Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for January 28th, 2007

Mi Puerto Rico, Master Painters of the Island, 1780-1952 at THE NEWARK MUSEUM

Sunday, January 28th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
THE NEWARK MUSEUM

Mi Puerto Rico
Master Painters of the Island, 1780-1952

THE NEWARK MUSEUM OFFERS LAST CONTINENTAL U.S. VIEWING
OF LANDMARK EXHIBITION
February 16 – April 15, 2007

THE NEWARK MUSEUM
49 Washington Street
Newark, New Jersey 07102-3176
General Information: 973-596-6550
http://www.newarkmuseum.org

The first major exhibition in the continental United States devoted to Puerto Rico’s three greatest masters, José Campeche, Francisco Oller, and Miguel Pou, opens at The Newark Museum on February 16, 2007. Organized by the Museo de Arte de Ponce, Mi Puerto Rico: Master Painters of the Island, 1780-1952 showcases select masterpieces from their permanent collection and rarely seen paintings from private collections in Puerto Rico. Celebrating the art and artists of this Caribbean island, Mi Puerto Rico provides an extraordinary glimpse into the rich artistic heritage of this United States Commonwealth. The Newark Museum is the exhibition’s final venue in the continental United States; it closes on April 15.

Mi Puerto Rico consists of forty paintings including portraits, still lifes, landscapes, and genre scenes by José Campeche (1751-1809), Francisco Oller (1833-1917), and Miguel Pou (1880-1968). The exhibition explores how these three principal painters from different generations perceived and rendered their surroundings, especially the island’s people and iconic landscapes, over the course of nearly two centuries. Providing a broader context for the paintings of Oller and Pou, there are five additional works by several artists who were their peers: Ramon Atiles, Manuel E. Jordan, Jose Cuchi, Felix Medina and Ramon Frade.

José Campeche was the official portrait painter of 18th-century Puerto Rico. His elegant, delicate, and refined renderings offer detailed testimony about the life of the ruling classes. Bishops, governors, mayors, and other high-ranking officials commissioned him to paint their likenesses. Campeche was the son of a slave who had bought his freedom. Yet, from these inauspicious roots, Campeche became the best portrait painter in the Spanish America of his era, achieving an honored position within San Juan’s ruling elite. Campeche did not limit his artistic talents to painting; he was also well known as an urban planner, architectural draftsman, musician, musical instrument craftsman as well as a fireworks maker. Because of his impressively broad range of talents, his mastery allowed him access to the pillars of Puerto Rican society: the Catholic Church, government, and the military. A retrospective of Campeche’s work was held in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art in
1988.

The legacy of artistic excellence established by Campeche continued with Francisco Oller, whose paintings epitomized a new role for the artist, that of critic as well as chronicler of society. Oller’s formal education began with trips to Spain and France, where he resided for a number of years. The influence of the Spanish master painters is evident in his still lifes. In Paris, he joined the vanguard of Courbet and Manet, becoming close friends with Pissarro and Cézanne. He embraced Realism and Impressionism, artistic movements that were changing the face of painting in the West. In the landscapes he painted after returning to Puerto Rico, he sought to capture the Caribbean’s atmosphere through its tropical light and intense, variable skies. In 1983, a major exhibition of Oller’s work traveled to El Museo del Barrio in New York, the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de America Latina in Washington, D.C. and the Museum of Fine Arts in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Miguel Pou liked to portray what the artist called “regional types.” Pou studied in the United States at the Art Students League in New York and the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts during the earlier part of the 20th-century. In terms of subject matter, he wished to “reflect the soul of my people” and a way of life he feared was being “blown by the wind” of modernity. His best work was local, embracing the land, its people, and their customs. Like Campeche and Oller before him, Pou helped to define the national character of Puerto Rico during his lifetime, and he added to the island’s artistic tradition in equally important ways.

The additional works in Mi Puerto Rico are by contemporaries of Oller and Pou. These artists were also inspired by the island’s majestic landscape, and they portrayed its inhabitants and especially the abundance of the natural world as symbols of pride and authenticity.

Visit our Web site for more information on the exhibit or The Newark Museum @ http://www.newarkmuseum.org

For more information go to: http://www.newarkmuseum.org

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Words and Things at Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen

Sunday, January 28th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen

Words and Things
Alexander Gutke, Annette Kelm, Susanne Kriemann, Matthias Meyer, Christopher Williams
3rd February – 9th April 2007

Opening: Friday, 2nd February,
7.30 pm

Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen
Grabbeplatz 4
D - 40213 Düsseldorf
http://www.kunstverein-duesseldorf.de

Words and things have a somewhat arbitrary relationship to one another. Any thinking about the constitution of language incorporates therefore thinking about the cognition of reality, images and things. How do language and systems of categorization determine reality and the portrayal of reality? Is our perception governed by what we think we know? In his book The Order of Things, the original title of which translating as "Words and Things", the French philosopher Michel Foucault investigates different historical systems of classification with regard to ways in which the "world" is apprehended.

The group exhibition "Words and Things" features a series of photographs and films by international artists, who, in the broadest sense possible, engage in with questions of representation and show how aesthetic and cultural meaning often emanates primarily from the interpretation of images.

Discussions with artists in the context of the exhibition "Words and Things":

Thursday, 22nd February, 7.30 pm
Discussion I
Matthias Meyer

Thursday, 8th March, 7.30 pm
Discussion II
Susanne Kriemann

Thursday, 22nd March, 7.30 pm
Discussion III
Alexander Gutke

Thursday, 29th March, 7.30 pm
Discussion IV
Annette Kelm

Opening times: Tuesday – Saturday 12 – 7 pm / Sundays 11 am – 6 pm

The Kunstverein is supported by

For more information go to: http://www.kunstverein-duesseldorf.de