Feb 22

Wellington.scoop.co.nz » The 2012 New Zealand International Arts …

Press Release – New Zealand International Arts Festival

Prepare for 24 days of extraordinary arts experiences when the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival opens in Wellington this Friday.
Around 900 artists from around the globe will descend on Wellington and fill its theatres – and streets – for New Zealand’s largest multi-arts festival. The 2012 programme spans everything from salsa to Shakespeare, from home-grown opera to fairy tales and features artists from as far afield as the Sahara and as close to home as Newtown.
“The 2012 Festival programme has been greeted with huge enthusiasm,’’ says Festival Executive Chair Kerry Prendergast. ‘’Wellington audiences have embraced the Festival and we’re also attracting increasing numbers from all over the country. Whether it’s the high-energy physical theatre of the National Theatre of Scotland’s Beautiful Burnout, the charm and wit of Circus Ronaldo’s vintage Big Top or the magical Fijian love story, Masi, there’s something for everyone. With nine world premieres, the new Town Hall Gigs and a feast of Shakespeare, there is plenty to choose from.’’

The opening weekend kicks off with the free First Contact 2012 opening night party on the waterfront: the Festival ‘’fan zone’’. Artist Michel Tuffery’s vibrant projected artworks will transform the facade of Te Papa into a moving canvas from 8.30pm, with music and dance from the Whitireia Performing Arts School, The Nomad, Horomona Horo – and more. From 6pm, French acrobats Les Philébulistes will perform Arcane, jaw-dropping feats atop their giant wheels at Waitangi Park.
The city’s theatres will pulse to the irresistible Brazilian rhythms of Grupo Corpo with Parabelo/Onqotô ; the devilish fairy tale of Kneehigh Theatre’s The Wild Bride; the monumental Stravinsky double-bill, Oedipus Rex and Symphony of Psalms and Pan Pan Theatre’s unique take on Hamlet, The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane. The TelstraClear Festival Club, on Odlin’s Plaza, opens with the Barons of Tang’s ‘’gypsy death core’’. Other highlights of opening weekend include Taki Rua’s epic Michael James Manaia, and the New Zealand String Quartet begins its 25th anniversary celebrations with Beethoven! The Age of Enlightenment at St Mary of the Angels church. Tickets for most shows start at 48.
For those who have never been to a Festival event before, head down to the First Contact centre, in front of Te Papa throughout the Festival, for a chance to win discounted tickets.
ENDS
Content Sourced from scoop.co.nzOriginal url

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Feb 21

FREE Arts Workshop | B31 Voices

From Emma Bowen, Ikon Gallery. FREE Workshop TOMORROW as part of Birmingham City Council’s Arts Champions scheme:

Join Emma from the Ikon Gallery and Elaine the cellist from Birmingham Contemporary Music Group for an afternoon of drawing to music on Tuesday 21 February at Allens Cross Community Centre 12-2pm. The afternoon is FREE and everyone is welcome, so bring your friends and family along to listen to this incredible artist and get creative in the process.
For more info please call Emma on 0121 248 0708.
Allens Cross Community Centre,Tinkers Farm Road, B31 1RH

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Feb 20

Artists Personal Choice – Richard Piper – 1stAngel Arts Magazine …

Posted by 1stAngel on February 19, 2012 in Photography, Pick of the Day | 0 comments

Artists Personal Choice is a series of posts where the artist themselves show us favourites from their own work.
Todays artist is Richard Piper London – United Kingdom
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Since an early childhood encounter with sunlight sensitive paper, a couple of rubber bands and some old family negatives, my fascination with image creation was kindled. To help fan the flames, art, science and the natural world were subjects that excited me then – and still do today.
I guess with that mix of ingredients, it’s not surprising that my future life and livelihood would revolve around the creation and capture of still and moving images.
I am fundamentally a ‘visual’ junky. I love the buzz and challenge of bringing together the technical with the artistic – the tools with the imagination – the physical with the intangible. And with today’s amazing advances in technology, combined with the ever increasing human appetite for visual stimulation, I believe that the magic of artistic photography has only just begun.

Every time I look outside my house I see a different forest, with seasons, climate and time of day constantly playing a different story. My aim was to capture the wonder and mystery and the sense of past spirits that linger in this prehistoric woodland. Although quite abstract in form, the image contains subtle hidden details, that draw in those who look.

