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Fine Arts

  • Dream and Reality at Istanbul Modern

    A Celebration of Woman Artists of Turkey

    By: Zeren Earls - Oct 31st, 2011

    Via an impressive historical overview of Turkish woman artists, the exhibition highlights the changes from empire to republic to today's vibrant contemporary art scene in Turkey. Curated by Levent Çalιkoglu of Istanbul Modern, feminist academic and activist Fatmagül Berktay, and art historians Zeynep Ínankur and Burcu Pelvanoglu, the exhibition takes its title from the 1891 novel, Dream and Reality, coauthored by Fatma Aliye Topuz, the first female Turkish novelist, and Ahmet Mithat, a male journalist. The show runs to January 22, 2012.

  • Istanbul Biennial

    An Outstanding 12th Edition

    By: Zeren Earls - Oct 24th, 2011

    Istanbul is up there with Venice and Sao Paulo among the art biennials that matter. The 2011 edition explores the relationship between art and politics. Aesthetically pleasing, it is a sophisticated, rewarding show, which runs to November 13.

  • Pennie Brantley at National Association of Women Artists

    NY Exhibition on View Through October 27

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 20th, 2011

    The work of the realist painter Pennie Brantley is readily familiar from participation in Boston and Berkshire based exhibitions. She is currently the focus of a one woman exhibition at the venerable National Association of Women Artists. This stunning show remains on view through October 27.

  • The Art Salon in Central Mass

    An Interview with Pat Bock

    By: David Wilson - Oct 20th, 2011

    When I sat down with Pat a week ago, ostensibly to discuss her Eagle Hill 2011-2012 Art Teas schedule, I had little idea how wide a spectrum of ideas we would end up exchanging. Here in a somewhat distilled form is the essence of our conversation.

  • Van Gogh's Death Suicide or Murder

    Gregory White Smith & Steven Naifeh's Gogh: His Life

    By: Nelida Nassar - Oct 19th, 2011

    The 1991 Pulitzer Price winner Gregory White Smith and Steven Naifeh argue a new theory regarding Van Gogh death in their recently published book Van Gogh: His Life. According to the two authors the world most famous painter would not have committed suicide but would have been murdered. This is an intriguing hypothesis worth contemplating but cannot be proven.

  • Big, Bold, and Undeniably Ambitious

    Jonathan Prince at the Sculpture Garden in New York City

    By: Edward Rubin - Oct 18th, 2011

    At first glance, Prince’s monumental sculptures appear to be nothing more than simple geometric forms, a square with a broken edge, a column with its top gouged, and couple of circular sculptural riffs, one resembling a large distressed pill set on edge, the other a partially eaten donut doing a clever balancing act. On closer examination the lively simple shaped quartet begins to take on an otherworldly, if not quasi-religious cast.

  • Ellsworth Kelly at the MFA

    Museum School Alumnus Shows Wood Sculptures

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 30th, 2011

    The first special exhibition in the newly renovated Linde Family Wing of Contempoary Art is a survey of wood sculptures by Ellsworth Kelly. With this project the MFA honors one of the most distinguished among the alumni of its Museum School. During the opening Kelly spoke with the media about studying with Boston Expressionist Karl Zerbe.

  • Contemporary Art in Boston

    Smoke and Mirrors at the MFA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 23rd, 2011

    On the occasion of the opening of the Linde Family Wing of Contemporary Art we reflect on a troubling history. There has been a struggle going back to the 1930s and the founding of the Institute of Contemporary Art. There has been an awkward relationship between the ICA, MFA and other museums in the area. It is now time for art workers to unite and throw off their chains.

  • MFA Goes Contemporary

    New Linde Wing Abounds in Surprises, Satisfactions

    By: David Bonetti - Sep 19th, 2011

    Many scoffed that the MFA didn't have any contemporary art. The new installation of the collection proves that the old dame has more than Morris Louis. Bostonians are among the best-educated and most sophisticated people in America and they don’t need to be treated as if they are grade school children when it comes to contemporary art.

