Designed to complement the National Portrait Gallery's exhibition «Elaine de Kooning Portraits», the East Hampton exhibition presents self - portraits, likenesses, and reflections on Elaine de
Kooning by other artists.
Complementing the National Portrait Gallery's exhibition, «Elaine de Kooning Portraits,» in Washington, DC, this exhibition comprises self - portraits, likenesses, and reflections on Elaine de
Kooning by other artists, including Arshile Gorky, Fairfield Porter, Hedda Sterne, Alex Katz, Robert De Niro, Sr., Ray Johnson, Joop Sanders, Paul Harris, Edvins Strautmanis and her husband Willem de Kooning.
Not exact matches
Artists like David Hare, Ibram Lassaw, Adolph Gottlieb, David Smith, Willem de Kooning and several other artists are represented by Surrealist inspired
Artists like David Hare, Ibram Lassaw, Adolph Gottlieb, David Smith, Willem de
Kooning and several
other artists are represented by Surrealist inspired
artists are represented
by Surrealist inspired works.
Finally, pretend that
Koons's concurrent gigantic shows — one at the Battlestar Gagosian on West 24th Street, the
other in the West 19th Street branches of the David Zwirner empire — were in less turbocharged environments, and that they constituted any
other double show
by a 58 - year - old
artist.
Strategies of Non-Intention: John Cage &
artists he collected / Gering / 14 E 63 (new location) / thru 8/31 Lyonel Feininger / Moeller / 35 E 64 / thru 6/27 (extended) Billy Al Bengston / Franklin Parrasch / 53 E 64 (new location) / thru 6/28 Mark Grotjahn / Blum & Poe / 19 E 66 (new in NYC) / thru 6/21 Lynda Barry / Baumgold / 60 E 66 / thru 7/11 Kan Yasuda / Eykyn - Maclean / 23 E 67 / thru 6/27 Horacio Zabala; Eduardo Kac / Faria / 35 E 67 / thru 6/21 Anna Maria Maiolino / Hauser & Wirth / 32 E 69 / thru 6/21 Copied / Roth / 160A E 70 / thru 6/20 Nalini Malani / Asia Society / 725 Park @ 70 / thru 8/3 Distilled: The Small Painting Show / Jacobson / 17 E 71 / thru 7/31 Pierre Soulages / Levy / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 6/27 Pierre Soulages / Perrotin / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 6/27 Helen Frankenthaler and David Smith / Starr / 5 E 73 / thru 8/8 Frank Stella / Van Doren Waxter / 23 E 73 / thru 6/27 Carved, Cast, Chrushed, Constructed / Freedman / 25 E 73 / thru 8/22 (extended) Peter Sis curated
by Charlotta Kotik / Czech Center / 321 E 73 / thru 9/1 Harmony Korine / Gagosian / 821 Park @ 75 (new, additional location) / thru 7/11 (extended) Jeff
Koons / Whitney Museum / Madison @ 75 / thru 10/19 Opening 6/27 Kathleen Kucka / Geranmayeh / 956 Madision @ 76 — floor 3 / thru 6/28 Jasper Johns; Roy Lichtenstein / Castellli / 18 E 77 / thru 6/27 The Shaped Canvas, Revisited / Luxembourg & Dayan / 64 E 77 / thru 7/3 Ed Rusha thru 7/11; Marcel Duchamp thru 8/8 Opening 6/26 / Gagosian / 980 Madison @ 77th Barbara Crane / Higher Pictures / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 6/21 Journal / Venus Over Manhattan / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 7/26 Lynn Chadwick / Blain - DiDonna / 981 Madison @ 77 / thru 7/25 James Lee Byars / Werner / 4 E 77 / thru 8/30 Peter Davies / Roitfeld / 5a E 78 / thru 8/10 Eddie Martinez / Half / 43 East 78 / thru 7/15 Nancy Graves / Mitchell - Innes & Nash / 1018 Madison @ 78 / thru 6/27 Jean Dubuffet; Miquel Barcelo / Acquavella / 18 E 79 / thru 9/19 Opening 6/30 Lucien Smith / Skarstedt / 20 E 79 / thru 6/27 Luke Diiorio / Blumenthal / 1045 Madison @ 80 / thru 7/2 Lucas Samaras thru 9/1; Dan Graham with Gunther Vogt thru 11/2; Goya thru 8/3; Etc. / Met Museum / 5th Avenue @ 82nd Italian Futurism thru 9/1, Etc. / Guggenheim / 1071 Fifth Avenue @ 89 The Annual: Redifining Tradition / National Academy / 1083 Fifth Avenue @ 89 / thru 9/14 Sophie Calle / Cooper + Perrotin @ The Episcopal Church of the Heavenly Rest / 2 E 90 / thru 6/25 Mel Bochner thru 9/21;
