Tag Archives: metropolitan museum of art

Modern Art Monday Presents: Big Oval By Jane Dickson

big oval by jane dickson photo by gail worley
Photo By Gail

In 1980, Jane Dickson (b. 1952)and her husband, artist Charlie Ahearn (b. 1951), moved into a loft near New York’s then seedy, but glittering Times Square where,  two years earlier, she’d found work programming the first Spectacolor billboard. Attracted to the neighborhood’s brilliant nighttime signage, she began working with oil stick against deep-black backgrounds to evoke the gleam of the nocturnal scenes she witnessed. Traveling to Florida in the mid-1980s, Dickson happened one night upon a carnival filled with amusement rides. She eventually created Big Oval (1985) from pictures and sketches, painting the roller coaster’s arc of blazing lights stretching up into the night.

Photographed in The Museum of Modern Art in New York City

Modern Art Monday Presents: Window in the Studio By Vincent Van Gogh

window in the studio photo by gail worley
Photo By Gail

Vincent Van Gogh’s Window in the Studio (1889) depicts a room with a barred window that he was allowed to use  as a studio in the hospital in Saint-Rémy. Pots and bottles stand on the sill of a window that looks out over the walled garden on the hospital grounds, with several of Van Gogh’s own paintings hanging on either side of the window. Continue reading Modern Art Monday Presents: Window in the Studio By Vincent Van Gogh

Eye On Design: FSW Folding Screen By Charles and Ray Eames

fsw folding screen by charles and ray eames photo by gail worley
Photos By Gail

Recalling the organic folds of heavy drapery, the self-supporting FSW Folding Screen by Charles and Ray Eames (1946) offers an elegant way to divide a room by screening off objects and activities. The screen could also serve as a backdrop for other furniture.
Continue reading Eye On Design: FSW Folding Screen By Charles and Ray Eames

Modern Art Monday Presents: Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott By David Hockney

henry geldzahler and christopher scott photo by gail worley
Photos By Gail

Henry Geldzahler (July 9, 1935August 16, 1994) was a Belgian-born American curator of contemporary art in the late 20th century, as well as a historian and critic of modern art. He is best known for his work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, as New York City Commissioner of Cultural Affairs under Mayor Ed Koch, and for his social role in the art world; having enjoyed close relationships with many contemporary artists.
Continue reading Modern Art Monday Presents: Henry Geldzahler and Christopher Scott By David Hockney

Modern Art Monday Presents: Helen Lundeberg, Plant and Animal Analogies

plant and animal analogies photo by gail worley
Photo By Gail

Helen Lundeberg  (19081999) organized a group of California artists, the only interwar Surrealist group in the United States. The “Post Surrealists,” as they were called, bypassed automatism and dream imagery in favor of provocative juxtapositions and careful compositions. Their manifesto (1934) , written by the artist and illustrated with this painting, Plant and Animal Analogies (193435) promoted an art that was “an ordered, pleasurable, introspective activity; an arrangement of emotions or ideas. The pictorial elements function only to create this subjective form; either emotional or mood-entity, or intellectual or idea-entity.”

Photographed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC