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Major Retrospective of French Sculptor Camille Claudel

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Visitors at the Camille Claudel exhibition at the Getty Center. Image courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Trust
Visitors at the Camille Claudel exhibition at the Getty Center. Image courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Trust

The J. Paul Getty Museum presents Camille Claudel, an exhibition showcasing nearly 60 sculptures by one of the most daring and visionary artists of the late 19th century. On view at the Getty Center through July 21, 2024, the exhibition seeks to reevaluate Claudel’s work and affirm her legacy within a more complex genealogy of modernism.

A trailblazing artist working in France in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Claudel defied the social expectations of her time to create forceful sculptures of the human form. Her innovative artworks treat the universal themes of childhood, old age, love, and loss with an expressive intensity in a variety of genres, materials, and scales.

Visitors at the Camille Claudel exhibition at the Getty Center. Image courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Trust
Visitors at the Camille Claudel exhibition at the Getty Center. Image courtesy of the J. Paul Getty Trust

“A pioneer for women artists of the time, in a short but extraordinary career, Claudel established herself as one of the most important sculptors of the late 19th and early 20th-century Europe,” says Timothy Potts, Maria Hummer-Tuttle and Robert Tuttle Director of the Getty Museum. “Revered in France, and now widely sought after by museums around the world, her deeply moving images of the human body are one of the high points of romantic sculpture in Europe, and I am sure will be greatly admired by our visitors and especially the artist community.”

Claudel’s career has often been interpreted through her dramatic personal life, which involved a complicated relationship with her mentor, Auguste Rodin, and mental health issues resulting in a 30-year confinement in a psychiatric institution. While French collectors and critics immediately recognized Claudel’s talent, her art remains little known outside of France.

Organized chronologically and thematically, the exhibition will invite visitors to experience a diverse array of sculptures Claudel created during her career and many of the masterpieces that earned her much success.

“Claudel excelled at capturing the likeness of her subjects, depicting individuals at every stage of life with powerful emotion and empathy,” says Anne-Lise Desmas, senior curator of sculpture and decorative arts at the J. Paul Getty Museum. “The support and success she experienced with collectors, fellow artists, and journalists during a time when few women artists were widely regarded is testimony to her rare talent and ceaseless creativity.”

camille claudel the waltz scuplture
Camille Claudel, “The Waltz (Allioli),” about 1900, Bronze, Private collection, Photo: Musée Yves Brayer , EX.2024.1.36

Claudel impressed critics with compositions that pushed the boundaries, such as “The Waltz”—a dynamic scene of two lovers surrendering to a dance. The first iteration Claudel created of the sculpture will be on view—a unique bronze cast with complex, openwork draperies or “veils” swirling behind the figures. In response to demand from collectors, Claudel produced several inventive versions of the couple at a smaller scale, including a few bronzes that will be on view to juxtapose their varied patina effects with brown, green, and gilded surfaces.

Another masterpiece in the exhibition is “Age of Maturity,” on loan from the Musée d’Orsay. One of her most ambitious sculptures, the three large figures depict life’s tragic journey with Old Age leading Middle Age forward, beyond the grasp of a kneeling, abandoned Youth. When it was exhibited, a critic declared, “We can no longer call Mademoiselle Claudel a student of Rodin; she is a rival.”

For more details: getty.edu

Join Us for a Rare Fine Art Trip to Venice

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Regatta on the Grand Canal Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697-1768), known as Canaletto
Regatta on the Grand Canal Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697-1768), known as Canaletto

Join Us for a Rare Fine Art Trip to Venice

Venice is one of the most colorful and architecturally interesting cities in the world, with everyday life taking place on canals and most transportation occurring by boat. That’s why so many artists have been drawn to this inspirational city.

John Singer Sargent did an entire series of paintings in Venice over the course of several years, and the last time I was there, I stood in the same spots where Sargent would have stood to do his paintings. But it wasn’t just Sargent; there has been a procession of artists to Venice for generations. The city was documented most by Canaletto, who lived in Venice, and resident artists have also included Bellini, Carpaccio, Veronese, Giorgione, Titian, and Tintoretto.

Anders Zorn painted his famous portrait of Isabella Stewart Gardner in Venice. In fact, he had stayed at her home, Palazzo Barbaro, for several weeks, struggling with the portrait, until one day she got up, walked to the balcony with arms spread wide, and Zorn shouted, “Don’t move! Hold that pose!” Other guests at the palazzo included Sargent and Henry James. Sargent first visited in the 1880s and then multiple times from 1898-1913. He loved the architecture, the water, and the characters around Venice and painted it all in both oils and watercolor.

