Arcadja

SOME HIGHLIGHTS OF IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN - NEW YORK: SOTHEBY’S VS. CHRISTIE’S


Written by Elena Lanzanova October 31 2008

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AUTUMN 2008: CHRISTIE’S VS SOTHEBY’S


Written by Elena Lanzanova October 9 2008

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Christie’s and Sotheby’s, the two most important auction houses in the world, really seem to want to ignore the great financial crisis that is hitting the global economy, to challenge each other with their masterpieces. Which of the two will sell the most, gaining the title of “queen of the autumn auctions”? All we can do is wait for the following dates: the 19th October at Christie’s London with the auction “Post War & Contemporary Art” and the sale at Sotheby’s , “Impressionist & Modern Art” organized for the 3rd November 2008.

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AN AUTUMN ENTIRELY DEDICATED TO VAN GOGH


Written by Elena Lanzanova October 7 2008

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is definitely one of the most famous artists in the world. His art, so unique and perceptive, makes him recognizable even to those who do not have specific knowledge in the field of art.  Besides his marvelous paintings, the notoriety of the Dutch artist grew thanks to his life lived almost as a novel:  his troubled life and tragic suicide certainly made him an icon of modernity, symbol of the existential discomfort that started to afflict man since the industrial revolution.

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DID VAN GOGH NEED MORE SLEEP? STARLIT OBSESSIONS AT MOMA SHOW


Written by arcadja September 23 2008

Sunflowers aside, was captive to the night. The nocturnal sky is full of brightly ringed stars and spirals in “The Starry Night”, one of the top draws in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan and the initial excuse for an exhibition focused on the painter’s dusk-to-dawn scenes.
“Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night” is compact yet wide-ranging, hitting many of the artist’s obsessions, from peasants to gaslights. Among the 23 paintings in the show, about five are perfect, gorgeously idiosyncratic hymns to color and form. There are another handful of head-turners and some typical theme-exhibition filler. The show doesn’t all cohere conceptually, but in front of so many great paintings that barely matters. (Bloomberg)

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NOCTURNAL VAN GOGH, ILLUMINATING THE DARKNESS


Written by arcadja September 19 2008

Devoting an exhibition to , among the world’s most beloved artists, may not seem like much of a reach for the Museum of Modern Art. On paper, at least, “Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night” reads like an obvious play for big box office and increased membership.
But this exhibition largely dodges such charges. Small and quirky, it is an anti-blockbuster. Instead of the usual are-we-done-yet marathon followed with ordeal by gift shop, it quietly displays 23 paintings, 9 drawings and several letters by van Gogh in six intimate galleries. The final gallery features a dense display of books that he read, most open to poems about the night. (The New York Times)

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VIENNA SHOWS VAN GOGH AS DRAUGHTSMAN IN EU£ BILLION EXHIBITION


Written by arcadja September 8 2008

“Van Gogh, Drawn Lines”, a new exhibition at Vienna’s Albertina, promotes itself with a list of superlatives - the most expensive exhibition ever in Austria and the first show in Vienna for 50 years.
More daring, though, is its claim to shed new light on a painter who must be the world’s favorite, if the number of reproductions is a guide. The exhibition, open since Sept. 5, sets out to show Van Gogh as a great draughtsman whose skills with line played a decisive role in the success of his painting.
The Albertina, whose own collection is primarily of sketches, has amassed an array of 140 Van Gogh paintings and drawings from museums and private collectors in 16 countries. The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam and the in Otterlo have loaned so many works, you have to wonder whether they are left with blank walls. The whole show is insured for an inconceivable 3 billion euros ($4.2 billion).
There are cases where the drawing is on show but not the painting to go with it, or vice versa. , there are also canvases and drawings that were unfamiliar to me because they are in private collections or far-flung museums such as Detroit or Honolulu. Among those rarely on public view is “Garden in Auvers”, painted in the last weeks of the artist’s life, an extravagantly dotted canvas with purple and red flowerbeds tilted at odd angles.
The show spans Van Gogh’s short career, starting with the early years in the Netherlands, where he focused on depicting peasant life and dark landscapes in charcoal drawings and oils with the kind of muted colors typical of the old Dutch masters.
It then breaks out in a burst of color, the period when Van Gogh went to Paris and first encountered the work of the impressionists. He realized that his own palette was old-fashioned and conventional in comparison with this vibrant new style. Perhaps the best-known painting on display from that era is his self-portrait in a straw hat.
The last rooms cover the wheatfields, cypresses and olive groves of his two years in Provence, where he suffered increasing sickness and insanity, eventually leading to his suicide in Auvers-sur-Oise near Paris, in 1890 at the age of 37.
Van Gogh first went to Provence in search of the brilliant light and landscape of Japan. He was a big admirer of Japanese colored woodcuts, which are the inspiration for the dots, dashes and squiggles of his drawings. The magical reed pen-and-ink drawing of “Boats at Sea” (1888) is comprised of meticulous spots, swirls and curved short lines in varying shades.
Reed pen-and-ink drawings like this and “The Sower” (1888) were created from the painting he had produced earlier, proof that Van Gogh valued his drawings in their own right, not merely as templates for a painting. Painted during a fierce mistral, “The Sower” shows a brilliant sun above a windswept wheatfield.
The drawing Van Gogh produced for Theo has, if anything, more drama and intensity than the painting, even without the penetrating colors. The sun is bigger in the sky, the lines of the wildly disheveled field more heavily accentuated, and the sower himself looks more purposeful.
Where the exhibition at the Albertina works best is in showing that each line of Van Gogh’s, whether in the drawings or paintings, was disciplined, exact and planned.
Seeing the two juxtaposed, it becomes clear that no matter how thick his paint, how intense his colors or how tumultuous and fizzing with wild energy his fields and skies can be, Van Gogh’s bold brushstrokes are not the product of uncontrolled madness. The precision of his drawing is there in his paintings, too.
His creeping mental illness may have affected his way of perceiving the world, but in no way did it impair his control over the meticulous execution of his work. (Bloomberg)

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VAN GOGH DOUBLES: UNDER A FLOWERY MEADOW BY THE TROUBLED PAINTER THERE IS A HIDDEN FACE


Written by Silvia Bosi August 5 2008

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In the last days some clamorous news about a rediscovered picture by Van Gogh has been published in the magazine “”, and has already been spread out loud to the whole world. Under the surface of a painting by the great Dutch artist there is another one, realized previously and then covered, portraying the face of a woman.

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Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night


Written by arcadja July 22 2008

van-gogh-and-the-colors-of-the-night.jpgTitle: Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night
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