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Showing posts from February, 2015

Turquoise and Rose - In Memory of Deah Barakat and Yusor & Razan Abu-Salha

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Gregg Chadwick  Turquoise and Rose   6"x6" oil on panel 2015 There is a vigil tonight at 7pm to honor Deah Barakat and Yusor & Razan Abu-Salha, the Muslim students murdered by a ruthless gunman in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Most Common Type of American Terrorist Is a White Man With a Weapon and a Grudge http:// thenat.in/1AYnY3a   @ thenation   The three Muslim students tragically killed in the # ChapelHillShooting lived to help others http:// on.mash.to/1ChAwOu     The Hill  ‏ @ thehill     2m 2 minutes ago Father of Muslim students killed in # ChapelHillShooting : "This was a hate crime." http:// ow.ly/IU36v  

Aristotle With The Bust of Homer - A Memoriam to Walter Liedtke

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Rembrandt van Rijn Aristotle With The Bust of Homer 56 1/2" x 53 3/4" oil on canvas 1653 Courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York   With the sad news that Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Walter Liedtke was killed in this week's horrible rail crash in New York, posting his powerfully narrated web episode of 82nd & 5th: "The Choice", for me, helps keep this wonderful man's passion for Rembrandt alive. Below is the  Metropolitan Museum of Art's label text for  Aristotle With The Bust of Homer : Aristotle (384–322 B.C.) rests his hand reflectively on a bust of Homer, the blind epic poet of the Iliad and the Odyssey. A medallion representing Alexander the Great, whom Aristotle tutored, hangs from the heavy gold chain. The philosopher contemplates material rewards as opposed to spiritual values, with the play of light and shadow on his features suggesting the motions of his mind. Painted for the great Sicilian collector Antonio Ruffo, t...

Titus Kaphar's "The Jerome Project" at The Studio Museum In Harlem

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The contemporary artist Titus Kaphar searched for his father’s prison records in 2011. On the web, Titus found arrest photographs of dozens who shared his father’s name.  Horrified and spurred to artistic action, Titus created a series of paintings which comment on the United States' biased prison-industrial complex. The recent events spanning the US from Ferguson, Missouri, to Los Angeles, California, to New York City point out the inherent prejudices in the policing and imprisonment culture  current  in the United States.  Titus created portraits of men who shared his father's name. Echoing the loss of voice inherent in those imprisoned, Titus dips his paintings into hot tar - rendering his subjects mute.   Titus Kaphar Jerome I , 2014 Oil, gold leaf and tar on wood panel 7 × 10 ½ in. Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York ©Titus Kaphar Titus Kaphar Jerome III , 2014 Oil, gold leaf ...