Regatta on the Grand Canal Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697-1768), known as Canaletto
Regatta on the Grand Canal
Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697-1768), known as Canaletto

Announcing Our Fine Art Connoisseur Trip to Venice

Each year, Fine Art Connoisseur Editor Peter Trippi and I lead a group of art enthusiasts, collectors, and artists through a region of Europe to go “behind the scenes” in the art world. Our next trip, October 20-29, 2024, includes six nights in Venice and three nights in Verona, a must-see art adventure not on many people’s radar.

Our trips are legendary. On a typical trip we visit art museums, often privately and behind the scenes with the help of curators and directors. It’s not unusual for us to find ourselves in private homes, visiting with artists or viewing private collections, touring the artwork in churches, or having gourmet meals, as well as enjoying multiple memory-creating unique experiences rarely available to those touring on their own.

Venice promises many special adventures in a city rich with culture, with art created across generations. Due to limitations on our scheduled events, seating is especially limited for this tour. It is recommended that reservations be booked now (also, this is the time to save by advance booking on flights).

This trip does not include airfare, but includes hotels, touring transportation, and most meals. This is a very high-end, VIP-level luxury trip. Art lovers and spouses are welcome.

To sign up for the trip, visit www.FineArtTrip.com.

Optional Painting Trip with Eric Rhoads

I’m going to take advantage of the chance to paint Venice one last time (in case it sinks), so I’m organizing an optional three-day painting trip (October 17-19) before the Fine Art Trip begins. This is only available to people in attendance on the full trip, and must be arranged separately through me, by contacting [email protected].

Artist Spotlight: Larry Cannon

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Larry Cannon painting on the Sonoma Coast
Larry Cannon painting on the Sonoma Coast

How did you develop your unique style?
Larry Cannon: Largely through finding ways to overcome my early weaknesses as a watercolor painter and finding that my disasters forced me to rely on previously learned painting fundamentals, and to paint more loosely out of my comfort zone. Over time I enjoyed observing the accomplished paintings of many watercolorists but found none that totally suited my vision and ambitions. Hence, I stopped trying to paint like others and stuck to my own personal path.

How do you find inspiration?
Larry Cannon: Through a love of the land and sea of California where one can both see and physically feel the Forces of Nature that are continually altering the landscape. Painting Nature in its multitude of moods coalesced into a passion after viewing an exhibition of watercolors by the early 19th century artist Percy Gray in Carmel-by-the-Sea. From that point on I sought my inspiration from plein air painting along the beautiful California coastline and in her lush valleys and mountains.

To see more of Larry’s work, visit:
Website 

watercolor painting of beach scene with large cliff rocks on left side
A Moment in Time: Malibu, Larry Cannon, watercolor, 16 x 20 in; Millennia-old battle as irresistible force meets immovable object, 2019
watercolor painting of cows grazing on farmland with foliage on mountain range in background
Valley of the Moon, Larry Cannon, watercolor, 11 x 14 in; Sonoma Wine Country pastoral valley that Native Americans named Valley of the Moon, 2020

Sagebrush and Solitude: Maynard Dixon in Nevada

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Maynard Dixon, Cowboy and Packhorse, 1934. Oil on canvas, 26 x 30 inches. Ray and Kay Harvey Collection
Maynard Dixon, "Cowboy and Packhorse," 1934. Oil on canvas, 26 x 30 inches. Ray and Kay Harvey Collection

On view at the Nevada Museum of Art is “Sagebrush and Solitude: Maynard Dixon in Nevada,” the first comprehensive exhibition documenting his visits to the Silver State. From 1901 through 1939, Dixon made several trips from his San Francisco home to depict the striking landscapes of the Great Basin and Sierra Nevada region. On view are nearly 150 paintings and drawings, many rarely or never seen before.

Maynard Dixon, Virginia City, 1933. Oil on canvas, 16 x 20 inches. Collection of the A.P. Hays Family
Maynard Dixon, Virginia City, 1933. Oil on canvas, 16 x 20 inches. Collection of the A.P. Hays Family

From the first sketching trip taken with fellow artist Edward Borein in 1901, Dixon captured the beauty of Nevada’s open spaces, which were fast being transformed by external forces. Among his favorite subjects were old homesteads, wild horses, and stands of cottonwood trees — romanticized images that conjure the era before modernization. Historian Kevin Starr (1940–2017) once noted that a driving impulse was Dixon’s “sense of imminent loss” of the geography, history, folklore, and culture of the American frontier. He sought to record it all through his art — and words — before it vanished.

