Monet’s Water Lilies Return to MOMA

Monet’s Water Lilies are back at MOMA. They’re spectacular pieces. Pollock had to be thinking of Monet while dripping his buckets of industrial paint onto canvas. The scale is comparable – I loved when they used to hang the two paintings facing each other, creating a dialogue across the years. Somehow works of art, while being unique products of their respective eras, also have the ability to transcend time. Monet’s brushwork dazzles. The studies crackle with whips of paint depicting flowers and grass, swirling as if alive. Densely clotted surfaces serve as perfect grounds for shocking strokes of pink outlining flowers adrift on the pond’s surface. The Japanese bridge emerges from a tangle of rust and yellow. Monet elevates the brushstroke to the same level of importance as the subject, beginning the drift towards art for art’s sake.

Water is one of the more challenging surfaces for an artist to depict. The constant shimmer of rippled light does not lend itself easily to a static surface. Movies are another story. Last night I saw the animated film Ponyo by Hayao Miyazaki. The movie is freely adapted from Hans Christian Anderson’s “The Little Mermaid”. Miyazaki’s films inhabit the strange and wondrous space of fairy tales. He draws the ocean as a living being, magical creatures manifest themselves as waves, ancient sea beasts swim freely through the waters of modern Japan. The most beautiful landscapes you could imagine at 24 frames per second.

Dutch New York

PBS has a new show in celebration of the 400th anniversary of the Dutch settling New York. It’s by Barry Lewis, the same historian that does the walking tours of various NY neighborhoods. The concept is similar, he walks through various areas pointing places of historic significance. Although this show also travels outside of the city to Albany. If you’re interested in the early history of NY or the US (as various aspects of Dutch culture were essential in the formation of American values) watch this show.

http://www.thirteen.org/dutchny/

NYFA Artist Fellowships

Artists’ Fellowships are $7,000 cash awards made to individual originating artists living and working in the state of New York for unrestricted use. Grants are awarded in 16 artistic disciplines, with applications accepted in eight categories each year. Since the awards began in 1985, NYFA has awarded over $22 million to over 3,688 artists. In 2009, NYFA awarded 131 Fellowships to 134 artists, with six of them working in a collaboration.

http://www.nyfa.org/level2.asp?id=1&fid=1&sid=101

Haley Jane Samuelson

I was reading the New Yorker calendar section on the subway ride home tonight and was really happy to see a name I recognized! An exhibit by photographer Haley Jane Samuelson was profiled. I had the pleasure of posting some of her work on ArtinBrooklyn in April. She describes her images as “an embodiment of my own subconscious forces at work, mixed with real events.” The show is up until the end of the week at Hous Projects, 31 Howard Street.

Meet James Ensor, Belgium’s Famous Painter

MOMA has an exhibit of James Ensor’s work, closing on Sept 21. As Ensor himself would readily testify, time is running out. Obsessed with issues of identity and mortality his favorite subjects were skeletons and masks. He’s got a slightly wicked sense of humor, frequently self-deprecating. One of my favorites is entitled “My Portrait in 1960” – imagining the state of his material being at the age of 100.

Link to MOMA event calendar and the exhibit website.

Also check out the song by They Might Be Giants and appreciate the man.

Insight Magazine

My work is featured in the latest edition of Insight Magazine. Committed to uncensored artistic expression, INSIGHT provides a platform for emerging and established artists to share their perspective on art. They’re a publication of the F.O.K.U.S. organization which produces a great series of events in NYC and Michigan. More information is available at their website http://www.onefokus.org

Special thanks to Atiba, Maya, and the whole F.O.K.U.S. family!

Food and Art

Food and art are both sensual pleasures, easily appreciated by all and capable of endless refinement. I remember first seeing the work of Wayne Thiebaud in a retrospective as a high school student in California. The vibrant colors and symmetrical rows of pies spoke of joyous pleasures and platonic order. Apollo and Dionysus meeting at a diner for a slice of Boston Creme or Lemon Meringue.

Tonight I saw the movie Julie and Julia, and completely recommend taking the plunge (and yes, I am a devoted Netflix viewer). I’ve had an interest in cooking for years, immensely enjoyed the PBS show in 1999 featuring Julia Child and Jacques Pepin. I’ve also read the blog and later the book of The Julie/Julia Project. The movie was faithful to the spirit of all of the above.

Of course, my first introduction to the delight of cooking was at home. My mother is an amazing cook and we grew up eating delicious meals. If I was looking for an equivalent in the arts it would be the exhibition of Chardin works at the Met in 2000.

At MOMA my favorites are the Claes Oldenburg sculptures. The double hamburger and pastry case pieces are incredible, they’re practically alive they have so much energy compressed into their form and surface paint.

Now I’m hungry.

Underground Together: The Art and Life of Harvey Dinnerstein

Just picked up this beautiful book at the used bookshop. Harvey has taught for years at the Art Student’s League and paints using traditional techniques. He’s got mad skills. There’s a nice overlap of subject matter with my own work. Many scenes of city streets, parks, and subways. Always nice to see a different artist’s approach to the same subject. Guess that’s one of those things that you miss from art school. Perhaps a good theme for a group exhibit? I’ll file that away under “future projects”. See the work of HD here – http://www.freynorris.com/artwork_list.php?id=3