Fair and Loathing: Coincidences, Trends and a Coupla WTFs
Fair and Loathing: Big Paintings
Fair and Loathing: Art? Not Art?
Fair and Loathing: Small and Mid-Size Paintings
I wish I could tell you that I have a lot of women to show you in this post, but no. If the contemporary art world is still reluctant to embrace women artists, it was far worse back then. Rothschild, Fanny Sanin and Lygia Clark are the women artists whose work I saw. (There might have been more, and if you saw some, please use the Comments section to tell us who, what and where.)
The Latin American galleries can be counted on to show some consistently fine work, and for an artist like myself who never got an integrated art history in art school, these galleries offer a historical experience. You can pooh-pooh the fairs all you want, but for me the opportunity to see so much mid-Century Latin American abstraction is one of the highlights in Miami. And Josef Albers (Albers!) was one of the great revelations this time around. Go figure. Here's some of what I saw.
Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart, Compositon No. 212, 1959-60, at Annely Juda Fine Art, London; ABMB
Ilya Bolotowsky, Somber Key, 1949, at Joan Washburn Gallery, New York City; ABMB
Sandu Darie, Untitled, 1950s, at Tresart, Coral Gables, Florida; Art Miami
Paul Kelpe, Composition, 1927, at Valerie Carberry Gallery, Chicago; ABMB
Juan Melé, Pintura, 1946-75, at Galeria Guillermo de Osma, Madrid; ABMB
Myron Stout, Untitled, 1950, at Joan Washburn Gallery, New York City; ABMB
Burgoyne Diller, First Theme #246, c. 1940, at Valerie Carberry Gallery, Chicago, ABMB
Detail below
Cesar Paternosto at Galeria Guillermo de Osma, Madrid; ABMB
Judith Rothschild in the Kabinett devoted to her work, at Valerie Carberry Gallery
Above, below, and below that we're panning around the space from left to right. Most of the work, which includes fluid geometric abstraction, some with cubist overtones, is from the 1940s
Above: The two large works above are shown in closer views below
Judith Rothschild, Curious Personnage, 1947
Judith Rothschild, Untitled, c. 1948
Detail below with pentimenti
Fanny Sanin, 1978, at Henrique Faria Fine Art, New York and Buenos Aires; ABMB
Mary Martin, mixed media works, 1962, each app. 20 x 20 inches, at DAN Galeria, Sao Paolo
Victor Pasmore, Abstract in Black, White, Maroon and Indigo, 1963; at DAN Galeria; ABMB
Lygia Clark sculpture and painting, "decade of 1960," according to the gallery description, also at DAN Galeria
Norman Dilworth,Untitled, 1966, also at DAN Galeria
(This venue is a trove of fabulous mid-century abstraction from throughout the Americas; I look for it every year)
Ralston Crawford, shown above and in an installation of his works, at Menconi + Schoelkopf, New York City; ABMB
Leon Polk Smith, Untitled, 1970, at Valerie Carberry Gallery, Chicago; ABMB
More Leon Polk Smith, ca. 1948, at Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts; Art Miami (I think)
Untitled (Abstraction in Blue), 1948
Below: Torch (Abstraction in Red), 1948
Leon Polk Smith, Black, Green, 1957, again at Valerie Carberry, Chicago; ABMB
Stuart Davis, Study for Pochade #2, 1958, at at Hirschl & Adler Modern, New York City; ABMB
View below for scale
Installation of small works at Galeria Guillermo de Osma, Madrid; ABMB
Closer views of two works below
Above: Rubem Ludolf, Geometria, 1965
Below: Hermelindo Fiaminghi, Composicion, 1959
As we continue around the installation at Guillermo de Osma, take a look at the green and yellow painting on the far right. Can you identify the artist?
Now can you identify the artist?
Josef Albers, above, Related A, 1937
Below: A more conventionally recognizable Albers, 1962, at Jorge Mara-La Ruche, Buenos Aires; ABMB
Another surprising aspect of Albers's work in his Homage to the Square series: shades of gray and larger scale. Here, Half Past, 1966, oil on masonite, 48 x 48 inches, at Waddington Custot Galleries, Lonodon; ABMB
Below: more gray from Albers, this time in a woodcut
Astatic, 1944, woodcut from plywood, 13.25 x 9 inches, at Hirschl & Adler, New York City; ABMB
3 comments:
This post is my fave - so far. That Leon Polk Smith pair from 1948 in blue and red are really fabulous. I have never heard of him before but now I'll have to look him up. Thanks for all your looking and refining, Joanne. Your discoveries are inspiring.
Thank you for opening my eyes to some artists I had never heard of or had heard of but was not familiar with their work. I am beginning to become obsessed with mid century modern geometrics.
Nice!!! Beautiful examples of mid-century abstraction-Rothschild rocks!
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