Spring 2015 - Friends of European Art
Transcription
Spring 2015 - Friends of European Art
Connecting with Leonardo (cont’d from page 1) Leonardo lived 100 years before the invention of the telescope and was limited in his day on his powers of observation by having to rely on the naked eye to observe nature. It is intriguing to wonder what he could have done had he access to a telescope or, better yet, a camera. Photography plays an important part in the exhibition. Still-action photographs from the 19th and 20th centuries by Eadweard Muybridge and Harold Edgerton picture ideas expressed by Leonardo and demonstrate examples of close observation made possible through mechanical means. Photographs by Edward Weston and Ansel Adams, on the other hand, express the important lesson learned by returning repeatedly to a subject, of thinking on photographic paper looking to the ideal image. Other works included in the exhibition will be images by Kiki Smith, Tony Les arceaux fleuris, Giverny (Flowering Arches, Giverny), Claude-Oscar Monet, 1913. Foster, Andreas Feininger, Devorah Sperber, and Oil on canvas. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum, Gift of Mr. & Mrs. Donald D. a powerful video installation by Bill Viola that will Harrington. be difficult to forget. I’m pleased to say that this is an unusual, even groundbreaking approach to the exhibition of Leonardo’s Codex Leicester that we hope you enjoy and remember. It is certainly a great way to kick off 2015. In Honor of Jim Ballinger Friends of European Art and Western Art Associates are pleased to co-host a dinner on March 27, 2015, to honor Jim’s long-time commitment to the Museum. It will be a time for our two support groups, special to Jim, to socialize and reminisce. For this fund-raiser, you are invited to underwrite appetizers or a dinner course, in Jim’s honor. Contact Bunny Gordon to contribute. (602.214.8883 or [email protected]) FEA’s net proceeds will go toward our commitment to assist funding Leonardo da Vinci Leicester Codex and the Power of Observation and the exhibition on Michelangelo in 2016. Georgia Wolfe, Program Chairman Bill Viola, The Raft, 2004, Collection of the Bill Viola Studio The Schorr Collection Loan Expands to Twenty Works Our multi-year loan of Old Master European paintings now includes twenty works with the installation of six additional paintings from The Schorr Collection, significantly enriching our Renaissance, Baroque and 17th century European galleries. The integration of the Schorr loans brings new artistic context to the objects in our own collection. Giovanni Balducci’s The Martyrdom of St. Lawrence, before 1587; The Mocking of Christ, early 1630s, by Matthias Stomer and The Death of Sapphira, 1590s by Ambrosius Francken the Elder illustrate three dramatic religious narratives. The Sukhman Gallery dedicated to Dutch art has two stunning landscapes. Landscape with Travelers on a Path Near a Waterfall, 1640s is by Jan Both, a leading master of the ‘italianate’ trend of Dutch landscape painting in the 17th century. Jan van der Heyden’s harmonious view of Travellers in a Hilly Landscape, 1660s, appears to depict an imagined ruined castle and a farmhouse. Bernardo Strozzi’s Saint Jerome, 1630s, complements our Jan van Dalen’s Vanitas, c. 1665, and an earlier The Schorr Collection loan, St. Jerome in his Studio, c. 1520-1550 by Marinus van Reymerswaele. President’s Letter Letter from the Director Dear FEA Members: Dear FEA Members, What a unique year for FEA thus far! We have had several lectures and events in conjunction with other support groups like the Contemporary Forum, the Collectors Club and our upcoming event with the Western Art Associates. These joint events are a first and lay the foundation for continued cooperation in support of Phoenix Art Museum. For the first time Phoenix Art Museum will be hosting an exhibition of Leonardo da Vinci: Leonardo da Vinci’s Codex Leicester and the Power of Observation. Our curator Jerry Smith has been working hard on this exhibition developing the idea of the Power of Observation; read his article in this issue. Our March 27 celebration, An Evening with Jim Ballinger – Thank You for 40 Years, will help support the Museum with the Leonardo exhibition expenses. I hope you plan on attending. Jim