A black bird sits quietly on its favourite perch. With sunlight softly twinkling and leaves gently waving in the breeze, it is perfect weather for flying… and perfect weather for not.

This is one of my favourite winter images. I love the juxtaposition of the moon and the nest, with the snow covered branches creating a classic Disney cartoon like impression. The image was also processed to further enhance the hand painted fantasy feel, yet still contain the details of reality.

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If you would like to be shown here, please use the contact form to let me know.
© 2012, 1stAngel. All rights reserved.

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Feb 19

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston to launch its first online catalogue …

BOSTON.- Just in time for Presidents’ Day, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, will debut on February 20 its first online catalogue, Paintings of the Americas. The free digital publication, available here, will feature a selection of more than 400 paintings from its collection of nearly 2,000 (including new acquisitions) created by artists from the 17th through the 20th centuries. The online catalogue was produced to complement the Museum’s Art of the Americas Wing. This is the first publication in a generation to document the MFA’s world-renowned holdings of American paintings, along with those that represent the broader spectrum of the Americas. With its elegant design, ease of use, and access to a wide range of information, Paintings of the Americas tells a compelling story through a chronological exploration of diverse works from North, Central, and South America. It also showcases masterworks by John Singleton Copley, Mary Cassatt, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Wifredo Lam. Support for this publication was provided by the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz Foundation for the Arts, the Ann and William Elfers Publication Fund, the Wyeth Foundation for American Art, and the Vance Wall Foundation. “We are especially pleased to introduce to our online visitors—including families, students, and museum lovers—a new way to experience for free one of the world’s finest collections of American paintings in a format that will be regularly added to and updated as new information is entered into our database,” said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the Museum.In 2000, the MFA was one of only a few museums in the world to make its collection available online, and today, the majority of its 450,000 works can be viewed on the web. Now, with the new online catalogue, readers using a personal computer or tablet, such as an iPad, will be able to dig deeper into information about 425 paintings by browsing artwork by chapter, title, and artist; bookmarking favorites; reading essays; and enjoying interviews with curators and conservators. The catalogue’s online format will allow content to be regularly updated and, in the future, the number of paintings featured will expand, as will the range of scholarly background information. Beginning with a Director’s Foreword by Malcolm Rogers and an introduction by Elliot Bostwick Davis, the John Moors Cabot Chair of the Art of the Americas Department, the catalogue is organized into 12 chapters,with headings written by Erica E. Hirshler, the MFA’s Croll Senior Curator of American Paintings. It will highlight works that reflect the broader definition of the art of our nation and the Americas by incorporating a greater number of paintings by women, indigenous artists, artists of color, Latin American artists, and self-taught artists. A selection of newly acquired works by African American artists from the John Axelrod Collection also will be showcased in the online publication.“Complementing the opening of the Museum’s Art of the Americas Wing, the online catalogue represents painters from the colonial Americas, the United States, and those from North, Central, and South America. As in our galleries, we hope visitors to the publication will discover a range of artistic expression that derives inspiration from a variety of cultures, periods, and styles found around the world and closer to home,” said Davis, who oversaw the creation of the catalogue led by Karen E. Quinn, the MFA’s Kristin and Roger Servison Curator of Paintings, and Erica E. Hirshler.Recent scholarship, innovative design, and the latest digital publishing technology will bring the Museum’s works to audiences as never before—completely for free. “We are committed to publishing the MFA’s collections by the best means available, whether the delivery ‘device’ has printed pages or a touch screen. This type of catalogue is well-suited to the digital realm. It represents a true marriage of traditional museum publishing and all the scholarship behind it, and the accessibility and connectivity made possible by the web,” said Emiko Usui, Director of MFA Publications.MFA Publications, the publishing imprint of the MFA, offers a wide variety of scholarly and general-interest books on the visual arts, including essays, biographies, and exhibition and collections catalogues. Paintings from the Americas is one example of the innovative ways MFA Publications shares works from the Museum’s collection with readers. Another is the creation of e-books, such as Sargent’s Daughters: The Biography of a Painting (2009) by Erica E. Hirshler, Croll Senior Curator of Paintings in the Art of the Americas at the MFA, which explores the genesis of one of the Museum’s great iconic works, The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit (1882) by John Singer Sargent. The book can be downloaded from a variety of e-book retailers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and iBooks. Additionally, beginning this summer, MFA Publications will provide to online visitors at www.mfa.org/publications several downloadable PDFs of select out-of-print publications, such as Sargent’s Murals, originally published in 1999. Written by Carol Troyen, Pamela Hatchfield, and Lydia Vagts, the book celebrates the famous murals Sargent created for the MFA’s rotunda and colonnade in the early 20th century, and the subsequent restoration process that was undertaken by the MFA in 1999. Included among upcoming publications is a printed catalogue and an e-book version to complement Sargent’s Watercolors (title TBD), an exhibition jointly sponsored by the MFA and Brooklyn Museum, which will open at the MFA in the fall of 2013. Produced by MFA Publications, the catalogue will feature a lead essay by Erica E. Hirshler, which places Sargent’s watercolors in the context of his own works in oil and in relationship to 20th-century watercolor practice. Other contributors are Antoinette Owen, Senior Paper Conservator at the Brooklyn Museum, and Annette Manick, Head Conservator, MFA, Boston; Richard Ormond, Director, John Singer Sargent Catalogue Raisonn?; Teresa A. Carbone, Andrew W. Mellon Curator of American Art and Karen Sherry, Associate Curator of American Art.

