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Thoughts On the Last Day of an Exhibition: Drawings From Leonardo to Titian at the Getty

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Jacopo Bassano "Christ Driving the Money Changers From the Temple" 17 3/16" x 21 3/8" black and colored chalks on blue paper circa 1570 Getty Collection Jacopo Bassano's "Christ Driving the Money Changers From the Temple" is a remarkable drawing. Rich, swirling masses of colored chalks are rubbed and shaded onto a colored sheet of paper defining a light filled atmosphere as much as a biblical scene. The freedom of execution in this preliminary study seems to speak directly to the Venetian love for complex coloristic effects. Jacopo Bassano learned much from Titian . Titian's oil paintings are richly layered with unique pigments from around the world that were readily available because of the Venetian Republic's long maritime reach. With access to these powders, which would be ground with linseed oil to form paint, Venetian artists such as Titian and Giorgione were able to lay out singular colored atmospheres. In essence Titian at his finest...

Chácara do Céu: Art Heist in Rio

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A brazen armed robbery of paintings by Picasso, Matisse, Monet and Dali marked the opening of the Carnival in Brazil on Friday. Gunmen burst into the Chácara do Céu museum in Rio de Janeiro and made off with their most valuable paintings and a book by Picasso. Sources in Brazil say that the stolen paintings were Pablo Picasso's "The Dance", Claude Monet's "Marine", Henri Matisse's "Garden of Luxembourg" and Salvador Dali's "Two Balconies". Museum director Vera de Alencar told reporters that at least four men brandishing firearms had been involved in the heist - including one holding a hand grenade. Art lovers inside the museum were also relieved of their wallets, cameras and cellphones during the robbery. The assailants rushed out of the museum into the cobblestone streets of the Santa Teresa district and disappeared into a crowd following a Samba parade. With its steep, almost precariously tilted streets, cable car line, and bo...

Opening Tonight at Santa Monica Art Studios

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Gregg Chadwick City of Desires (Cidade dos Desejos) 72" x 96" oil on linen 2005 Opening tonight at the Santa Monica Art Studios from 6 to 8pm is the exhibition: LEAVING AZTLAN (redux) February 25 – April 9, 2006 Opening Reception Saturday, February 25, 6-8pm ARENA 1 A project of Santa Monica Art Studios 3026 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica, CA. 90405 Directors: Sherry Frumkin and Yossi Govrin My studio will also be open.

A Day With Sergio Arau and Yareli Arizmendi at CSU Monterey Bay

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Sergio Arau and Yareli Arizmendi This Tuesday, February 21st at Cal State University, Monterey Bay, Sergio Arau and Yareli Arizmendi will be leading a lecture and discussion on "Images of Latinas/os in Film and Media". The husband-and-wife team will lead the free event at 7 p.m. in the University Center ballroom. Together they wrote the screenplay for the film "A Day Without A Mexican." Arau also directed the movie; Arizmendi is the star. In today's Monterey Herald , Marc Cabrera reports that "were it not for the couple's shared vision, the surprising indie hit "A Day Without A Mexican" would have just been a funny idea that Arizmendi had shared with her husband, who was also the film's director." "There is some competition when it regards whose idea was that," said Arizmendi over the phone from a Los Angeles studio, where she and her husband are working on individual projects. "I was the one who said the line, ...

Barbara Guest: The Blue Stairs

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Cover by Helen Frankenthaler "Her placement of words was like the placement of paint on a canvas," said her daughter, Hadley Guest. Modernist poet and art writer, Barbara Guest died on February 15, 2006 in Berkeley, California. During the 1950s, she created collages that later became covers for her books, and along with her poet colleagues in the New York School wrote for Art News magazine. In her recent collection of art writings, "Dürer in the Window" , gathered from a lifetime of looking, thinking and creating, Barbara Guest describes her experiences as a poet among painters and sculptors in a time when there was no "recognized separation between the arts." Her poems are crisp and visual with a taste for color and painterly image. "The Blue Stairs" inspired by a stairway in the Stedelijk Museum of Modern Art in Amsterdam is a good introduction to her work: "The Blue Stairs" by Barbara Guest (audiofile) There is no fear in taking the...

Blakes on the Block: Getty to the Rescue?

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William Blake "Death of the Strong Wicked Man" watercolor on paper 1805 William Blake "The Grave Personified" watercolor on paper 1805 The recently rediscovered William Blake watercolors to be sold at Sotheby's in the spring should be bought by the Getty and the Tate jointly so both institutions can make the works available for scholars and the public. In Carol Vogel's piece on the rediscovered Blakes in the New York Times, Martin Butlin, a Blake scholar, expresses that breaking up the collection and selling them one by one at Sotheby's is "absolutely philistine. The seller has no regard for the integrity of works of art, only for money. As a group they tell a story." The nineteen artworks are from a series of 20 watercolors that Blake originally created as illustrations for the poem, "The Grave," by the Scotsman Robert Blair. With luck the William Blake watercolors could be showcased in an exhibition that moves between Los Angeles...

Intelligently Designed at the Lisa Coscino Gallery

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Gregg Chadwick The Stillness Between 48"x48" oil on canvas 2006 INTELLIGENTLY DESIGNED: Supreme Art by gallery artists: Johnny Apodaca, Aleah Koury, Anita Hilton, Bud Gordon, Kevin Flynn, Dianna Cohen, Gregg Chadwick, Brian Behnke and Richard Newman 18 February - March 2006 Reception: SATURDAY, 18 February 4-6pm - (note different time!) Hope to see you there. LISA COSCINO GALLERY / 216 Grand Avenue / Pacific Grove / CA / 93950 / 831.646.1939