Other Primary Structures thru 8/3; Etc. / Jewish Museum / 1109 5th Avenue @ 92 Museum Starter Kit: Open with Care, Etc. / El Museo del Barrio / 1230 Fifth @ 104 / thru 9/6 Glenn Kaino; When the Stars Begin to Fall; Carrie Mae Weems; Etc. / Studio Museum / 144 W 125 / thru 6/29 If You Build It / No Longer Empty / 115 & St. Nicholas Ave. / thru 8/10 Opening 6/25 (7 - 9 PM) BROOKLYN Parallel Shift / NARS Foundation / 201 46th Street — floor 4, Sunset Park / thru 6/20 Itness: MaDora Frey; Nicola Ginzel; Heide Hatry; Fawn Krieger; Seren Morey / Trestle / 168 7th, Gowanus / thru 7/2 Myles Bennett, Jay Gaskill, Cat Glennon, Enrico Gomez, Eliot Markell, Esther Ruiz and Jeanne Tremel / Ground Floor / 343 5th / thru 6 /?
Featuring nearly 100 works
by Carla Accardi, Pierre Alechinsky, Karel Appel, Martin Barré, Harry Bertoia, Louise Bourgeois, Alberto Burri, Sam Francis, Grace Hartigan, Asger Jorn, Yves Klein, Franz Kline, Willem de
Kooning, Conrad Marca - Relli, Kenzo Okada, Jorge Oteiza, Jackson Pollock, Ad Reinhardt, Pierre Soulages, Clyfford Still, Antoni Tàpies, Jean Tinguely, Cy Twombly, Takeo Yamaguchi and Zao Wou - Ki, among
others, this collection - based exhibition and publication explore the affinities and differences between
artists working continents apart, in a period of great transition and rapid creative development.
Featuring renowned pieces
by, among many
others, Diane Arbus, Robert Gober, Jeff
Koons, Sherrie Levine, Richard Prince, and Christopher Wool, the exhibition will also include recent work
by artists such as Liz Deschenes, Sam Lewitt, Laura Owens, Frances Stark, and Bernadette Corporation.
Artists Bryan Hunt, David Salle and Ralph Gibson are included in the painting inspired by group photographs made by Hans Namuth of Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and other artists gathered on a sand dune, according to Phyllis Tuchman, who wrote the essay for the exhi
Artists Bryan Hunt, David Salle and Ralph Gibson are included in the painting inspired
by group photographs made
by Hans Namuth of Jackson Pollock, Willem de
Kooning and
other artists gathered on a sand dune, according to Phyllis Tuchman, who wrote the essay for the exhi
artists gathered on a sand dune, according to Phyllis Tuchman, who wrote the essay for the exhibition.
So now that I got that off my chest, on to an important question: Why do some
artists go
by their nicknames (Ken Price, Andy Warhol, Jeff
Koons) and
others, who are known personally
by their nicknames, go
by their full names (Robert (Bob) Irwin, James (Jim) Turrell, Barnett (Barney) Newman)?
However, the couple stands apart from the majority of the elite collector class in one critical regard: unlike those who spend millions to amass small treasure troves of work
by Gerhard Richter, Jeff
Koons, or
other market darlings, these London - based collectors focus their attention almost exclusively on emerging and mid-career
artists.
