This week Rosana brings you the news and recommendations. News: Texas Monthly: Kermit Oliver, Texas artist, designs scarves for Hermes. All Things Considered audio story…
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This week Rosana brings you the recommendations AND Jennifer Casler Price tells us the story of Michelangelo’s The Torment of St. Anthony. Recommendations: 2X2 at…
Leave a CommentThe Kimbell Art Museum 3333 Camp Bowie Boulevard Fort Worth, Texas 76107-2792 This week, we visit The Kimbell Art Museum and speak with curator, Jennifer…
Leave a CommentThis week, Kate visits Houston and speaks with Julie Kinzelman, of Kinzelman Art Consulting, AND Bill Arning, Director of the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston about…
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Amon Carter Museum of American Art
3501 Camp Bowie Boulevard
Fort Worth, TX 76107-2695
This week, we visit The Amon Carter Museum of American Art and speak with curator Rebecca Lawton about the exhibition, To See as Artists See: American Art from The Phillips Collection. Through January 6, 2013
Show Notes:
Amon Carter
Phillips Collection
Information about the Migration Series by Jacob Lawrence at the Phillips Collection
As a celebration of American art, The Phillips Collection has assembled masterworks from their collection by over 63 American artists from the end of the 19th Century to mid 20th Century. This comprehensive show, entitled To See As Artists See, highlights how art is in constant communication with itself, the times, and with people. Duncan Phillips, the man behind it all, actively participated in his contemporary art community hoping to cultivate a powerful collection that later on became the first modern art museum in America.
The Amon Carter Museum of American Art plays host to this marvelous exhibition from October 6, 2012 to January 6, 2013. This show is the largest exhibition the museum has ever hosted, consuming the special exhibition galleries, as well as the photography galleries. To See As Artists See seems to be a natural fit with the Amon Carter.
The Meadows Museum 5900 Bishop Blvd. Dallas, TX 75205 This week, we visit The Meadows Museum and speak with Meadows Director Dr. Mark Roglan about…
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The Nasher Sculpture Center
2001 Flora St.
Dallas, TX 75201
This week, we visit The Nasher Sculpture Center and speak with Curator Dakin Hart about the exhibition, Sculpture in So Many Words: Text Pieces 1960-1980. On view through January 13, 2013.
Show Notes:
Exciting, new and challenging exhibitions are now at The Nasher Sculpture Center. Rediscoveries: Modes of Making Modern Sculpture and Sculpture in So Many Words: Text Pieces 1960-1980 will be held in tandem at the Nasher to shed light on the meaning, relevance and importance of modern and conceptual sculpture.
Rediscoveries utilizes Auguste Rodin’s quote “I invent nothing; I rediscover” as the springboard to delve into the past 125 years of sculpture, to analyze four creative tactics used to fashion modern sculpture. The first approach examined in this exhibition is the artists’ use of modules, series and process. Second, the reciprocity between fragment and totality, that is the interplay that the whole has to its parts, particularly within the human form. The third mode surveyed is the machine aesthetic that was thoroughly examined during the rise of industrialization during the early 20th century. Last and certainly not least, how everyday materials are repurposed into fine art. That’s a lot to tackle within one show, but the Nasher succeeds to bring to light all of these elements by displaying art from the power players of modern sculpture: Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, Carl Andre, Richard Serra, Richard Long, Alexander Calder, Ellsworth Kelly, Naum Gabo, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, John Chamberlain, Jasper Johns, just to name a few.
The Nasher Sculpture Center
2001 Flora St.
Dallas, TX 75201
This week, we visit The Nasher Sculpture Center and speak with Adjunct Assistant Curator Catherine Craft about the exhibition, Rediscoveries: Modes of Making in Modern Sculpture. On view through January 13, 2013.
Show Notes:
Exciting, new and challenging exhibitions are now at The Nasher Sculpture Center. Rediscoveries: Modes of Making Modern Sculpture and Sculpture in So Many Words: Text Pieces 1960-1980 will be held in tandem at the Nasher to shed light on the meaning, relevance and importance of modern and conceptual sculpture.
Rediscoveries utilizes Auguste Rodin’s quote “I invent nothing; I rediscover” as the springboard to delve into the past 125 years of sculpture, to analyze four creative tactics used to fashion modern sculpture. The first approach examined in this exhibition is the artists’ use of modules, series and process. Second, the reciprocity between fragment and totality, that is the interplay that the whole has to its parts, particularly within the human form. The third mode surveyed is the machine aesthetic that was thoroughly examined during the rise of industrialization during the early 20th century. Last and certainly not least, how everyday materials are repurposed into fine art. That’s a lot to tackle within one show, but the Nasher succeeds to bring to light all of these elements by displaying art from the power players of modern sculpture: Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, Carl Andre, Richard Serra, Richard Long, Alexander Calder, Ellsworth Kelly, Naum Gabo, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, John Chamberlain, Jasper Johns, just to name a few.
This week, Sally visits the Nasher and speaks with Adjunct Assistant curator Catherine Craft about Fountainhead, the book produced by The Art Foundation. We also…
Leave a CommentThis week, we visit Centraltrak and speak with Frank Dufour and Thomas Riccio about their exhibition, Not So Indifferent. On view through November 3, 2012.…
Leave a CommentThis week, Rosana brings you the recommendations. Sally speaks with Thomas Riccio and Frank Dufour about their upcoming installation at Centaltrak, and Centraltrak head, Hyde…
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