Jack Tworkov: Against Extremes, Five Decades of Painting, on view from August 13 to October 27, 2009, offers a chronological arrangement of Tworkov's most
celebrated works lent from prominent private and public collections including The Albright - Knox Art Gallery (Buffalo, NY), The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington, DC), The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY), and The Provincetown Art Association and Museum (MA).
Jack Tworkov: Against Extremes — Five Decades of Painting, on view from August 13 to October 27, 2009, offers a chronological arrangement of Tworkov's most
celebrated works lent from prominent private and public collections including The Albright - Knox Art Gallery (Buffalo, NY), The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington, DC), The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY), and The Provincetown Art Association and Museum (MA).
Not exact matches
Although she did not win the prize, she became a
celebrated artist, with Charles Saatchi initially acquiring the
work, which was recently sold for # 2.54 million at Christie's, acquired by a German businessman who has since
lent it to the Tate, where the bed now sleeps.
More than 4,000 other pieces from the Goetz Collection, which includes
works by Richard Prince, Rachel Whiteread, Douglas Gordon, Isa Genzken and Andreas Gursky, and which
celebrates its twentieth anniversary this year, will be
lent on permanent loan.
Among its many highlights, Robert Rauschenberg presents the artist's widely
celebrated Combines (1954 — 64) and silkscreen paintings (1962 — 64) in fresh ways, including two rarely
lent works: Charlene (1954), the last and largest from the artist's series of Red Paintings, which incorporates mirrors, part of a man's undershirt, an umbrella, comic strips, and a light that flashes on and off; and Monogram (1955 — 59), Rauschenberg's famous Combine assembled from a taxidermied angora goat and a tire, positioned on a painted and collaged wooden platform.