With five current exhibitions on view (two permanents and three temporary), is a museological space of reference in Lisbon, where the visitor can enjoy the best of modern and contemporary art, hosting the Berardo Collection with its more than 70 artistic tendencies and more than 900 works that demonstrates its strong museological and didactic nature, with works
by artists like Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró, Man Ray, Andy Warhol, Francis Bacon, Jackson Pollock, Gerhard Richter, James Rosenquist, Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Yves Klein, Maria Helena Vieira da Silva, Helena Almeida, Louise Bourgeois, Dan Flavin, Andreas Gursky, Nan Goldin, Rebecca Horn, Donald Judd, Anish Kapoor, Jeff
Koons, Nam June Paik, Frank Stella, Bill Viola, among many
others.
Other leading contemporary
artists to have built upon the historic and the classical to create something wholly new include Jeff
Koons at Almine Rech Gallery, and, more recently, Mat Collishaw at Robiland + Voenna, with four mirror works that engage with paintings
by Caravaggio in the Galleria Borghesa's permanent collection in Rome.
In the same period, Rauschenberg immersed himself in all aspects of the New York art world, attending lectures
by major critics and
artists at the Club, the legendary space where
artists associated with the New York School gathered for debate beginning in 1948, and frequently viewing recent work
by Willem de
Kooning (1904 — 1997), Jackson Pollock (1912 — 1956), Franz Kline (1910 — 1962), Philip Guston (1913 — 1980), and Barnett Newman (1905 — 1970), among
others, all of whom were acquaintances of varying familiarity.
Nothing morally grand is being proposed about these paintings being handmade
by one
artist, nor any effort to denigrate
other,
Koons - style options.
On view from May 14 — September 3, 2017, it features works
by artists including Duchamp, Cory Arcangel, John Baldessari, Sophie Calle, Judy Fiskin, Sherrie Levine, Jeff
Koons, Jorge Pardo, Francis Picabia, Julian Schnabel, Andy Warhol, Kara Walker and
others in a variety of mediums that address issues of beauty, value and judgment.
The show features some 70 masterpieces of US contemporary art
by artists such as Alex Katz, Jeff
Koons, Jenny Holzer, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Longo, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall, Andy Warhol, among
others.
Anchored in the gallery's acclaimed program, Lévy Gorvy's booth (1C14) features works
by a diverse group of
artists, including Willem de
Kooning, Zao Wou - Ki, Pierre Soulages, Rudolf Stingel, Frank Stella, Carol Rama, Andy Warhol, and Yayoi Kusama, among
others.
The museum attracts art lovers with exhibitions of the permanent collection, which comprises of major works
by artists such as Bacon, Calder, van Gogh, Matisse and Picasso, and temporary shows with contemporary
artists such as Jeff
Koons and Philippe Parreno, and public art projects
by Louise Bourgeois, Jenny Holzer, and
other renowned
artists.
The exhibition features more than 100 works
by 35
artists including Josef and Anni Albers, John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Willem and Elaine de
Kooning, Buckminster Fuller, Jacob Lawrence, Robert Motherwell, Kenneth Noland, Robert Rauschenberg, Dorothea Rockburne, Kenneth Snelson, Jack Tworkov and Cy Twombly among
others.
The show also featured eleven works
by other artists — including two sinuous canvases
by de
Kooning (Untitled, 1987, and Untitled XIII, 1985)-- suggesting lines of
The
artist's choices, which are presented in separate galleries, include work
by Paul Klee, Felix Gonzales - Torres, Francis Bacon, David Hockney, Willem de
Kooning, Philip Guston, Eva Hesse, Pablo Picasso, and Dieter Roth, and
other less - well - known
artists.
His Pop sensibility is now standard practice, taken up
by major contemporary
artists such as Richard Prince, Takashi Murakami, and Jeff
Koons, among countless
others.
His Pop sensibility is now standard practice, taken up
by major contemporary
artists Richard Prince, Takashi Murakami, and Jeff
Koons, among countless
others.
• Richard Deacon's Restless 2005, a gift from the
artist • Arthur Hughes's (1832 — 1915) Elaine with the Armour of Launcelot c. 1867 and The Singer c. 1866, a major bequest • Cecil Gordon Lawson's The Hop - Gardens of England 1874 • the bequest of Nimai Chatterji's important archive of 20th century documents and publications • the donation of a group of works by Don McCullin from Eric and Louise Franck • 58 photographs by Lewis Baltz, San Quentin Point 1982 acquired with funds from PAC • Olga Chernysheva's On Duty 2007, presented by VTB Capital 2011 • Hala Elkoussy's On red nails, palm trees and other icons — Al Archief (Take 2) 2009, with funds from MENAAC • Susan Hiller's Dedicated to the unknown Artists 1972 - 6, with assistance from the Art Fund • Works by Martin Creed, Jeff Koons and Robert Mapplethorpe were added this year to the ARTIST ROOMS colle
artist • Arthur Hughes's (1832 — 1915) Elaine with the Armour of Launcelot c. 1867 and The Singer c. 1866, a major bequest • Cecil Gordon Lawson's The Hop - Gardens of England 1874 • the bequest of Nimai Chatterji's important archive of 20th century documents and publications • the donation of a group of works
by Don McCullin from Eric and Louise Franck • 58 photographs
by Lewis Baltz, San Quentin Point 1982 acquired with funds from PAC • Olga Chernysheva's On Duty 2007, presented
by VTB Capital 2011 • Hala Elkoussy's On red nails, palm trees and
other icons — Al Archief (Take 2) 2009, with funds from MENAAC • Susan Hiller's Dedicated to the unknown
Artists 1972 - 6, with assistance from the Art Fund • Works
by Martin Creed, Jeff
Koons and Robert Mapplethorpe were added this year to the
ARTIST ROOMS colle
ARTIST ROOMS collection.
Interviewees represented in this book include Gerhard Richter, Jeff
Koons, Richard Serra, Gabriel Orozco, Elizabeth Murray, Harald Szeemann and Mike Kelley (among many
others), and each text is accompanied
by relevant works and previously unpublished photographs of the
artists.
Taking Freud's idea of the Uncanny as a starting point,
artist Mike Kelley plays Sunday curator and presents work
by Jasper Johns, Paul McCarthy, Jeff
Koons, Tony Oursler, and
others (reprinted from a 1993 catalogue), plus photos of chewing gum wrappers, postcards, record covers, and toys, all connected to ideas of youth and the Uncanny.
Kendrick's art is indebted on the one hand to the emphasis on touch brokered
by New York School
artists of the de
Kooning ilk and on the
other to the constructivist rigors of the minimalist art that nudged its way into dominance in the 70's.
Included in the show were works
by the painters Willem De
Kooning, Franz Kline, Mark Tobey, and German émigré Hans Hoffman, and the sculptors Theodore Roszak and David Smith, among
other artists working in New York City and elsewhere in the country during this decisive period.
Organized in groupings that explore varied themes — such as «Women, Men, and
Other Beasts,» «Primal Landscapes,» «An Art of Memory,» and «Vicissitudes of the Grid» — the show features key works
by artists such as Louise Bourgeois, Helen Frankenthaler, Adolph Gottlieb, Philip Guston, Willem and Elaine de
Kooning, Louise Nevelson, Philip Pearlstein, and Robert Rauschenberg.
Spearheaded
by a family friend and friend of Lisa de
Kooning, actor Alex Kilgore, the new residency program opened its doors in May 2015 to creatives that are not visual
artists but are writers, playwrights, producers, actors, filmmakers and
other creative types.
Sure enough, two years after its debut at the Underground Museum, we find these works — not Davis»
other work (mercurial and captivating paintings in their own right), not the works of Karon Davis, and not the works of any of the various interesting
artists exhibited at the Underground Museum — but the replicas of
Koons, Flavin, and Smithson, exhibited through the storefront windows at MOCA, mockingly obscured and reflected
by the fun - house mirrors of «high culture.»
From time to time, an
artist who was as adept with words as with visual mediums recorded the progress of a fellow
artist: Elaine de
Kooning, a frequent contributor, wrote about Hans Hofmann, David Smith, Hyman Bloom, and
others; Fairfield Porter, another of the magazine's regulars, followed Jane Freilicher's day -
by - day work on a portrait; in addition to chronicling Pollock, Goodnough described sculptors David Hare and Saul Baizerman in the studio.