Read more here: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston to launch its first online catalogue …

Disk cleaner

Feb 19

LYRIC CENTER FOR THE ARTS Virginia, Minnesota: Range of the …

The 9th annualRange of the Arts 
A celebration of the arts and culture on the Iron Range!Saturday, Feb. 25thArts International Bazaar

Kaleva Hall – 121 3rd St. N. Virginia
Buy Coffee an’ ($3) or Soup Lunch ($7) by Ladies of Kaleva

30+ local artists, artisans and cooks!
Sponsored by Ladies & Knights of Kaleva and Sons of Norway

A ‘play date’ for creative women!5:30pm—8pmThe First Stage Gallery
514 Chestnut Street, Virginia

Please register in advance by  e-mailing  lyriccenterforthearts@yahoo.com.
Cost:  $15.00  (you may also want to bring a monetary tip for the masseuse)

514 Chestnut Street, downtown Virginia

Find out how to utilize the new web site created by the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board to get the word out about your artwork.

Saturday, March 3rdPaintings and Sketches from the Pros
Artist Reception at The First Stage Gallery
Noon – 2:30pmThe First Stage Gallery

An exhibit of work by local masters, Bob Maki and Al Zaverl
Exhibit runs throughout the month of March
Thursday—Saturday 11am—3pm

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Feb 18

Coconut Grove Arts Festival 2/18-20/12 | Soul Of Miami

Coconut Grove Arts FestivalFebruary 18-20, 2012. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.Coconut Grove, Florida. The Arts Festival’s colorful mile-long path begins on McFarlane Road and runs down South Bayshore Drive offering picturesque views of Biscayne Bay.
$10 per person per day. Children 12 and under are free. All animals are prohibited except for certified animals assisting disabled guests.
Standard tickets are available at the Festival gates, as well as online at www.CGAF.com. Residents of Coconut Grove in the 33133 zip code can enjoy the Festival for $5.00 per day (proof of residency required). Group tickets for parties of 50 or more can be purchased by calling (877) 7-CG-ARTS.
The Coconut Grove Arts Festival® returns this President’s Day weekend to inspire ones imagination for visual, culinary and performing arts. The 49th annual three-day event brings the most talented and creative artists from all over the world to Coconut Grove, February 18 – 20, 2012.
Considered the top fine art event in the history of Sunshine Artist Magazine’s 200 Best, artists from more than 43 states and Canada were among the more than 1,200 applicants that submitted samples in mixed media, painting, photography, digital art, printmaking & drawing, watercolor, claywork, glass, fiber, jewelry & metalwork, sculpture and wood. Applicants included 19 local artists from the Miami area and more than 100 from Florida.
“Our festival is truly a celebration of the arts, introducing top caliber masters of art in all mediums and genres,” said Monty Trainer, president of the Arts Festival. “Locals and visiting guests alike will appreciate the internationally celebrated visual, musical and culinary collections.”
Complementing the visual arts on display is the popular Culinary Pavilion which invites nationally-renowned chefs to prepare their famous dishes and explain their specialties. This year’s chefs will represent successful restaurants and hotels from South Florida, including some nationally recognized authors. In addition, musicians will grace the Festival’s main stage located in Peacock Park
Residents of Coconut Grove in the 33133 zip code can enjoy the Festival for a reduced admission of $5 (proof of residency required).
The Coconut Grove Arts Festival is produced by the non-profit Coconut Grove Arts and Historical Association. Proceeds help fund year-round arts programs. The association also maintains the Coconut Grove Arts Festival Gallery and presents special exhibitions throughout the year from its location at the Shoppes at Mayfair.Since its inception in 1963, the association has awarded more than $100,000 in scholarships to students who attend fine arts programs in local schools. For more information or to purchase tickets for the Arts Festival online, visit www.CGAF.com.
Information courtesy www.miamiartguide.com

