Showing posts with label MoMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MoMA. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Inspirational Links: October 16 - 22


What inspires you?
Five thought-inspiring things found online last week. 

Browse the entries in this classic-art-remake challenge sponsored by BOOOOOOOM! and Adobe. Across the board they’re remarkably inventive while staying true to their roots. Test your art history prowess while you’re at it! How many originals do you recognize? [via BOOOOOOOM!]

Richard Serra’s Verb List (1967-68) struck me when I saw it this summer at the Met. (That retrospective is now at the SFMoMA, and it’s worth a visit if you’re in SF.) Since Verb List is a new acquisition for MoMA’s Dept of Drawings, it came up again in the blog-o-sphere this week. Read it aloud to yourself. Feel the energy. Act!  [via INSIDE/OUT]
Calligrapher/typographer Sabeena Karnik sculpted the alphabet out of vibrant, swirling paper. Wouldn't they be perfect on a playroom wall?! [via Behance]

I want to buy this Psalt Bubble Fish Tank and keep it on a shelf high above eye level. I’m not sure exactly why… [via designboom]
David Rockwell discusses How Good Buildings Happen with Architizer's Marc Kushner. Rockwell and his team are driven by curiosity and solving problems. He says, “From the air this city looks like this very neat organized Cartesian grid, but on the ground it’s this incredibly messy, vital, ever-changing opportunity for good design and bad design.”  Lucky for us New Yorkers Rockwell gives us the former with the new Film Society of Lincoln Center. [via Architizer]    
How Good Buildings Happen - David Rockwell from MAS on Vimeo.

Leave a comment and share the links that inspire you. 

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

MoMA - de Kooning Retrospective

Nearly 200 pieces taking up MoMA’s entire sixth floor and spanning 7 decades? Man! Laziness creeps in just thinking about the vastness of the de Kooning retrospective at MoMA, but shake it off because you must see this show. Pregame with a strong espresso and a yummy pie at PizzArte (dare you to try their new deep fried pizza!). Then, take a breath and go! From the first glimpse of the first Woman you’ll be glad you’re there.
De Kooning insisted, “Art should not have to be a certain way.” That conviction translates into a massive body of work, which MoMA breaks down for you into six sections. The coolest part is having the chance to see it all together. The master continually challenged himself. He manipulated traditional materials and techniques. He layered and sanded and reworked his canvases. If you look closely you can find traces of color behind the “black and whites.” 

Seeing de Kooning’s work all together like this seems like the only way to truly appreciate its greatness. As NYMag’s Jerry Saltz said in his review, “this retrospective should permanently set the art-historical record straight on this artist.” Bottom line, there is a lot to take in. Plus, there’s a free audio tour with really interesting commentary by curatorial assistant Lauren Mahony (available for ipad/iphone, too). Thank you, MoMA, for that!
De Kooning: A Retrospective is up for the next three months, so go see it! If you can’t make it in person, click here and live vicariously. MoMA has set up a comprehensive exhibition website where you can explore the work by theme, period, method & material, or timeline. Zoom in on the bits of charcoal in the paint, the drips, the pinholes, but doing so will make you want to see it in person. Consider yourself forewarned. 

Ingredients:
Venue: MoMA - Museum of Modern Art
Artist: Willem de Kooning
Streets: 53rd St, 5th-6th Aves
Eats: PizzArte
Map: