Category Archives: General

Miro at MoMA

On view through January 12, 2009 at the Museum of Modern Art is Joan Miro: Painting and Anti-Painting, 1927-1937. The productive decade’s work includes works from 12 different series’, and different they are, from themselves and everything else. There are, of course, the pared down Miros which open the show and consist of exposed, unprimed, bare canvases with minimalist blobs of paint. There are also the highly colorful and iconic Miro images derived Dutch interiors and done in 1928-29. Less obvious Miro series’ from this time period include the large, colorless collages and the large paintings on white grounds from 1929. My favorite pieces in the exhibit, perhaps because they were unexpected, are the Drawing Collages (1933-34) which incorporate popular postcards, illustrations and drawings into the works as well as the the small, colorful paintings on copper and masonite (1956-36). It is amazing to see 12 such different series’ encompass just one decade.

Winter Art Gallery Tours

LPDM Fine Art Consulting is pleased to offer a new round of art gallery tours in addition to LPDM’s Metropolitan Moms classes and private client and group tours. LPDM’s classes are geared towards adults of all ages and all levels of experience in the art world and are limited in size. These tours are a chance to enjoy some of the best cultural activities available in New York City.

The tours will be given on Saturdays and will last one and one half hours. The goal of each tour is to acquaint participants with the process of visiting galleries and looking at artwork. The art gallery tours will give participants the opportunity to explore the styles of artwork and differing aesthetics in the galleries of each neighborhood and to understand what those galleries have in common.

Saturday, January 10, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm, Chelsea Art Gallery Tour
Explore the contemporary art galleries of the famed Chelsea neighborhood. Participants will be exposed to works in a variety of media such as paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, sculpture and installation pieces in galleries ranging from the large international powerhouses to smaller, local galleries. We will see artwork from established contemporary art stars and emerging talent.

Saturday, January 24, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm, Midtown Art Gallery Tour
Midtown’s Modern and Contemporary galleries display predominantly American and European artwork and have long been a counterpoint to the edgier downtown art centers. We will visit select buildings around 57th Street that are brimming with art galleries displaying a variety of styles and media on each floor including sculpture, drawings, photography and paintings.

Saturday, February 7, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm, Madison Avenue Gallery Tour
SOLD OUT!!!
See the best of the Upper East Side’s art galleries, nestled among the city’s finest museums, in this tour of the 19th and 20th century American and European paintings galleries. We will also visit uptown art galleries showing emerging and established contemporary artists – despite their uptown addresses. All of this within one neighborhood!

Attire: Please dress warmly and wear comfortable walking shoes. We will be indoors as much as possible given the time of year, but we will need to move outside at times to get from one gallery building to the next.

Cost: $100 per class, Package of three classes for $250

Magnificent Morandi

I may be biased, as Giorgio Morandi has always been among my favorite artists, but his current retrospective at the Met entitled Giorgio Morandi, 1990-1964, is outstanding for the breadth of work it shows and for the understanding it provides of the progression of this incredible artist’s work through time. Tackling the very large questions of perception of space and light, Morandi moved in delicate, quiet steps from one interpretation of a still life to another, often making nearly imperceptible shifts in the “landscapes” he composed. The subtle yet astonishing variations of his work act together in this exhibition almost as a murmur of his effect and of his style. The variations in texture, handling of light and shadow and perspective lull the viewer into his world, where he gently builds to a crescendo and then begins to tackle a scene again from a different angle. His landscape paintings (though fewer of them in this show, echo the erroneous public perception that he was more of a still life painter than a landscape painter) also seem to become manipulated or arranged space in the hands of the artist. The swaths of grass or sky or trees become almost objects in his landscape still lifes. Take your time as you walk through the exhibit to notice the subtle changes in perspective, background, the texture of his surfaces and the solidity of his objects. Through December 14, 2008 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Van Gogh at MoMA

I recently had the chance to view Van Gogh and The Colors of the Night at MoMA following a lecture on the exhibit given by one of my favorite art history professors, Professor Vivien Fryd of Vanderbilt University. The artist, whose active career as an artist lasted only ten tears, produced 1250 paintings and 100 drawings of himself, his neightbors and his French environs. This exhibit, small in scale yet large in impact, displays the artist’s nocturnal work as divided into scenes of peasant life, sowers and wheatfields, poetry of the night (town) and poetry of the night (country). The colors of the works are often jarring in their intensity and the thickness of Van Gogh’s impasto gives the works strength and content other artists could only dream of conveying. The works are drawn from many collections and it is a vert rare treat to have access to them together like this. Don’t miss it. You can also see the exhibition on-line at www.moma.org The show is on view through January 5, 2009 at the Museum of Modern Art.

To Buy or Not to Buy

Fredric Koeppel of the Memphis Commerical Appeal recently interviewed LPDM for an interesting article on the state of art buying in recent weeks. The article addresses the concerns of collectors who are passionate about their art yet hesitant about the financial turmoil of the times. To read the piece please click here to be redirected to their site.