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Feb 15

Art News | Jack Rutberg Fine Arts to feature Two Solo Exhibitions …

Written by David Wollheim Tuesday, 14 February 2012 00:40

Los Angeles, California.- Jack Rutberg Fine Arts is honored to present two solo exhibitions which continue the gallery’s themed Pacific Standard Time shows, which debuted September 28th, 2011 with an historic Hans Burkhardt exhibition. “Claire Falkenstein: An Expansive Universe” and “Ruth Weisberg: Now & Then” are both on view at the gallery from February 18th through April 28th. Ruth Weisberg will be inattendance for the opening reception of Saturday, February 18th from 6.00 to 9.00 pm.“Claire Falkenstein: An Expansive Universe” features a selection of the artist’s larger sculptural work and rarely-seen paintings, and follows an earlier Pacific Standard Time exhibition at the gallery of her intimately-scaled sculpture, wall pieces and iconic jewelry. Claire Falkenstein’s (1908-1997) work, with its innovative use of materials such as glass, metal and resin, reveals a prescient fascination with the possibilities of chance and choice which parallels current views of our expanding universe. Her ability to move sculpture to non-traditional realms, whereby she incorporates and suggests both the expansiveness of form as well as the compression of space, has established her as one of the most important modern artists in this medium.  Falkenstein is well-known as the creator of Peggy Guggenheim’s Venice palazzo gates. Falkenstein’s first solo museum exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Art in 1940 was followed by her works being shown at such prestigious museums as the Louvre and the Rodin Museums of Paris.
Moving to Paris for 13 years in 1950, her studio was a central meeting place for admiring critics and artists. Her works were shown at The Tate Gallery in London, Whitney Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, Art Institute of Chicago, the Guggenheim Museums in New York and Venice, National Museum of American Art at the Smithsonian Institute, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Armand Hammer Museum of Art, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. The exhibition also launches the first major publication detailing her entire career – Claire Falkenstein – with essays by art historians Susan M. Anderson and Maren Henderson, art writer and critic Michael Duncan, and an introduction by Philip Linhares, President of the Falkenstein Foundation and former Chief Curator of Art at the Oakland Museum of California.
“Ruth Weisberg: Now & Then” presents paintings and works on paper by one of Los Angeles’ most celebrated figurative artists since her arrival in 1969.  The exhibition, which includes her most recent paintings, and spanning more than three decades, reveals Weisberg’s unique vision through which the viewer sees the convergence of art history, personal memory, and cultural experience. The exhibition reveals Weisberg’s decades-long interest in re-imagining the works of such past masters as Titian, Velazquez, Blake and Corot.  Through fresco-like effects in her unstretched paintings, as well as the veils of washes in her masterful lithographs, Weisberg brings past-time into contemporary context. Ruth Weisberg is currently a professor at USC, where she was one of the longest tenured Deans of the Roski School of Fine Art.  