Exhibitions 2005
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Strokes
of Genius: Masterworks from the New Britain Museum of American
Art,
Jan. 19 - March 20,2005
The
Telfair is proud to present highlights from the highly respected
American art collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art
in New Britain, Connecticut. The first institution in the country
to focus solely on American art, the New Britain is traveling its
diverse collection while its historic building undergoes renovation.
Ranging from mid-eighteenth century portraits by Joseph Badger to
the postmodern conceptual work of Christo (right), the works represented
in Strokes of Genius conjure up a portrait of America itself.
The history of our country is encapsulated in these works, from
colonial portraiture reflecting British taste and traditions, to
the homegrown subject matter of Midwestern Regionalism, to the breakaway
aesthetic of Abstract Expressionism, sometimes considered the first
truly American art movement.
In
addition to 18th- and early 19th-century portraits, the exhibition
includes landscapes by Thomas Doughty, Asher Brown Durand (below)
and Sanford Gifford representing the dramatic Hudson River School
tradition. American naturalism is evidenced by the genre paintings
of Winslow Homer and Henry Ossawa Tanner, and American impressionism,
by a significant number of works from its leading practitioners,
including Childe Hassam and Frederick Carl Frieseke.
Early
20th-century works by Ashcan School artists such as Robert Henri
and William Glackens, who rejected the gentility of American impressionism
for the gritty, vital reality of urban America, are featured along
with early modernist works by Maurice Prendergast and Charles Sheeler,
which signal an awareness of European avante-garde movements. Also
featured are Regionalist works of the 1930s by John Steuart Curry
and Grant Wood, who infused their Middle American subject matter
with a dash of the heroic. Social realism is represented by a powerful
work from Jacob Lawrence, perhaps the most influential African American
artist of the 20th century.
Works
by Adolph Gottlieb and Louise Nevelson signify the triumph of the
abstract expressionist movement, which would establish New York
City as the new center of the art world. Postmodern pieces by well
known “wrap artist” Christo and the brilliantly satirical
Red Grooms complete this breathtaking journey through American art
history. Rounding out the experience are works by three of the greatest
American illustrators, N.C. Wyeth, Maxfield Parrish and Norman Rockwell.
Many
of the artists included in Strokes of Genius, such as Arthur
Bowen Davies, Frederick Carl Frieseke, Childe Hassam, Robert Henri,
Ernest Lawson, Willard Metcalf, and Henry Ossawa Tanner, are also
represented at the Telfair, offering visitors the opportunity to
broaden their understanding of artists in the museum’s permanent
collection. Strokes of Genius is organized by the New Britain
Museum of American Art and sponsored in part by the City of Savannah
Leisure Services Bureau/ Department of Cultural Affairs.
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