Maynard Dixon (1875–1946), "Tired Men," 1923, oil on canvas, 25 x 30 in., private collection
Maynard Dixon (1875–1946), “Tired Men,” 1923, oil on canvas, 25 x 30 in., private collection

Wearing a Stetson hat and cowboy boots, Dixon fashioned a persona that lent an air of authenticity to his search for the “Old West” as he imagined it. At the same time, he pushed stylistic boundaries and helped usher in a new style of modernism. In 1934 he was commissioned by the federal Public Works of Art Project to document the construction of what is now called the Hoover Dam near Las Vegas. Scholar John Ott says that these two dozen paintings “…depart dramatically from the nostalgic frontier scenes with which Dixon established his reputation.”

This groundbreaking project has been organized by Ann M. Wolfe, the museum’s chief curator and associate director, and is accompanied by a 250-page catalogue.

Virtual Gallery Walk for April 19th, 2024

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Friday Virtual Gallery Walk

As part of our effort to continue to help artists and art galleries thrive, we’re proud to bring you this week’s “Virtual Gallery Walk.” Browse the artwork below and click the image itself to learn more about it, including how to contact the gallery.

Red Daffodil, Nicole Troup, oil and gold leaf, 20 x16 in; The Gilded Portrait Workshop

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Midwinter Day’s Dream, Sherry Mason, oil, 16 x 16 in; Sherry Mason; 2024 Appalachian Art Show – Regional Juried Art Show and Sale

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Puck Torso – Bibliotec di Pietrasanta, Pietrasanta, Italy, 1984, Elizabeth MacQueen, Plaster, Reinforced, 8.5’H x 2.5’W x 2’D; Elizabeth MacQueen

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After the Rain, Pennsylvania Ave, Jean Schwartz, oil on linen panel, 24 x 30 in; Calloway Fine Art, Washington DC

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Under the Aspens, Love Declared, Debra Holladay, oil on oil primed linen board, 24 x 24 in; Santa Paula Museum

Want to see your gallery featured in an upcoming Virtual Gallery Walk? Contact us at [email protected] to advertise today. Don’t delay, as spaces are first come, first served, and availability is limited.

The Painting That Most Resonated with T. Allen Lawson

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We’d like to congratulate Ann Rudd for winning Overall First Place in the March 2024 PleinAir Salon, judged by T. Allen Lawson.

PleinAir Salon art competition - Ann Rudd, “Untitled in Gray,” Oil, 7x5 in.
Ann Rudd, “Untitled in Gray,” Oil, 7×5 in.

“I awarded this small figurative painting first place because of its emotional quality,” Lawson said. “I believe it was beautifully composed and wonderfully painted. It is well drawn yet leaves much to be interpreted. Of all the paintings in this competition this piece really resonated with me.”

“I love the experience of quiet contentment,” Rudd says in her artist statement. “I look for it, appreciate it, and am generally intrigued when I see individuals sitting quietly, alone with their thoughts. I love painting these moods with gray tones and soft edges and I challenge myself to lose as many edges as possible.”

Ann T. Rudd is a contemporary oil painter with work represented in galleries in the United States and abroad. Her artwork has received numerous awards, including the BoldBrush Award for Abstract in June 2022, Top 100 Finalist in PleinAir magazine’s November 2023 PleinAir Salon competition, and a Finalist award in International Artist magazine’s People and Figures competition, published in February/March 2024.

She is from Raleigh, North Carolina, earned a bachelor’s degree from East Carolina University, a master’s in Applied Psychology from Virginia Tech, and provided psychological services for people with special needs for several decades. Over the years, she attended classes with master artists in the Charlotte area and a myriad of online painting workshops, exploring contemporary ideas of abstraction. In addition to painting, Rudd enjoys reading, couch time, family, beach, travel, chess, team trivia, and ongoing efforts at golf and racquet sports.

“For painters and artists thinking of entering a competition or a public exhibition, my advice would be to paint what interests you,” Lawson advises. “Pay no attention to what you may think the judges or audiences would like to see. If you are true to yourself and take the time to learn, really study and learn your craft, then ask yourself why you are drawn to a particular subject matter and then execute your painting to the best of your ability, your painting will be an honest interpretation.”


