For the first time since 1946 an exhibition of Gordon Onslow Ford's work is available for viewing in New York City: The exhibition will continue until Christmas Eve.
http://www.francisnaumann.com/EXHIBITIONS/ONSLOWFORD/index.html
Ford is a key link between the European surrealism which originated well before World War II, and the New York School of painting which flourished in the immediate aftermath of that war. He is a member of a select group of figures who were able to exemplify and document noteworthy transitions between phases of their art -- examples in other fields are Hardy in literature and Busoni in music. Such figures tend to be under appreciated for a time (perhaps because of the intellectual complexity entailed in defining their roles), then gradually acquire standing among connoisseurs over multiple generations.
Among the thirty one works - the large (46" x 60") Temptations of the Painter made an especially powerful, indeed visceral impression on me, with its sense of inexorable motion and the prospect of an alternative world caught in mid creation. Ford also developed an incandescent style -- I was especially taken with Lunelipse (1951) and The Painter and the Muse (1943) in this regard.
See
http://www.amazon.com/Gordon-Onslow-Ford-Paintings-1939-1951/dp/0980055652/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1292860975&sr=1-1
for Martica Sawin's book, including extensive critical notes as well as the 1941 New School Lectures delivered by Ford.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
New York Film Festival 2010 - Highlights
I appreciated many individual films - but here I would like to highlight "favorite ways to appreciate the adroit, almost magical editorial and curatorial process" of FSLC in creating the 2010 New York Film Festival:
-Shinoda series of twelve films.
I made a comment here as the series started; I managed to see eleven of the twelve films -- stunned by the range of subjects and techniques in Shinoda's work, from almost early-Almodovar-like brilliant color and corrosive irreverence in the early 1960s to formally elegant presentations on classical Japanese themes.
-Special events of real resonance --
Director Mike Leigh really investing himself wholly in the exploration of issues connected with his work -- Nuremberg restoration with actual participants joining us almost sixty-five years after their partcicipation
-The multiple opportunities to savor the Portuguese language in film --
-Shinoda series of twelve films.
I made a comment here as the series started; I managed to see eleven of the twelve films -- stunned by the range of subjects and techniques in Shinoda's work, from almost early-Almodovar-like brilliant color and corrosive irreverence in the early 1960s to formally elegant presentations on classical Japanese themes.
-Special events of real resonance --
Director Mike Leigh really investing himself wholly in the exploration of issues connected with his work -- Nuremberg restoration with actual participants joining us almost sixty-five years after their partcicipation
-The multiple opportunities to savor the Portuguese language in film --
Many participants looked forward to seeing Manoel de Oliveira's latest work - but who knew that his 1963 Rite of Spring would show up in the middle of the "Views from the Avant-garde" program. This Lusitanian thread triumphed on closing day this past weekend with Raoul Ruiz's Mysteries of Lisbon -- based in the 19th Century but shaped by the director's unique palette of surrealistic and non-linear techniques.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Distinctive Offering for Labor Day Weekend 2010
Time | Saturday at 8:00pm - Sunday at 12:00am |
---|---|
Location | Surreal Estate 15 Thames Street Brooklyn, NY |
More Info | Presenting the work of: Brian Rady Hyatt Michaels Mariana Valencia Meghann Snow Gratuitous Art Films HYRAX Join us Saturday, September 4th at 8pm as we explore intersections in contemporary performance practices, facilitate informal peer feedback on works in progress, and work to create a community of conscious, post-product-based working artists. Suggested donation of $5 at the door BYOB or $2 PBR (proceeds to the arts and activism collective and performance space, Surreal Estate). This PERFORMANCY FORUM, the fifth curated by the Panoply Performance Laboratory's Esther Neff and Brian McCorkle at Surreal Estate, includes hybrid performance art and video works. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)