  • Paul Ha Named Director of List Visual Arts Center

    MIT's Contemporary Art Museum Has New Leadership

    By: MIT/ List - Sep 12th, 2011

    Paul Ha, the current director of the Contemporary Art Museum in St. Louis, has been selected as the new director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) List Visual Arts Center. Mr. Ha is expected to begin his new position Dec. 1.

  • Prince Ankhaf a Coveted Treasure of the Museum of Fine Arts

    Grandstanding Mohamed Saleh Demands Its Return to Egypt

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 14th, 2011

    The Museum of Fine Arts is known to have the finest collection of Old Kingdom Egyptian art outside of Cairo. Its greatest treasure, which it acquired through shrewd negotiation in 1927, is the limestone, polychromed portrait bust of Prince Ankhaf. Egypt wants it back. The MFA response is more or less, bloody hell.

  • Mass MoCA Confirms Anselm Kiefer Installation

    Adding to Success of the LeWitt Building

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 08th, 2011

    Since December of 2010 we have been asking Joe Thompson about a long term installation of works by the major German contemporary artist Anselm Kiefer. He squirmed and refused to answer the question. As we have previously reported the museum is now in the process of creating another long term installation similar to the enormously successful building devoted to the late Sol LeWitt. It greatly strengthens North Adams as a global art world destination.

  • Eva Hesse At Institute of Contemporary Art

    Studiowork Showcases A Visceral Experimentation

    By: Mark Favermann - Aug 07th, 2011

    Eva Hesse was arguably one of the 20th Century's great sculptors male or female. Challenging herself with new, nontraditional and experimental materials and techniques, her work both synthesizes and transcends Minimalism, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism and Conceptual Art. The rarely seen and rather small Studiowork pieces now on view at the ICA are 50 process and test sculptural objects that indicate the thought and direction of the artist as her worked developed. The small size of the exhibit leaves the viewer wanting much more.

  • Museum of Fine Arts Goes Contemporary

    Linde Family Wing Opens Sept. 17-18

    By: David Bonetti - Jul 23rd, 2011

    The MFA's Fall season this year will be as change-making as last year's. The entire West Wing will be transformed to a contemporary art museum, featuring art from 1970 to the present. In the special exhibition galleries, "Degas and the Nude" should be one of the most important shows of the year internationally.

  • Jane Ingram Allen at South Boston Distillery Gallery

    Water – Paper – Life

    By: Nelida Nassar - Jul 19th, 2011

    Using transformative materials, in particular handmade paper, environmental artist Jane Ingram Allen has taken ordinary items that are ubiquitous in the City--manhole covers, signage. etc., and created a provocative installation. The work was crafted during a two week residency in South Boston at The Distillery Gallery. Allen both compels viewers to connect the presence of these items with water while seeking to raise awareness of this commodity as a fragile and quite precious but vital resource.

  • 2011 Maud Morgan Prize To Wendy Jacob

    Cambridge Artist to Display at MFA in September

    By: MFA - Jul 13th, 2011

    Last given in 2006, the Maud Morgan Prize was initially established as a purchase prize for under recognized midcareer women artists. The MFA has been criticized for nor awarding this prize by the local community. It has now been slightly changed to be a direct cash prize of $10,000 rather than the initial $5000 purchase prize. Another change is that recognition will now be given to more distinguished women artists. A small MFA exhibit of the artist's work is part of the prize. This year's recipient, Wendy Jacob combines high purpose with sculptural forms.

  • Cy Twombly Dies In Rome

    Creator of A Unique Elusive Aesthetic

    By: Mark Favermann - Jul 12th, 2011

    The aesthetically hard to pin down master artist Cy Twombly was one of the giants of contemporary art of the last sixty years. His work has been embraced as well as vilified. It is provocative, disturbing and incomprehensible while being somehow brilliant and heroic. Leaving a legacy of art of undefinable and probably irrelevant interpretation, Twombly died in Rome last week. Despite notions to the contrary, he lived half the year in Italy and half the year in his native Virginia.