About the PleinAir Salon:

In the spirit of the French Salon created by the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris, this annual online art competition, with 11 monthly cycles, leading to the annual Salon Grand Prize winners, is designed to stimulate artistic growth through competition. The competition rewards artists with $50,000 in cash prizes and exposure of their work, with the winning painting featured on the cover of PleinAir® Magazine.

Winners in each monthly competition may receive recognition and exposure through PleinAir Magazine’s print magazine, e-newsletters, websites, and social media. Winners of each competition will also be entered into the annual competition. The Annual Awards will be presented live at the next Plein Air Convention & Expo.

The next round of the PleinAir Salon has begun so hurry, as this competition ends on the last day of the month. Enter your best art in the PleinAir Salon here.

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PleinAir® Magazine is a registered trademark of Streamline Publishing, Inc.

View more artist and collector profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Artist Spotlight: Cynthia Inson

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artist with painting of Hollyhock
Cynthia with Hollyhock

How did you get started and then develop your career?
Cynthia Inson: I returned to painting when Covid shut everything down. I painted to remain sane and keep my mind focused on something positive and challenging.

What is the most interesting thing that you have painted and why?
Cynthia Inson: The most interesting thing/scene that I have painted was a plein air piece of the Rio Chama. I painted with a friend at a very steep and tight shoulder of the highway.

To see more of Cynthia’s work, visit:
website

oil painting of landscape with dirt road, and bushes and trees surrounding it
Cynthia Inson, “Chamisa Arroyo,” oil, 12 x 9 in; available through artist
gouache painting of desert landscape with hills and dirt round, surrounded by bushes
Cynthia Inson, “Rio Chama,” gouache, 12 x 6 in; available through artist

Art Collection Spotlight: Where There’s a Will, There’s a Wall

Gary Ernest Smith (b. 1942), "Hay Field with Figure and Barn," 1995, oil on canvas, 18 x 24 in.
Gary Ernest Smith (b. 1942), "Hay Field with Figure and Barn," 1995, oil on canvas, 18 x 24 in.

Art Collection Profile > Veda Barrie and Bob Weatherbee have visited more than 120 countries over the years, not only to go backpacking and mountain climbing, but also to explore local museums and heritage sites. Not surprisingly, they have brought home to Utah a huge array of books, magazines, photographs, and art objects documenting the wonders they saw. Veda recalls, “Having viewed art in the best museums around the world, we started looking closer to home for paintings to live with.”

fine art collection - Valoy Eaton (b. 1938), "Home from School," 1985, oil on canvas, 22 x 32 in.
Valoy Eaton (b. 1938), “Home from School,” 1985, oil on canvas, 22 x 32 in.

Their first acquisition was the painting by Valoy Eaton illustrated above. Created in 1985, it depicts two boys passing a farmhouse while walking along a muddy road. Veda recalls, “It just hit home. I am from an Idaho farm family and have two sons. Bob is from a Massachusetts dairy farm background. We fell in love with it. Bam! Had to have it.”

Now, more than 30 years later, the couple’s collection is mostly contemporary, encompassing such talents as William Acheff, Babe Atha, Erin Barrett, Ken Baxter, Shonto Begay, Lee Bennion, Will Caldwell, Royden Card, Russell Case, John Cogan, Rob Colvin, Sylvia Davis, Valoy Eaton, Phil Epp, Lynn Farrar, Trent Gudmundsen, Logan Maxwell Hagege, George Handrahan, Lucia Heffernan, Willamarie Huelscamp, Frank Huff, Brian Kershisnik, Randall Lake, Merrill Mahaffey, Michael Malm, David Mann, David Meikle, Ed Mell, Jim Morgan, Kathy Peterson, Jeff Pugh, Billy Schenck, Alexander Selytin, A.D. Shaw, Dennis Smith, Gary Ernest Smith, Kate Starling, Kathryn Stats, Bryan Mark Taylor, Clay Wagstaff, Rebecca Wagstaff, Kim Wiggins, Seth Winegar, Simon Winegar, Jim Wodark, and Michael Workman.

The collection is housed in two places. At their home in St. George, in southern Utah, Veda and Bob have focused on Southwestern imagery, while in Salt Lake City the emphasis is on artists from northern Utah, Idaho, and Kansas. Most of their art has been purchased through galleries. Veda prefers this method because, she says, “We get the benefit of working with a dealer who can advise us. Frequently we can take a painting home for placement to see if it works, though we also believe that ‘Where there is a will, there is a wall!’” In addition, the couple purchases through auctions and occasionally fairs and other special events.

