Gogh Big at The MET!

Vincent Van Gogh’s paintings gathered together:

 

“For the first time in recent memory, all seventeen of the Met’s paintings by Vincent van Gogh—the largest collection of the artist’s work on this side of the Atlantic—are in house and on view in galleries 823826, and 961. Visitors can enjoy a full range of highlights from the artist’s prolific years in France, from portraits to still lifes to landscapes. These masterpieces are often committed to exhibitions around the world, making this a not-to-be-missed occasion.”

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
5th Ave and 86 Street, NYC

 

 

Charles White: A Retrospective at MoMA

“Art must be an integral part of the struggle,” Charles White insisted. “It can’t simply mirror what’s taking place. … It must ally itself with the forces of liberation.”
  “Charles White: A Retrospective is the first major museum survey devoted to the artist in over 30 years. The exhibition charts White’s full career—from the 1930s through his premature death in 1979—with over 100 works, including drawings, paintings, prints, photographs, illustrated books, record covers and archival materials.” Over the course of his four-decade career, White’s commitment to creating powerful images of African Americans—what his gallerist and, later, White himself described as “images of dignity”—was unwavering.”

Charles White: A Retrospective

Until January 13, 2019

The Museum of Modern Art 11 West 53 Street, New York, NY

Image: General Moses (Harriet Tubman). 1965. Ink on paper

   
Bohemian Rhapsody, It’s the Music. It’s the Energy and the Memories

Bohemian Rhapsody, It’s the Music. It’s the Energy and the Memories

Bohemian Rhapsody, It’s the Music. It’s the Energy and the Memories

See Queen!  Listen to the music and the fun. It is not the “Phantom Thread” nor should it be. It is pure entertainment! And It makes no difference when it happened, date time or order, it’s the entertainment. Sing along if you know the words or just dance in your seats. Just go see it, it’s fun. 

Note: With all public figure we never get the whole story because no really knows what that is. 

 

Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury

Ficre Ghebreyesus at MOaD, San Franciso

“Museum of the African Diaspora presents the first museum showing and first west coast exhibition of the paintings of Eritrean-American artist Ficre Ghebreyesus (1962-2012), who fled conflict in his country and made his way to the United States as a political refugee. Ficre Ghebreyesus: City with a River Running Through brings together more than a dozen of his finest works, with a particular focus on Ghebreyesus’ abstractly rendered and vivid painted landscapes, replete with water imagery and aquatic life.”

Ficre Ghebreyesus: City with a River Running Through

(Sep 19, 2018 to Dec 16, 2018)

MoAD – The Museum of the African Diaspora

685 Mission Street San Francisco, CA

 

 

 

Nudes

“The Met Breuer presents a selection of some fifty works…paintings by artists of the school of Paris, a brilliant group of erotic and evocative watercolors, drawings, and prints by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, and Pablo Picasso, whose subjects, except for a handful, are nudes.”“The exhibition is the first time these works have been shown together…”

Obsession: Nudes by Klimt, Schiele, and Picasso

Until October 18, 2018

The MET / Breuer

945 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10021

 

 

Ashley Bryan at the Portland Museum of Art

Born in the Bronx (so was I), parents of Caribbean descent (Antigua, so am I) educated at Cooper Union, (no, not I). But, more importantly, Mr Bryan’s use of color immediately caught my eye.

Love it!

 Painter and Poet: the Art of Ashley Bryan is the first major art museum exhibition in Maine for the award-winning 95-year-old artist and Little Cranberry Island resident, a pioneer of African and African American representation in the children’s book medium, who has published more than 50 titles since his first collection of poems in 1967.”

Painter and Poet: the Art of Ashley Bryan

Until November 25, 2018

PMA  / Portland Museum of Art

Seven Congress Square in Portland, ME

(Image:  “The birds’ colors were mirrored in the waters,” circa 2002, from “Beautiful Blackbird,” collage of cut colored paper on paper)