“P.S. Art” * NYC Kids at The Met

“P.S. Art is an annual celebration of achievement in the arts in New York City public schools. This juried exhibition of the work of talented young artists showcases the creativity of 123 prekindergarten through grade twelve students from all five boroughs, including students from District 75, a citywide district serving students with disabilities. The exhibition consists of paintings, prints, sculptures, photographs, mixed-media works, collages, and drawings. Each work of art demonstrates personal expression, an imaginative use of media, the results of close observation, and an understanding of artistic processes.”

P.S. Art 2018: Celebrating the Creative Spirit of New York City Kids
Until October 21, 2018
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
5th Ave and 86 Street, NYC

(Image: Leeann Beckford (Age 10, Grade 4). The Forest, 2018. Mixed-media collage)

 

 

Old Timers at MoMa!

Examples of creative longevity are on view at The Museum of Modern Art with an exhibition called “The Long Run”. Over 100 works by artists that continued working after age 45 are highlighted.

 “All the artists in this presentation—drawn entirely from MoMA’s collection—are united by a ceaseless desire to make meaningful work, year after year, across decades. They include Lee Bontecou, Louise Bourgeois, Melvin Edwards, Gego, Philip Guston, David Hammons, Jasper Johns, Joan Jonas, Helen Levitt, Elizabeth Murray, Georgia O’Keeffe, Gerhard Richter, Frank Stella, and many others.”

The Long Run

(Until November 4, 2018)

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

(Image: Georgia O’Keeffe. Evening Star)

Magritte At SF MoMA!

The San Francisco Musem of Modern Art treats us to over 70 pieces from Surrealist artist Rene Magritte, 1898 – 1967.

This exhibition, the first to look exclusively at Magritte’s late career, examines his most important bodies of work from the 1940s through the 1960s, and shows how they marked a fundamental shift in painting from Modernism to our own time…the works reveal Magritte as an artist acutely attuned to the paradoxes at work within reality, and an enduring champion of the role of mystery in life and art. “

René Magritte: The Fifth Season

Until October 28, 2018

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

(Image: Rene Magritte  – “L’heureux donateur”  (The happy donor) 1966; Belgium)

 

 

Modern Japanese Portraits at AIC

“The 1940s and 1950s were a pivotal time for sōsaku hanga, the “creative prints” movement in Japan. Artists who had been trained primarily as oil painters turned to traditional woodblock printing to give full expression to their often somber images. Some of the most haunting portraits produced in Japan were created in this era, and they speak to the effort these artists made to imbue their subjects with a depth and psychological nuance entirely new to the medium.

This exhibition features the work of two such artists, Onchi Kōshirō (1891–1955) and Saitō Kiyoshi (1907–1997).”

Modern Japanese Portraits – Until July 1, 2018

AIC / The Art Institute of Chicago

111 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Il

 

 

Klimt and Schiele Together at Boston MFA

“To mark the centenary of the deaths of Gustav Klimt (1862–1918) and Egon Schiele (1890–1918), the MFA presents an exhibition of rarely seen drawings by the Austrian artists…”

“Klimt and Schiele: Drawn examines both the divergences and compelling parallels between the two artists—particularly in their provocative depictions of the human body.”

Klimt and Schiele: Drawn

Until May 28, 2018

Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Avenue of the Arts
465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts

(Image: Egon Schiele, The Artist’s Mother, Sleeping, 1911)

“Leon Golub: Raw Nerve” at the MET Breuer

American artist Leon Golub (1922–2004) “occupies a singular position in the history of mid- to late 20th-century art. His devotion to the figure, his embrace of expressionism, his fusion of modern and classical sources, and his commitment to social justice distinguish his practice as an artist.

“The artist’s work has much to teach us in the 21st century, as does his belief in the ethical responsibility of artists.”

Leon Golub: Raw Nerve

The Met Breuer

Until May 27, 2018

(Image: Gigantomachy II, 1966)