African Art At Newark Museum!

“Present Tense: Arts of Contemporary Africa”

Newark Museum Contemporary African Art

“This presentation focuses on the art of the present day, including works by nine artists with wide-ranging approaches to “art-making” as well as equally varied subject matter and sources of inspiration. Artists include: Olu Amoda, Owusu Ankomah, Viyé Diba, Etiyé Dimma Poulsen, Lalla Essaydi, Atta Kwami, Nnenna Okore, Yinka Shonibare and Sue Williamson. Together, they provide a window into the ongoing artistic creativity of this dynamic continent…”

“Present Tense: Arts of Contemporary Africa”

The Newark Museum, 49 Washington Street, Newark, NJ

(Image: Atta Kwame, “Dzedodo” (Conversation), 1956)

 

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Munch at SF MoMA!

Edvard Munch, (1863–1944), painted more than just “The Scream”. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art will have 45 of his other pieces on display, including Between the Clock and the Bed, a self portrait. He “was among the most celebrated and controversial artists of his generation. But, as he confessed in 1939, his true breakthrough came very late in life… these profoundly human and technically daring artworks reveal Munch as a tireless innovator and an artist as revolutionary in his maturity as he was in his breakthrough years.”

“Between the Clock and the Bed”

Until October 9, 2017

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
151 Third Street, San Francisco, CA

(Image: Self Portrait, 1940, “Between the Clock and the Bed”)

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19th Annual Harlem Book Fair!

On Saturday, 7/15/17, there will be spoken word events, over 200 exhibit booths, music, panel discussions and children’s activities will be on hand at the Harlem Book Fair. It’s a great way to spend a Saturday in the city.

“The vision of the Harlem Book Fair is to partner with local
and national leadership organizations under the banner of literacy
awareness, affirming HBF as the nation’s largest African American
literary event celebrating family literacy, community empowerment,
and community cooperation. “

 

19th Annual Harlem Book Fair

Saturday, July 15, 2017 – 10 AM – 6 PM

SCHOMBURG CENTER FOR RESEARCH IN BLACK CULTURE

515 Lenox Avenue, West 135th Street,, NYC

 

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Diebenkorn & Matisse – Together At SF MOMA!

Recently highlighted in a segment of CBS Sunday Morning, is a traveling exhibit featuring artists Matisse and Diebenkorn, often with paintings displayed side by side.

There are more than “90 paintings and drawings by the French modern master, Henri Matisse, and one of the greatest post-war American painters, Richard Diebenkorn.”

“Diebenkorn’s long engagement with Matisse’s work is among the most productive instances of one painter looking at another’s paintings in the history of 20th-century art. This landmark exhibition brings together a stunning array of works loaned from museums and private collections throughout the U.S. and Europe to follow the trajectory of Diebenkorn’s long and successful career with some of the powerful works by Matisse that the younger artist would have seen.”

“Matisse/Diebenkorn” Until May 29, 2017

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

 

(Images:The Yellow Dress. 1929-31 Matisse / Seated Figure with Hat. 1967  Diebenkorn)

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Cuban Art At MFAH!

The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents: “Adiós Utopia: Dreams and Deceptions in Cuban Art Since 1950”.

Considered to be “the most comprehensive and significant presentation of modern and contemporary Cuban art shown in the United States since 1944… it looks at how Cuba’s revolutionary aspirations for social utopia—and subsequent disillusionment—shaped 65 years of Cuban art. The exhibition brings together more than 100 of the most important works of painting, graphic design, photography, video, installation, and performance created by more than 50 Cuban artists and designers.”

Adiós Utopia: Dreams and Deceptions in Cuban Art Since 1950

Until May 31, 2017

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1001 Bissonnet St, Houston, TX

(Image: Raúl Martínez, Sin título (Untitled), 1969–70, oil on canvas)

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Watercolors in Philadelphia!

Until May 14, 2017, the Philadelphia Museum of Art Presents: “American Watercolor in the Age of Homer and Sargent”

 “Although widely practiced in the US before the Civil War, watercolor painting existed at the margins of the professional art world. Considered the domain of amateurs, women, and commercial artists, it drew little interest from the mainstream painters of the mid-1800s.

Watercolor’s reputation changed with the creation of the American Watercolor Society in 1866.”

 

American Watercolor in the Age of Homer and Sargent

Philadelphia Museum of Art

2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia

(Image: 2 cats, 1912, Stuart Davis)

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