has been an avid supporter of FEA as our liaison. He has been invaluable in finding excellent speakers, exhibitions and acquisitions for our group. His leadership shall be missed, but remember he’ll remain an active, honorary member of our group so we will continue to benefit from his knowledge. Our year is half over but we still have things to do. In addition to the March 27th event FEA is heading to London and the English countryside in May. – a must see for you travel and art lovers! Jan Both, Landscape with Travellers on a Path Near a Waterfall, 1640s, oil on canvas; Dutch, c. 1618-1652 A two-volume publication of The Schorr Collection in its entirety has been purchased by our Research Library. The Plates volume includes full descriptions and color images. The Catalogue volume has artist biographies and provenance information. When you come to view the galleries, you’ll want to include the Research Library in your visit. Visit our website for details: www.friendsofeuropeanart.org Warm Regards, Bunny Gordon We are beginning 2015 with a bang opening Leonardo da Vinci’s Codex Leicester and the Power of Observation on February 24. Thank you for your sponsorship of this great project which brings to Arizona for the first time original work by Leonardo da Vinci. This exhibition accomplishes two goals; first making clear that the genius of Leonardo is relevant for today’s audience and artists; while, second, providing a platform for the Museum to lead a discussion of water management and its importance for Arizona’s past and future. The Leicester Codex is dedicated to Leonardo’s thoughts about the power of water, its management and uses for the good of the community. The exhibition opens at a time of transition for me and the Museum, as I retire as the Sybil Harrington Director and pass the leadership baton to Amada Cruz to continue stewardship of our institution. You will be in good hands with Amada Cruz and Jerry Smith as your curator. This provides me with a moment of reflection regarding Friends of European Art. It seems like yesterday that a group of interested Phoenix Art Museum members came together with the desire to create a vibrant organization that would support and further European art for our community. We formally began in 1997 with Anne Connor as our inaugural President, and the organization has had consistent quality leadership ever since, right up to our current leader, Bunny Gordon. Perhaps the organization has benefited because our Docents are so well organized and most of FEA’s leadership has come from Docents. Along the way, FEA has successfully brought great speakers and programs to our visitors; helped sponsor several important exhibitions like the Leonardo project; and made seven important acquisitions for the galleries. Ironically, I have been directly involved in four, the most recent our joint acquisition of the Delft blue and white vase with the Collector’s Study Club. The others were the Jean-Léon Gérôme maquette of the Gladiator (2012), the Léon Pourtau pointillist landscape (2011) and our first acquisition by Hippolyte-Camille Delpy (1989). Thank you all for your support of Phoenix Art Museum and of me over many years. Together, working with staff, volunteers, contributors, collectors and Trustees we have created an anchor art museum for the people of Arizona. I know your enthusiasm will not wane in the future, and we all have next year’s exhibition of Michelangelo drawings to rally around – another first for Arizona! See you at the Museum! James K. Ballinger The Sybil Harrington Director Friends of European Art Fall 2013 Newsletter 2015 Calendar of Events January 14, 2015: Reception/Lecture: Florence in the Time of Leonardo John Spike, PhD, Guest Professor William and Mary College Hosted FEA Members Reception 5:30-6:30pm on Grossman Terrace Lecture in Whiteman Hall at 6:45pm January 19, 2015: Salon: The Dutch Golden Age Robert Aronson, Specialist in 17th & 18th century Delftware, Aronson Antiquaries, Amsterdam Private dinner & Salon co-hosted with the Collectors’ Study Club - $60 per person Cocktails at 5:30pm Dinner at 6pm The University Club of Phoenix, 39 E. Monte Vista Road, Phoenix 85004 March 27, 2015: Salons and Saloons: An Evening with Jim Ballinger – Thank you for 40 Years! • Invitations will be