Ruth Weisberg is the first living painter to have been afforded a solo exhibition at the Norton Simon Museum of Art. She holds that distinction as well at the Huntington Library.  Her first major survey in Los Angeles was in 1979 at Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery. The subject of over 80 solo and 185 group exhibitions, Weisberg’s work is included in the permanent collections of over 60 museums, including the Metropolitan Museum, National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., Whitney Museum of American Art, Portland Art Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Getty Research Institute, Norton Simon Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Detroit Institute of Arts, Biblioteque Nationale in Paris, and Rome Institute Nationale per la Grafica, among many others.
Jack Rutberg Fine Arts in Los Angeles was established in 1979 as a gallery dealing in Modern and Contemporary art. In that capacity they have acted as dealer, curator, and consultant for more than 25 years, representing a wide range of important American and European artists. Jack Rutberg hismelf has lectured extensively on a wide range of subjects related to Modern and Contemporary art in colleges and universities, including the University of California Los Angeles, California State University Northridge, Utah State University, Pierce College, Fullerton College, Orange Coast College, and Rancho Santiago College. Credited with bringing significant artists to broader public attention, Mr. Rutberg has been particularly responsible for the formidable attention afforded to the Irish contemporary painter Patrick Graham and Swiss born American painter Hans Burkhardt (1904-1994).Both artists are represented internationally by Jack Rutberg Fine Arts. Mr. Rutberg is the exclusive agent for The Hans G. & Thordis W. Burkhardt Foundation. Regarded as an authority on their works, Mr. Rutberg has on frequent occasions lectured on both artists at numerous museums. Mr. Rutberg has published extensively on the works of Hans Burkhardt. Among the many catalogues published to date on Burkhardt, Mr. Rutberg has written the catalogue raisonné, Hans Burkhardt: The War Paintings, published by Santa Susana Press, California State University Northridge. Documented are Burkhardt’s paintings created in response to war, spanning the Spanish Civil War through the mid 1980′s. Other publications include Hans Burkhardt: Desert Storms, Burkhardt’s response to the Iraq Kuwait conflict, published in 1991, and Black Rain documenting Burkhardt’s final works dating from 1993 and most recently, Hans Burkhardt: Paintings of the 1960s. In more than 29 years at its La Brea Avenue location, the Rutberg Gallery has featured exhibitions by gallery represented artists Jordi Alcaraz, Hans Burkhardt, Patrick Graham, Reuben Nakian, Ruth Weisberg, Jerome Witkin and Francisco Zuniga in addition to a wide range of solo exhibitions of major international artists: Alexander Calder, Oskar Fischinger, Sam Francis, Arshile Gorky, George Herms, Hundertwasser, Käthe Kollwitz, Georges Rouault, Edward Ruscha, Antoni Tapies, Max Weber and others. The gallery has been particularly noteworthy for its emphasis on education, presenting numerous lectures and panel discussions. Through that endeavor, Jack Rutberg Fine Arts is an important resource for established and beginning collectors, art historians, and museums internationally. Visit the gallery’s website at … http://www.jackrutbergfinearts.com/Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~

