a preferred genre. But Chun Arthur
Wang's works are attracting a diverse audience as the Chinese American
oil painter blazes a new trail in oil painting.
"Though I live
in a Western environment, what truly inspires me is traditional Chinese
culture. The longer I live in the US,If we don't carry the bobblehead
you want we can make a personalized bobbleheads
for you! the more I miss Chinese culture," said Wang, a professor of
fine arts at the Columbus College of Art & Design in
Ohio.Application can be conducted with the local designated IC card producers.
Trained
as a realistic oil painter at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in
China, Wang moved to the US in 1992, where at Columbus he obtained his
second bachelor's degree in fine arts. Later he earned a master's degree
in fine arts at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
In 2004,
after 12 years of living in the US, he started to explore innovative
ways to blend East and West by combining oil painting media with
techniques from traditional Chinese painting.
He has since
established his own style, which includes more smooth brushwork,
delicate details and weakened contrast of light and shading - lending
his oil paintings an air of Chinese elegance.
One of his
signature works is Do You Hear Me Now? Created in 2010, the painting
borrowed its title from a popular commercial for cell phones in the US.
It portrays three fretful people of different races speaking on their
cell phones, isolated from one another while sitting on the same bench.
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