The gallery focuses on the prints and works on paper
by artists such as Josef Albers, Vija Celmins, Willem de
Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn, David Hockney, Jasper Johns, Donald Judd, Ellsworth Kelly, Sol LeWitt, Roy Lichtenstein, Brice Marden, Joan Mitchell, Bruce Nauman, Ed Ruscha, Fred Sandback, Richard Serra, Wayne Thiebaud, Cy Twombly, and Andy Warhol, among
others.
Deitch claims to be the first person to have bought Basquiat («five little drawings for $ 50 each»), midwifed the incredible ascent of Jeff
Koons, forged the loss - leader gallery model of supporting exciting and attention - getting but deeply weird work with an aggressive backroom secondary - market hustle, helped give Art Basel Miami its bacchanalian gloss with his annual music - art extravaganzas (Fischerspooner, Devendra Banhart, Santigold, Chicks on Speed), and abetted the process
by which the contemporary - art museum became a showcase and playroom for private collections, many of which he helped assemble, in part with work from
artists he made stars: Vanessa Beecroft, Cecily Brown, Dan Colen, Shepard Fairey, and Miranda July, among many
others.
The gallery has and continues to show original paintings, sculptures and drawings
by established
artists including: Carl Andre, Donald Baechler, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Alexander Calder, Joseph Cornell, Jim Dine, Sam Francis, Alex Katz, Willem de
Kooning, Roy Lichtenstein, Gerhard Richter, Ed Ruscha, Andy Warhol and many
others.
Beginning in 1953, participants in these discussions included Philip Guston, Willem de
Kooning and Richard Lippold.10
Other artist groups that met there included the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors.11 The space even occasionally hosted public cultural events, such as a 1955 musical performance presented
by the Inter-Arts Committee and the League of Present Day
Artists.12 «That house was used very well for art», Nevelson later recalled.
The article tell us that Joannou's collection includes,
other than work
by Jeff
Koons, art
by other celebrated
artists, and mentions Maurizio Cattelan, Urs Fischer, Robert Gober, Chris Ofili, Charles Ray and Kiki Smith.
The»60s also cemented New York as the epicenter of the West's (white, male - dominated) avant - garde, even though that road had been paved in the 1950s
by Abstract Expressionists like Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Willem de
Kooning, and
others who enchanted critic Clement Greenberg, such as Barnett Newman, Kenneth Noland, and Helen Frankenthaler —
artists who the esteemed critic thought of as carrying the torch of art history into the modern era.
The sequence then moves to the ground floor of the new building, where sculptural works from the 1980s
by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Robert Gober, Charles Ray, Mike Kelley, Jeff
Koons, Katharina Fritsch, Franz West, and
others will be display, and concludes in the Museum für Gegenwartskunst with a survey of significant positions between the 1990s and the present, featuring sculptures
by artists such as Gabriel Orozco, Matthew Barney, Absalon, Damien Hirst, Danh Vo, Monika Sosnowska, and Oscar Tuazon.
Rather, it is placed in the context of works
by a diverse array of
artists that includes Sherrie Levine, Barbara Kruger, Lari Pittman, Nam June Paik, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Charles Ray, Sarah Charlesworth and Jasper Johns (some hailing from the Pictures Generation,
others definitely not), a curatorial move that embeds
Koons's Neo-Dada roots within a specific set of precepts that flow forward and backward in time.
Founded in 1961, the Rose boasts works
by some of the best - known
artists of the 20th century, including Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and Willem de
Kooning, among
others.
«Looking East» redresses those lapses
by presenting work of masters like Pollock, de
Kooning, and Rothko alongside their lesser recognized contemporaries, including painters Paul Horiuchi and Kenzo Okada, sculptors Ruth Asawa and Isamu Noguchi, and
artists of Hawaii such as Satoru Abe, Bumpei Akaji, Isami Doi, Ralph Iwamoto, Tadashi Sato and
others.
By juxtaposing the figurative art of Robert Gober, Jeff
Koons, Charles Ray and 30
other young
artists with images drawn from cutting - edge technologies and consumer culture, Deitch gives us a sobering glimpse of the post-human world to come.
