Richard Hambleton created side by side with Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, and ‘Shadowman’ is his troubled story.
Art
Art Review: Michelangelo: Divine Draftsman and Designer at Metropolitan Museum of Art
Nearly 150 works make up Michelangelo: Divine Draftsman and Designer, now on view at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art Tisch Galleries. Open until February 12, 2018.
Art Review: Small Scenes at TEFAF New York Fall 2017 at Park Avenue Armory
Miniatures and jewels steal the show at TEFAF New York Fall 2017, open until Wednesday November 1 at the Park Avenue Armory.
Matt Tierney has his first solo show at Bryant Toth Fine Art- and it couldn’t have come at a better time. On view until Oct 29 in NYC.
The show features 100,000 roses as well as a number of multi-media experiences.
The event featured presentations by Scandinavian designers as well as a panel discussion.
“For a nation of millions to make any kind of sense, it must base itself firmly on the concept of multiplicity, of plurality, and tolerance, of devolution and decentralization wherever possible. There can be no one way—religious, cultural, or linguistic—of being an Indian; Let difference reign.”
-Salman Rushdie
Modernism on the Ganges: Raghubir Singh Photographs showcases the trajectory of photographer Raghubir Singh’s career. His works are presented in dialogue with artists who have inspired him, including Henri Cartier-Bresson, Satyajit Ray, and Helen Levitt.
Despite his momentous contributions to the art form, Singh’s influences often go unrecognized—he has not had a major exhibition since 1998, and this exhibit reflects the Met’s continuing efforts to include international artists and expose the global artistic process. The Met acquired their first photograph by Singh 25 years ago, when Singh himself was a frequent visitor to the museum. This exhibition is a sort of canonization for one of the most important photographers of the generation.
Born in 1942 in Jaipur, India; Singh began photographing his native land at the age of 14. He was a pioneer of color street photography, known for intermixing traditions of the East and the West. Although he spent most of his adult life travelling between Hong Kong, Paris, London, and New York, he had a devout, visual passion for his native land India. His Western academic and artistic influence allowed him to capture India both as an insider and an outsider. He could immerse himself seamlessly into the Indian culture while being able to interpret it with an outsider’s perspective.
Photograph courtesy Succession Raghubir Singh
Unlike Bresson, whom he greatly admired, Singh insisted that he capture India in color photography. Color had always been a foundation of Indian art, and to betray the country’s abounding colors with black and white photography was to betray a large aspect of Indian culture. His photographs achieve a beautiful balance of colors: as saturated tones are often directly contrasted with muted ones. He wrote in 1998, “The fundamental condition of India, however, is the cycle of rebirth, in which colour is not just an essential element but also a deep inner source, reaching into the subcontinent’s long and rich past.”
His artistic process was often a waiting game, anticipating the world to congeal into harmony—a fleeting moment in which he could capture reality’s beauty and chaos into four corners. His photographs carried mythic iconographies mixed with the dailiness of the regions; themes of monsoon and floods; and the natural unity of people and animals interacting and coexisting within the various terrains of India.
His photographs are patriotic. They expose the paradoxical truths of his native land: of agony and tenderness, of commotion and serenity.
Photograph courtesy Succession Raghubir Singh
On view at the Met Breuer now till January 2, 2018
ON THE SCENE: Bill Powers of Half Gallery Launches ‘One Night Only’ Art Series in NYC
I went downtown to socialize with the beautiful people and coincidentally, the beautiful art by Austin Eddy.
Let’s talk about reading. Pumpkin Spice latte in hand, Adirondack chairs on deck, the weird occasional Christmas advertisement on the radio. Sounds like fall.
Billboards in Bushwick: Exclusive Interview with Ken Lavey and SaveArtSpace
Be sure to read the interview and visit the public art located in Brooklyn.