Go See – London: “New Paintings and Sculptures” by Yayoi Kusa at Victoria Miro through July 29th, 2011
Monday, July 25th, 2011More text and images after the jump…
More text and images after the jump…
Alice Neel, Ned McCabe (1964), all images via Victoria Miro Gallery
The Victoria Miro Gallery has staged an intimate selection of portraits by Alice Neel, focusing on her work with male subjects. Titled “Men Only”, the show highlights Neel’s relationship with the different men who posed for her over the years. Some are close friends, others are blood relatives, some were strangers that caught her eye, but each portrait gives a glimpse into the personality of the sitter.
More text and images after the jump…
Another view of the main lobby, A Scott Campbell “tropical fantasy” (represented by the Miami based OHWOW Gallery) is the top center work
Art Observed was on site at the Soho Beach House Miami during the week of Art Basel Miami Beach for a tour of the 150 work art collection assembled for the private club and hotel. Keeping a close connection with the artistic community has been an important part of the strategy for the Soho house brand, which has multiple locations in England as well as in New York and newly in Los Angeles, Berlin and Miami Beach. This week marked the first Art Basel Miami Beach for the location and it hit the ground running, hosting some important events such as dinners for White Cube and Victoria Miro galleries and a W Magazine event.
A John Baldessari on the left and a Friends With You on the right, in a hallway on the main floor
More story and images after the jump… (more…)
–>
Alice Neel, photographed by Sam Brody courtesy of Victoria Miro Gallery
“In The Company of Alice” is currently on view at Victoria Miro Gallery. This is a group exhibition of paintings honoring the life and work of Alice Neel. Each of the painters participating in the show drew inspiration from their admiration for Neel’s work. Some of the artists in the show often create portraits–but for others this is a new endeavor, and their very first portraits are being shown in this exhibition. “In the Company of Alice” coincides with a retrospective of Neel’s work at Whitechapel Gallery, opening on July 8th. Studying Alice Neel’s work as a point of departure for modern and contemporary portraiture, “In the Company of Alice” aims to broaden the viewer’s perspective of figuration and portraiture. The exhibition also brings forth the importance of these modes of practice in relation to contemporary art.
–>
Alice Neel, Richard, 1973, courtesy of Victoria Miro Gallery
More text and images after the jump…