The book illustrates works
by Ligon and
other artists — including Chris Ofili, Willem de
Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Lorna Simpson, Felix Gonzalez - Torres, and Jasper Johns — accompanied
by texts
by Ligon, Francesco Manacorda, Alex Farquharson, and Gregg Bordowitz, and an anthology of some 20 texts selected / excerpted
by Ligon.
Visitors see the first - floor sculpture studio, renovated in 1963
by the
artist; temporary exhibition on the 2nd floor; and on the 3rd floor, the living and dining space featuring over 200 works from Gross's extensive global art collection, including important American paintings
by Marsden Hartley, Willem De
Kooning, Milton Avery, Jacob Lawrence and many
others, installed
by the
artist and preserved as he had it during his lifetime.
Seeking works
by artists such as: Ed Ruscha, Andy Warhol, Raymond Pettibon, Jeff
Koons, Roy Lichtenstein, Jim Shaw, San Francis, Takashi Murakami, Alexander Calder, Richard Prince, Keith Haring, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Anish Kapoor, Frank Stella, Louise Nevelson, Chuck Close, Sol LeWitt, John Baldessari, Robert Longo, Pablo Picasso, David Hockney, Wayne Thiebaud, Francis Bacon, Rufino Tamayo, Willem DeKooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Jasper Johns Richard Avedon, Robert Mapplethorpe, David LaChapelle, WEEGEE, Diane Arbus, Ansel Adams, Helmut Newton, Cindy Sherman, Vik Muniz, Catherine Opie, Man Ray, Herb Ritts, Annie Leibovitz, William Eggleston * Amongst many
others *
Omer Tiroche Contemporary Art (London) will present a fresh selection of works
by some of the most important postwar and contemporary
artists, including Jean Michel Basquiat, Alexander Calder, John Chamberlain, Willem de
Kooning, Yayoi Kusama, Sol Lewitt, Nam June Paik, Claes Oldenburg, Frank Stella, and Andy Warhol, among
others.
Opening with masterpieces
by such major
artists as Kandinsky, Duchamp and Max Ernst, the exhibition goes on to explore postwar developments on both sides of the Atlantic, with the Art informel of European masters as Alberto Burri, Emilio Vedova, Jean Dubuffet, Lucio Fontana, and with work
by leading figures on the American art scene from the 1940s to the 1960s: Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Alexander Calder alongside work
by Willem de
Kooning, Robert Motherwell, Roy Lichtenstein, Cy Twombly and
others.
The show explores the spectrum of portraiture today and has an
artist lineup that includes works
by Jeff
Koons, Marina Abramovic, Nir Nod, Chantel Joffe, Youssef Nabil, Rez Aramesh and
others.
In the course of over 20 years she has founded the Israel Museum's international contemporary art collection and curated numerous exhibitions including James Turrell: Two Spaces (1982), Anselm Kiefer (1984), Three British Sculptors: Richard Deacon, Julian Opie, Richard Wentworth (1985), New York Now (Jeff
Koons, Sherrie Levine, Allan McCollum and
others, 1987), Christian Boltanski: Lessons of Darkness (1989), Life Size: A Sense of the Real in Recent Art (1990), Hidden Reflections (Marylène Negro, Christian Marclay, Hiroshi Sugimoto and
others, 1992), Kiki Smith (1994), Gerhard Richter (1995), Marks:
Artists Work Throughout Jerusalem (David Hammons, Juan Muñoz, Sarkis and
others, 1996) Skin - Deep: Surface Appearances in Contemporary Art (Zoe Leonard, Ana Mendieta, Khalil Rabah, Jana Sterbak and
others, 1999), Yinka Shonibare: Double Dress (2002), Nedko Solakov: Alien Auras (2003), Vanishing Point: Hidden Beauty in Contemporary Art (2005), Green Line — A Project
by Francis Alÿs (2005), News (2006), Made in China — The Estella Collection (2007), Bizarre Perfection (2008), First Show: Contemporary Art from The Israel Museum, Jerusalem.