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Feb 15

ArtiGras: A one-of-a-kind Fine Arts Festival | Palm Beach …

Works by artists such as Edward Loedding (left) are a big part of ArtiGras, as is the food available.

UPDATE: Added link to location
For 26 years, ArtiGras has been the go-to outdoor festival of fine arts in Palm Beach County. Last year about 125,000 people visited Abacoa for the three-day event. A juried exhibition of fine art, ArtiGras attracts the best artists nationwide. Sunshine Artist Magazine has rated ArtiGras one of the top 50 fine art shows in the nation, and for good reason.
The Fine Arts Area showcases 280 artists competing for more than $15,000 in prize and purchase awards money in the areas of ceramics, digital art, drawing/graphics/printmaking, emerging artists, fiber, glass, jewelry, metal, mixed media, painting, photography, sculpture and wood.

Directions, nearby dining | For further information, please go to: www.artigras.org

But Artigras also prides itself on being a family-friendly event and they’ve added new kids activities this year. The show also benefits local schools and charities, including the Kiwanis Club, Quantum House, Girl Scouts of Southeast Florida, Amara Shriners, Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League and 30 local and private schools.But there’s more to do than browsing the diverse collection of art. Here’s a rundown on what you’ll find:
Artist Demonstration Stage: Artists demonstrate technique and answer questions. Find a schedule in the festival program.Artivity Avenue: Adults can find their own inner artist on Artivity Ave. For instance, take a painting class with Alla Prima while enjoying complimentary wine and cheese.Homegrown Artists: This area features 13 local artists who are exhibiting at an outdoor art festival for the first time. It’s art that was created in your own backyard.Entertainment Stage: Hear music from jazz to R&B to rock to blues on the main stage, located near the Beer Garden and Food Court. Saturday performers include Taylor Renee, Page Turner Adventures, Peter Troup Band and New Horizon Band. Sunday it’s the Maltz Jupiter Theatre Youth Touring Company, Ray Chang, Burnt Biscuit and Eclipse. On Monday, Jeff Harding, The Party Dogs and the Anthony Carrado Super Funky Jazz Band.The Garden Art Area: Art and handmade crafts created with the backyard garden in mind, including sculptures, fountains and furnishings.
ESPECIALLY FOR KIDSArtiKids Area: A place for your little artist to get his or her hands dirty. They can sculpt or throw a pot on the potter’s wheel, or use recycled materials to create a masterpiece.Youth Art Competition Gallery: Tomorrow’s Andy Warhol might be exhibiting at ArtiGras today. Young artists from grades K-12 display their work. Winners receive savings bonds or ArtiBucks for their school’s art department.Tiny Treasures Children’s Art Boutique: Kids ages 3-13 can browse and buy artwork donated by the artists. It’s a great way to introduce tomorrow’s art patrons to fine art. Proceeds benefit the Quantum House.

Continued here: ArtiGras: A one-of-a-kind Fine Arts Festival | Palm Beach …

Feb 14

New concept Art Space to launch in Oak Park Arts District – Oak Park …

New concept Art Space to launch in Oak Park Arts District
Posted on: February 13th, 2012
On February 4th 2012, Bright Olive Gallery closed it’s doors and papered the windows. A few lights remain on to let passers by know that the space is not abandoned but in a state of transformation.

For a period of 14 days the gallery windows will be covered as a cicada-like transformation takes place. The former Bright Olive Gallery, run by artist, scientist and mom, Jenny Tiner, will undergo a complete re-branding, including a new name, yet to be released.
The space will focus on a smaller selection of represented artists whose artwork relates to science. The gallery space will get a complete make-over. The cooperative will offer exhibits and classes through a new website, social media and community presence. The space will be a beacon for learning as well as a place to see that art coupled with science can make for progressive, intriguing art, workshops and classes.
On February 17th, during the Oak Park Arts Districts 3rd Friday street-wide gallery walk, the art space will be re-launched and emerge ready for a new life. The opening will be from 6-9 p.m. There will be unique refreshments, a media presentation and activities for kids and adults. Ms. Tiner intends to start a partnership program that gives a percentage of sales to science research and funding art education. Owner and artist Jenny Tiner, represented artists and supporters will be there to share the new concept.

The rest is here: New concept Art Space to launch in Oak Park Arts District – Oak Park …

Feb 09

Sculpture from fine arts collection to be featured at Guggenheim …

Posted on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2012 — 4:43 PM

“Maz” by John Chamberlain, 1960. (Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery)

A sculpture from the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery collection will be included in upcoming Guggenheim exhibitions in New York and Spain.
John Chamberlain’s 1960 work “Maz” will be featured as part of John Chamberlain: Choices, a comprehensive examination of the late artist’s work and his first U.S retrospective since 1986. The sculpture will travel to New York Feb. 9, with Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery director Joseph Mella following on Feb. 10 to oversee its installation.
John Chamberlain: Choices is scheduled for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York from Feb. 24 to May 13, 2012, before traveling on to the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, where it will be on view from March through September 2013.
Born in Rochester, Indiana, Chamberlain (1927–2011) rose to prominence in the late 1950s with energetic, vibrant sculptures hewn from disused car parts, achieving a three-dimensional form of Abstract Expressionism that astounded critics and captured the imagination of fellow artists. Chamberlain frequently violated the formalist prohibition deriding the use of color in sculpture. He chose to adapt uncommon, recycled materials in his work, such as the slick, industrial palette of defunct auto bodies.
His balanced sculptures stressed the deep volumes and eccentric folds that he managed to achieve by squeezing or compressing the metal and then welding the disparate elements into highly developed, collage-like compositions.
Chamberlain died in December 2011.
Read more about the Guggenheim retrospective.
Contact: Joseph Mella, (615) 343-1704joseph.mella@vanderbilt.edu

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