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Gustav Klimt and Adele Bloch-Bauer: The Woman in Gold

Neue Galerie. NYC April 2, 2015-September 7, 2015 Note: Although the exhibition "Gustav Klimt and Adele Bloch-Bauer: The Woman in Gold" is only on view through September 7, the painting Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I by Gustav Klimt is on permanent view at the Neue Galerie. "Gustav Klimt and Adele Bloch-Bauer: The Woman in Gold" is an intimate exhibition devoted to the close relationship that existed between the artist and one of his key subjects and patrons. Included in the exhibition is a display of I, paintings, related drawings, vintage photographs, decorative arts, and archival material. This exhibition coincides with the opening of the historical drama "Woman in Gold," starring Helen Mirren as Adele Bloch-Bauer's niece Maria Altmann, and Ryan Reynolds as lawyer Randol Schoenberg. The film is based upon the true story of how Altmann, working in collaboration with Schoenberg, successfully sued the Austrian Government for the return o

Paul Cornoyer at Auction

Biography - Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, New York American painter best known for his tonalist depictions of New York City in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries I. Biography II. Chronology III. Collections IV. Exhibitions V. Notes VI. Suggested Resources I. Biography Paul Cornoyer was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1864 and enrolled at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts in 1881. Early in his career, Cornoyer worked in the Barbizon mode. He first exhibited his paintings in 1887, and in 1889 he moved to Paris to further his art education while continuing to show his work. He studied at the Académie Julian with Jules Joseph Lefebvre, Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant, and Louis Blanc. In the 1890s, Cornoyer’s style transitioned towards Impressionism and tonalism in his landscape and cityscape depictions. Cornoyer returned to St. Louis from Paris in 1894 and soon attracted the attention of William Merritt Chase. The renowned artist acquired one o

Francis Bacon at Auction

  Sotheby's 2016 A rare Francis Bacon self-portrait is set to come to auction for the first time in May, having remained in the same private collection since soon after it was painted over forty-five years ago. Widely acknowledged as the finest self-portrayal Bacon ever produced,  Two Studies for a Self-Portrait (1970) will lead Sotheby’s Evening Auction of Contemporary Art in New York on 11 May 2016, with an estimate of US$22-30 million.  While Bacon is renowned for capturing the tortured psychological depths of human existence in his portraits, the overwhelming positivity of Two Studies for a Self-Portrait renders this work almost unique in the artist’s oeuvre . Here we see an elated Francis Bacon on the cusp of his career-defining retrospective at the Grand Palais in 1971 (Bacon was only the second living artist, after Picasso, to be afforded this honour), and in the throes of his relationship with George Dyer, whose suicide a year later was to haunt Bacon (and shape his art) f

THE FRICK PITTSBURGH PRESENTS ROLLING HILLS, SATANIC MILLS: THE BRITISH PASSION FOR LANDSCAPE

Rolling Hills, Satanic Mills: The British Passion for Landscape, a major traveling exhibition drawn from the remarkable collections of Amgueddfa Cymru–National Museum Wales and organized by the American Federation of Arts, opens at the Frick Art & Historical Center in Point Breeze on May 9, 2014.  Rolling Hills, Satanic Millst races the development of landscape painting in Britain through the Industrial Revolution and the eras of Romanticism, Impressionism, and Modernism, to the postmodern and postindustrial imagery of today. More than 60 works of art—including major oil paintings, watercolors, drawings, and photographs—offer fresh insight into the changing relationship between artists and the landscape, as well as the evolving tastes of wealthy collectors.  Beginning with Old Masters ClaudeLorrain (1604–1682) and Salvator Rosa (1615–1673), the exhibition features an international roster of artists, from famed British painters Joseph Wright of Derby (1734–1797), John Constable (1