AUSTIN, TX. (via artdaily) - The Austin Museum of Art (AMOA) presents Modern Art. Modern Lives. Then + Now. This two-part exhibition, organized by the Austin Museum of Art, draws from AMOA’s permanent collection and local collections to explore how modern and contemporary artists merge art and life. It focuses on two distinct periods and areas: the start of modern art in the late 19th and early 20th century in Europe, and the late 20th and early 21st century from diverse cultures and art centers around the world.
“Modern Art. Modern Lives. Then+Now, comprised of rarely seen work drawn exclusively from local private collections and our own permanent collection, is one of the Museum’s most ambitious and broad-reaching exhibitions,” said Dana Friis-Hansen, AMOA Executive Director. “Never before have Austinites had the chance to see works by modern masters pushing at the boundaries of art in conjunction with the contemporary artists who are confronting the tough issues of our times.”
THEN: 19th and 20th Century Artists at the Turn of the Century, Curated by: Jim Housefield, Adjunct Curator.
Modern art was born in the 19th century out of a newly insistent sense that art and life must merge. This exhibition of works from local collections features artists whose lives changed the course of art as they examined the stories behind their artworks to reveal the social connections that guided Modernism’s course.
In the arts, “being modern,” meant pushing against the constraints of the present to envision new possibilities, especially new ways of shaping and depicting contemporary society. These new aesthetic and social forms emerge in the exhibition’s four sections Places and Spaces, Utopian Dreamers, Portraiture and Modern Temperament, and Follies and Diversions.
Places and Spaces shows the work of artists who dug into the “here and now” of the changing landscapes of modern life, and of others who fled the modern city to make their own places in nature, especially those Utopian Dreamers of artists’ colonies or distant lands. Portraiture and the Modern Temperament reveals the ordinary people who increasingly became the subjects of art: friends, family, hired models, even street performers, whose bodies became vehicles for new aesthetic expression. Experimenting with old techniques like painting and drawing or new printmaking technologies, the artists immortalized their own social circles. Artists gave new value to the fleeting experiences of modern life, even the Follies and Diversions of popular entertainments that poked fun at the foibles of modern men and women.
Famous works by Pierre Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, Édouard Manet, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Van Gogh are included in this collection. Many of these works by modern masters are being shown in Austin for the first time.
NOW: Where Are We Going? Contemporary Artists Address Issues of the 21st Century
Curated by: Dana Friis-Hansen, Executive Director and AMOA Chief Curator.
The contemporary section of Modern Art. Modern Lives. Then + Now presents an open-ended exploration of how fifty artists—both world-famous and lesser known, living and working in Austin, throughout the United States, and around the world—engage with key personal, social, and political issues of our time. This rich selection of artworks embraces a dazzling variety of media, styles, and expressive languages. Offering many viewpoints and provoking viewers to consider the complex world we live in at the start of the 21st century, these modern works are grouped into four sections: Where Are We Going? features both late 19th century and contemporary explorations of the search for meaning in modern times. Artists sought the authenticity and richness of outlying regions of France such as Pont Aven, or exotic locales such as Tahiti to insprire their art (Paul Gauguin, Émile Berard, Paul Serusier). In our own era, artists’ rendering of their quests have sometimes been allegorical (Beth Cambell, Jonathan Marshall, Lee N. Smith), meditative (TreArenz, Andrea Way) or through references to our place within epic or mysterious natural realms (Vija Celmins, Isaac Julian, Owen McCauley).
Paradise: Lost and Found focuses on landscape and the ways we find our place within it. Whether distilled to the colors of a single tree or phases of culture through the four seasons (Anne Appleby, Peat Duggins), or manipulated for our recreation or resources (Ed Burntsky, Rackstraw Downes, Skeet McAuley) artists treat nature very differently in the 21st century–as another artist shows–(Chris Jordan) going forward we must take great care about how we manage our waste.
Who Are We? assembles portraits and figurative representations that address the politics of culture, race, class, and gender in a globalizing world. With pride, anger, innovation, or sharp wit, these artists reject western white male dominance to propose hybrid identities, reminding us that from now on we will all live in a richer and more diverse world. (Terry Allen, Iona Rozeal Brown, Nancy Burson, Margarita Cabrera, Michael Ray Charles, Jenny Holzer, Lance Letscher, Young Min Kang, Ed and Nancy Kienholz, Barbara Kruger, David Magee, Ana Mendieta, Wangechi Mutu, Luis Gonzalez Palma, Fahamu Pecou, Adrian Piper, Andy Warhol, Marie Watt, Kihende Wiley, Carrie Mae Weems, Miwa Yanagi, and John Yancy).