Veda and Bob have become very friendly with many of “their” artists, and with a range of experts who generously share their knowledge, including Donna Poulton, Kirk Anderson, David Dee, David Ericson, Jane Lund, and Diane Stewart. The couple have kept their eyes sharpened by joining several art tours organized by the University of Utah, Southern Utah University, and Utah Technical University.

Veda has been remarkably thoughtful about the collecting process. “Several years ago,” she explains, “I wrote a two-page-long statement of my goals and ideas. I made a list of what I liked, the future I saw for our collection, and what changes we needed to make — areas to leave behind and move toward, what to look for from an artist. I considered which style, genre, or period was missing from our collection, and used a grading system of 1–8.”

This approach reflects Veda’s personality: “I’m the student of art, working at a slower pace. Sometimes that means I lose out on a painting I wanted. All the research I embark on is fun and actually helps a lot. I try to remember to ask, ‘Is this painting better than what we currently have? Are the artists passionate about their work? Did the piece ‘stop me in my tracks’? My husband approaches the matter very differently: If he likes it, he buys it. That’s that!”

Veda’s thoroughness has also resulted in a file folder for every work: its history, dimensions, description, insurance, purchase receipt, and information about the artist and his or her other works. Importantly, Veda adds, “The file also indicates what will happen to the work when we are no longer able to take care of it.”

Veda and Bob also own works by historical artists, including Conrad Buff, Jim Jones, Fred Ochi, and Edie Roberson. They especially love their scene of a barn — still standing near Logan, Utah — painted by the great LeConte Stewart in the early 1940s, as well as Alyce Frank’s scene of a New Mexico landscape.

Fortunately, the collecting process is never really complete. Veda and Bob are still on the lookout for a painting by Birger Sandzen, having missed several opportunities, and Veda says she is waiting for two other works that “I missed getting at an auction to turn up again. This time I will be ready!”

Art collectors Veda Barrie and Bob Weatherbee
Veda Barrie and Bob Weatherbee

View more artist and collector profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Subscribe to Fine Art Connoisseur magazine here for expert art collection advice, gallery exhibition news, and more.

WAOW 54th National Exhibition: Dreamweavers

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Jan Marie De Lipsey (b. 1953), "Vermillion Escarpment," 2023, oil on panel, 30 x 40 in.
Jan Marie De Lipsey (b. 1953), "Vermillion Escarpment," 2023, oil on panel, 30 x 40 in.

The Phippen Museum of Western Art is hosting “Dreamweavers,” the 54th National Exhibition of the nonprofit organization Women Artists of the West (WAOW). On view are 144 paintings, drawings, and sculptures created by its Master, Signature, and Associate members, who live in the U.S., Canada, and Australia and work in oil, pastel, watercolor, graphite, and bronze.

Illustrated above is the painting “Vermillion Escarpment,” which the New Mexico landscapist Jan Marie De Lipsey describes as “an unspoiled slick rock in a fantasy world of pale nooks, cool shadows, and sunlit rock — a dream world for a painter of landscapes.”

On March 9, the reception and awards banquet featured a keynote presentation by Jana Bommersbach, author of Hellraisers and Trailblazers: The Real Women of the Wild West.

Details:
“Dreamweavers” 54th National Exhibition
Women Artists of the West
The Phippen Museum of Western Art, Prescott, Arizona
womenartistsofthewest.org
Through June 23, 2024

Virtual Gallery Walk for April 12th, 2024

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Friday Virtual Gallery Walk

As part of our effort to continue to help artists and art galleries thrive, we’re proud to bring you this week’s “Virtual Gallery Walk.” Browse the artwork below and click the image itself to learn more about it, including how to contact the gallery.

Summer Breeze, C.M. Cooper, oil on panel, 10 x 8 in; C.M. Cooper

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Secrets of the Tides, 2013, Linda Post, oil on cradled wood panel, 36 × 24 in; 33 Contemporary

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Nostalgia Blossoms, Manon Sander, oil on linen panel, 11 x 14 in; Manon Sander

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Come Watch with Me, Sherry Mason, oil, 16 x 16 in; “Rendezvous in Scottsdale” International Guild of Realism Juried Exhibition, T.H. Brennen Fine Art Gallery

Want to see your gallery featured in an upcoming Virtual Gallery Walk? Contact us at [email protected] to advertise today. Don’t delay, as spaces are first come, first served, and availability is limited.

WEEKLY NEWS FROM THE ART WORLD

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