by Sandy | Nov 19, 2019 | Art, Blogroll, Exhibits, Museums
The National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, presents Día de Muertos • A Matter of Life:
“The Day of the Dead commemoration is deeply rooted in ancient indigenous beliefs of life after death and a spiritual existence within the universe. After the 16th century Spanish encounter of America, celebrations for the deceased were mainly observed on All Saints’ and All Souls’ Days (November 1 & 2) throughout Mexico. Today, various Mexican communities and regions honor their dead in unique ways. From the Afro Mexican towns along the Costa Chica, to the Mixteca towns in the state of Puebla, each region observes the age-old practice in unique ways. “
“Come enjoy the unique installations of traditional and contemporary ofrendas to the dead!…”
Día de Muertos • A Matter of Life
Until December 8, 2019
National Museum of Mexican Art
1852 W. 19th street
Chicago, IL 60608
by Sandy | Nov 8, 2019 | Blogroll, Directors, Film, Movies
In a movie review, the writer described a film as “Felliniesque”. No reference to the director, for whom the term was coined, just – “Felliniesque”. I understood.
Federico Fellini, 1924 – 1976, was one of the most influential Italian directors of his day. His films were character driven, people and plots sometimes bizarre and outrageous, but the inhabitants of his pictures were closer to the reality of the everyday world than what was usually seen on screen during the 50s and 60s.
Four of his films won the Best Foreign Film Oscar: La strada (1954), with his wife Guilietta Masina and Anthony Quinn, Le Notti di Cabiria (1957) (Nights of Cabiria), 8½ (1963) and Amarcord (1973).
But, his film La Dolce Vita (1960) with Marcello Mastroianni brought him worldwide fame. The famous/infamous frolic in the fountain scene with Marcello and Anita Ekberg seemed such wild decadence in the 60’s, but, pretty tame now.
BTW: “Felliniesque” is often used to describe films that put a character’s inner thoughts and/or memories into dreamlike sequences, and/or scenes that move backward/forward in time.
Films to find on DVD:
***
by Sandy | Oct 9, 2019 | Blogroll, Culture, Education, Exhibits, Learning, Museums
This wonderful, amazing space is always packed during the Summer. Maybe a nice Fall visit will give an opportunity to see more ~ without the lines 🙂
The National Museum of African American History and Culture opened in September 2016. There’s lots to see and experience. The museum’s 11 massive galleries contain more than 30,000 priceless artifacts collected from all over the country.
Oprah Winfrey has her own exhibit devoted to her 25 years on T.V. Video highlights from her shows, letters & journals, photographs, etc all gathered to acknowledge an amazing life – Oprah!
Founding director Lonnie Bunch says, “This is not (nor was it ever intended to be) the National Museum of Discrimination…For me, the African American experience is an experience not of tragedy, but of unbelievable belief — belief in themselves, belief in an America that often didn’t believe in them”.
National Museum of African American History and Culture
***
by Sandy | Sep 20, 2019 | Art, Arts, Entertainment and Music, Blogroll, Museums
“Telfair Museums proudly presents Suzanne Jackson: Five Decades, the first full-career survey and most comprehensive presentation to date for American artist Suzanne Jackson (American, b. 1944). A luminous career that spans over five decades, the retrospective will include her visual art practice as well as her connections to dance, theatre and costume design, poetry, and social activism.”
“The exhibition will feature approximately 40 signature works made between 1959–2018, alongside ephemera such as photographs, letters, periodicals, and journals.”
Suzanne Jackson: Five Decades
Until October 2019
Jepson Center, 207 W. York St.
Savannah, GA 31401
(Image: El Paradiso,1981-1984, acrylic wash on canvas)
by Sandy | Aug 29, 2019 | Art, Artist, Blogroll, Exhibits, Museums
The Thannhauser Collection is a permanent installation at the Guggenheim. The vast art collection of Justin Thannhauser, son of an art dealer, was acquired by the museum in the last century.
The collection features “Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, and modern French masterpieces including works by Degas, Cezanne, Gauguin, Kandinsky, Picasso, Renoir and more.”
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 5th Avenue (at 89th Street ), NYC
by Sandy | Aug 19, 2019 | Art, Blogroll
“Between Play and Grief: Selections from the Latino American Collection features a survey of works from the MFAH collection of modern and contemporary Latin American art.
”The exhibition “spans six decades of artistic expression, from figures who were actively in dialogue with leading postwar artistic movements such as Nouveau Réalisme, Arte Povera, and Pop Art in the 1960s, to contemporary artists whose work speaks to their identities as both insiders and outsiders within an American experience.”
Between Play and Grief: Selections from the Latino American Collection
Museum of Fine Arts – Until September 8, 2019
Houston,
1001 Bissonnet St, Houston, TX
(Image: Antonio Berni, Carnaval de Juanito, 1962, collage)