Before and After Battle reveals how the preparations for and recovery from conflict forever impact our lives in ways visible and invisible, subtle and profound. Here we find pre- and post- conflict portraits of everyday people (Paul Shambroom, Sigmar Polke), war victims (Binh Dan), and survivors (Suzanne Opton); weapons turning into ploughshares (Hayden Larsen); allegories of battle and torture (Seth Alverson, Tom Molloy, Julie Merhetu, Sarah Pickering); potentially inflammatory emblems of patriotism (Vito Acconci, Shimon Attie, John Salvo); and evidence of how readily we accept tragedy into our lives (Julie Speed).
Re-blog via ArtDaily.org
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The Beat Generation t-shirt sale has ended. My apologies, but I promise it will come again.
Thanks as always for shopping in the real, and for your continued support of Beat Poetics.
The more exposure to the beats the better off we all will be…
You can still order a custom Beat lit t-shirt (or other) on the Custom page, or pick one up at Book People at 6th and Lamar in Austin. They’re graciously featuring Beat Generation writers in the store this month to coincide with the On the Road with the Beats exhibit at the University of Texas at Austin / Harry Ransom Center.
The exhibit explores the lives and works of the artists who made up the “Beat Generation.”
Featuring more than 250 items drawn from across the Ransom Center’s collections, the exhibition will take visitors on a journey through the cities, landscapes and communities that fostered and shaped the most important works of the Beat Generation, from the early 1940s to the mid-1960s. The exhibition runs from Feb. 5 to Aug. 3 in the Ransom Center Galleries at The University of Texas at Austin.
Jack Kerouac’s scroll manuscript of On the Road, on loan from the collection of Jim Irsay, will be on display from March 7 through June 1. The first 48 feet of this 120-foot “page” (aka “the roll”) will be visible in the gallery. This visually stunning first draft has no paragraph or chapter breaks, and the characters are referred to by their real names.

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I always wanted the biggest box of crayons. It was always a really cool thing to have. But as I think about it now, someone that would have taught me how to color, to actually do something with 8 crayons, that could have changed my life. I might have moved from being a consumer to an artist. Big is about consumers. Small is about artists. Big is about changing people to your world. Small is about preparing people to change their world.
Read the article here. - Social scientists have a name for this sort of incessant online contact. They call it “ambient awareness.” It is, they say, very much like being physically near someone and picking up on his mood through the little things he does — body language, sighs, stray comments — out of the corner of your eye.
Each little update — each individual bit of social information — is insignificant on its own, even supremely mundane. But taken together, over time, the little snippets coalesce into a surprisingly sophisticated portrait of your friends’ and family members’ lives, like thousands of dots making a pointillist painting. This was never before possible, because in the real world, no friend would bother to call you up and detail the sandwiches she was eating. The ambient information becomes like “a type of E.S.P.,” as Haley described it to me, an invisible dimension floating over everyday life.Source: New York Times
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Tate Liverpool
Albert Dock
Liverpool
Fourth floor galleries
Peter Blake: A Retrospective
June 29-September 23, 2008
A highly influential and original artist, Peter Blake is often described as the godfather of British Pop art. The Tate Liverpool exhibition will survey his rich and diverse oeuvre, presenting familiar works alongside other rarely-seen ones.
The show will include major iconic works such as On the Balcony (1955-57), Self-Portrait with Badges (1961), The Toy Shop (1962), The Beatles (1963-68) and ‘The Meeting’ or ‘Have a Nice Day, Mr Hockney’ (1981-83). It will conclude with recent works, such as the Marcel Duchamp World Tour, a project which has occupied the artist for the last decade.
At the core of Blake’s work has been his fascination with popular culture, including music, film and sports. A prolific artist, he has worked in a variety of media including painting, drawing, printmaking, illustration, collage and sculpture. During the late 1950s and early 1960s Blake became one of the best-known British Pop artists. He defined a specifically British pop aesthetic and, has on several occasions, seamlessly blended his work with popular culture itself, the best known examples being his cover for the Beatles album Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and the recent cover design for Stop the Clocks by Oasis.
Read on and view more work here.
via Art Tattler | Tate Collection - Way back in the 1950s, sociologist Erving Goffman proposed in his study The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life that the very warp and woof of the social world consists of carefully constructed dramaturgy, albeit of a manner that most performers were unconscious. Our daily lives and cultural rituals provide all the settings, costumes, props and scripts we need to take our roles. The same logic underpins our movement through digital spaces and online communities, but unhinged from the necessities of physical limitations, and with a greater promise of self-transformation -- the dream of a complete rebooting of the self. via Rhizome
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