  • Berkshire Collectors Jay and Jane Braus

    Exhibition at the Berkshire Museum Thorugh October 11

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 07th, 2011

    The fine arts collectors Jay and Jane Braus divide their time between summers in the Berkshires and winters in Florida. When they sold their home in Larchmont a collection of major abstraction expressionist works was liquidated. But those bare walls in a Florida condo started them going again. Through October a selection of works from their collection is on view at the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield.

  • 'COLORS' by Sarah Sutro

    Reflections on Planet Earth and Art

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Jul 04th, 2011

    Sarah Sutro is a painter, writer and poet. Her latest publication, COLORS, Passages through Art, Asia and Nature was published in 2010. This one hundred page book offers one thousand bits of wisdom, knowledge and information about living thoughtfully, carefully and well - here and abroad.

  • Brandeis University Resolves Rose Art Museum Lawsuit

    Museum to Observe Its 50th Year

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 30th, 2011

    Today, Brandeis University president, Fred Lawrence stated in part "I am very pleased to inform you that Brandeis and the four plaintiffs involved in the Rose Art Museum litigation have reached an agreement to settle the case. As a result, their claims have been dismissed. In addition, the Massachusetts Office of the Attorney General has officially terminated its review of Brandeis." The Rose will remain open.

  • Pissarro Lecture at the Mahaiwe July 7

    Michael Cassin of the Clark in Free Speech

    By: Clark - Jun 23rd, 2011

    Michael Cassin, Director, Center for Education in the Visual Arts at The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute will present a free lecture on the Clark's major summer exhibition Pissarro's People on Thursday, July 7 at 7:00 pm at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center. In this special lecture, Cassin will introduce the people in Pissarro’s paintings.

  • Memory of Water at Shakespeare & Company

    Cast Adrift

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 19th, 2011

    The contemporary play The Memory of Water by Shelagh Stephenson has been given a spirited and at times hilarious production at Shakespeare & Company. But a first rate, brilliant cast and totally committed performances are not enough to salvage a messy play that sinks to the bottom under the weight of trying to combine tragedy, a funeral, with comedy.

  • Reflections on Melville: Arthur Yanoff and Kay Canavino

    Arrowhead and the Eclipse Mill Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 18th, 2011

    This summer Arrowhead, the Pittsfield historic site and former home of Herman Melville is presenting its first ever special exhibition of contemporary art "Reflections on Melville." Inspired by the collaboration of Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne this is a project by the painter Arthur Yanoff and the photographer Kay Canavino. A second part of the project will be on view starting June 24 at the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams.

  • Flush With the Walls 40 Years Later

    Does the MFA Give a Crap About Boston Artists

    By: Sarah Hwang - Jun 17th, 2011

    Forty years later to the day a group of Boston artists, organized by Boston Phoenix art critic, Greg Cook, recreated a preemptive strike on the uptight and stuffy MFA. In a roto rooter event artists hung their works in the male and female rest rooms of the venerable Fenway dowager. The exhibition and reception was busted, rather politely, after just twenty hilarious minutes. But 21 artists can now put the MFA on their resume. Three of the artists, Robert Guillemin (Sidewalk Sam), David Raymond, and Jo Sandman reprieved their original participation. The big question focused on whether or not the MFA has really changed over the past 40 years?

  • New Director At RISD Museum of Art

    John W. Smith Appointed

    By: Rhode Island School of Design - Jun 16th, 2011

    Effective Fall 2011, John W. Smith will serve as the director of the Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design. He brings a distinguished background to the job along with major fund-raising skills. He currently serves as the director of the Archives of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution and was formerly the assistant director at The Andy Warhol Museum. Mr. Smith is a talented curator, administrator and scholar.

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