Stuart Davis has a sure claim to a place in the history of American art. As early as 1932, he was hailed as “the ace of American modernists” and there is scarcely a museum in the United States that ...
A resonant exhibit at Vermont's Brattleboro Museum brings together work by artists who have endured displacement in search of freedom. Helicline Fine Art makes its art fair debut at The Salon: Art + ...
The exhibition that belatedly introduced Van Gogh, Cezanne, Matisse, Rouault, Braque and Picasso to the U.S. public—Manhattan’s Armory Show in 1913 —also inspired a young U.S. artist named Stuart ...
Painter Stuart Davis is a small, rotund man who complains a good deal these days about not feeling too well. When asked specifically what ails him, he sweepingly announces, “I’m sick!” He may be—but ...
This two-part exhibition features abstract paintings from 1930 to 1980 by artists like Robert Motherwell and Stuart Davis, complemented by the welded sculpture of Ibram Lassaw. Robert Motherwell, ...
Stuart Davis, “Lucky Strike” (1921), oil on canvas, 33 1/4 x 18 inches, The Museum of Modern Art, New York; gift of the American Tobacco Company, Inc., 1951 (all ...
ALEXIS ROCKMAN: OCEANUS Rockman has been portraying environmental calamity in his paintings for decades, often with a nightmarish, finely detailed dystopian aesthetic that might bring to mind ...
Catalog of an exhibition held at the Koriyama City Museum of Art, July 8-Aug. 6, 1995; the Museum of Modern Art, Shiga, Aug. 12-Oct.1, 1995; and the Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum, Oct. 10-Nov.
Sims, Lowery Stokes, "Stuart Davis: American Painter," New York, NY: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1991, fig. 46. Hills, Patricia, "Stuart Davis," New York: Harry N ...
In 1937, Stuart Davis received a commission from the WPA Federal Art Project to paint a mural for a low-income public housing development in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. (Then, the neighborhood was a ...
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