mailed in February. • Cocktails will being at 6:30pm at the Phoenix Country Club. • A silent auction will be geared to museum devotees! • Dinner with comments from Jim will follow. • Mayor Stanton will share highlights of the Museum’s and Jim’s successful and long-standing relationship with the city of Phoenix. Friends of European Art Welcomes Our Newest Members Nancy Littlefield Davis, Mark Ellis, Mary and Jeff Ehret, Pat Mariella, Jane And Vincent Perla, Helen Pierson, Susan von Hellens, Somers White Contact Mardelle Mikus for membership brochures and information at (480) 991-8004 A support organization of FEA BOARD 2014-2015 President Bunny Gordon Vice President Victoria Cook Secretary Rona Kasen Treasurer Steve Wolfe Museum Liaison Jim Ballinger Member at Large Dr. Kati Festy-Sandor Member at Large Ruth Hay Member at Large Jan Gilpin Anderson Collections James Melikien Communications Carolyn Parker Hospitality Dawn Schlott Membership Mardelle Mikus 1625 North Central Avenue Phoenix, AZ 85004-1685 FriendsofEuropeanArt.org Programs Georgia Wolfe Alice Meyer Publications Lisa Roger Gigi Jordan Public Relations Matt Engle Parliamentarian Toni Minarich Travel – Domestic Georgia Wolfe Travel – International Mary Newstead Rachel Maloney Webmaster JoAnne Smith Joyce Durham Connecting with Leonardo By Jerry N. Smith, Ph.D. Curator of American and European Art to 1950 and Art of the American West Leonardo da Vinci’s Codex Leicester and the Power of Observation is a rare opportunity to examine a remarkable text written by the great Renaissance master and to consider his continuing influence on art. On view will be the codex, marking the first time a work by the hand of Leonardo da Vinci will be displayed in Arizona. It features Leonardo’s written passages on properties of water, the moon, shells in mountain regions, and a host of other topics. The pages are illustrated with numerous designs and diagrams relating to the scientific text. The document is, without question, remarkable and gives us great insight into the mind of Leonardo. However, it is only readable by those who can read sixteenth-century Italian written in reverse. The sketches and images are fascinating to look at, especially given the author, but they are far from being on par Jacopo de’ Barbari, View of Venice, 1500, with Leonardo’s finest Collection of Minneapolis Institute of Arts drawings or well known paintings. This poses a bit of a problem for an art museum; with its limited aesthetic appeal, how do we make the Codex Leicester something people want to see at an art museum? The answer was to develop an exhibition of works of art based around the codex, featuring works from the sixteenth century into the present. These are engaging works of art that complement Leonardo’s working methods, demonstrate his continued influence and provide opportunities for us to explain some of the many concepts expressed in the codex itself. From Leonardo’s own time, we will feature Jacopo de’ Barbari’s remarkable View of Venice, a large-scale woodcut print made in 1500. Printed on six sheets of paper from six different blocks, it measures an impressive 4’ 4¼” x 9’ 1¼”. Barbari viewed the water-bound Venice from bell towers, and then imagined a bird’s eye view, the first of its kind of a European city and the first work to ever receive a copyright (lasting four years). An extraordinarily expensive and rare work in its day that originally cost 3 golden ducats, the work on view will be one of only 13 of the original printing known to exist. It is an amazing work of art that demonstrates the intellectually curious times in which Leonardo lived. The theme of close and repeated observation is expressed in the codex, and is also found in the exhibition in paintings by Gustave Courbet and Claude Monet. Utilizing the Museum’s own collection of European art, we feature two paintings by Courbet from his Wave series from the 1860s, along with the Museum’s Monet from Giverny. The new context should give us a refreshing way to think about items in our own collection. In addition, we are borrowing Monet’s The Cliff, Étretat, Sunset, 1883, from the collection of North Carolina Museum of Art. It is a beautiful, early work by the Impressionist. Issue 50 Spring 2015 Cont’d on page 2 FriendsofEuropeanArt.org