Tag: Retrospective
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A MoMA Retrospective Proves Duchamp Was More Sincere Than He Seems
The first rooms of MoMA’s Marcel Duchamp retrospective almost dare the visitor to find in his early paintings some hint of the artist’s future travesty of those mediums. The picture with which the show opens—a placid scene of the artist’s two older brothers, Gaston (Jacques Villon) and Raymond, engrossed in a game of chess—telegraphs Duchamp’s read more
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Dutch Designer Iris van Herpen’s High-Tech Garments Are On View in a Mid-Career Retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum
In 2010,Iris van Herpen, only three years after establishing her eponymous couture brand, sent the first 3D-printed garment down the runway as part of her “Crystallization” collection. A top evoking the skeletal structure of a snake with its ivory-colored coils of 3D-printed polyamide, the piece was a collaboration with British architect Daniel Widrig. “It was read more
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An Alexander Calder Retrospective in Paris Underscores His Inventiveness
Object with Red Discs</em>, 1931″,”description”:”ntttt nnnnnnn ntBy 1930 Calder sought to distance himself from what had brought him early recognition. His discovery of Piet Mondrianu2019s studio at 16 Rue du Du00e9part in Paris that October acted as a catalyst for his turn toward nonfigurative art. Calder later recalled that the visit gave him u201cthe shock read more
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Met Museum Appears to Be Planning the First US Cy Twombly Retrospective in More Than 30 Years
While the Metropolitan Museum of Art just announced a sizable Lee Krasner–Jackson Pollock exhibition for the fall, it now appears that that show isn’t the only grand one for a postwar painter on the docket at the New York institution. Last week, the Met posted a job posting for a researcher who would work on read more
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A Tracey Emin Retrospective Asks If We Expect Too Much from Women Artists
“I’m starting to think I am a really boring artist,” admits Tracey Emin in the catalog accompanying her retrospective at the Tate Modern. It’s quite the reflection from a woman who made her name on shock value. Her 1998 self-portrait-cum-performance-cum-sculpture My Bed—her actual, slept-in bed covered in the detritus of her life—shook the art world read more
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An Overfilled Guggenheim Retrospective Dulls Carol Bove’s Brilliance
Art Review A smaller survey would have allowed for something more meaningful than just showing what Bove has been doing for the past decades. Carol Bove, “10 Hours” (2019) (all photos Seph Rodney/Hyperallergic) There was a moment in the Guggenheim’s sprawling new Carol Bove exhibition when the entire show began to make sense to me. read more
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Carol Bove’s Gripping Guggenheim Retrospective Transcends Time and Space
Lionel Ziprin’s unlikely rediscovery really got going with a walk-in safe in Carol Bove’s Brooklyn studio. It was a big safe, and an old one—Bove initially had to use a car jack to pry open its metal door—and it became the unlikely home for all things related to Ziprin, a doyen of the Lower East read more
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Gagosian Plans Lichtenstein ‘Brushstroke’ Show, Following Last Year’s $150 M. Auction Run and Ahead of Whitney Retrospective
This spring, Gagosian will open its 14th exhibition dedicated to Roy Lichtenstein. Titled “Painting with Scattered Brushstrokes,” the exhibition draws exclusively from the Lichtenstein family collection and will feature paintings, sculpture, watercolors, and works on paper from the 1970s and ’80s. Opening March 19 at the gallery’s 541 West 24th Street space, the show lands read more
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