Museums
Lichtenstein in Motion: Three Surprises on Whitney Screens

Lichtenstein in Motion: Three Surprises on Whitney Screens

By Marsha McCreadie They are in town for a just a few more days, but since the only three films by Roy Lichtenstein, of Pop Art and the comic book style, haven’t been screened since 1971, you don’t have to think twice about catching them. Three Landscapes: A Film Installation by Roy Lichtenstein is at...
History Lesson: Leutze

History Lesson: Leutze

How Washington icon crossed the pond From time to time over years of visiting The Metropolitan Museum of Art, I would find myself in front of Emanuel Leutze’s iconic “Washington Crossing the Delaware.” About 12 and a half feet high and 21 feet long, the huge rectangle was simply and plainly framed, hanging at just...
Modern Masters at Montclair Art Museum

Modern Masters at Montclair Art Museum

Beginning Feb. 12, Montclair Art Museum, located at 3 South Mountain Ave. in Montclair, N.J., will host the exhibition Look Now: Modern and Contemporary Art from Private Collections. The exhibit will feature multi-media works by 31 modern masters and cutting-edge artists—including Roy Lichetnstein, Andy Warhol, Louise Bourgeois, Rachel Harrison and Ryan McGinness—through June 17. For more...
Cecil Fabulous: Beaton’s New York Years Revived

Cecil Fabulous: Beaton’s New York Years Revived

By Marsha McCreadie One high aesthetic compliment is to call an artist ahead of his time. Yet the real trick is to be of your time and ahead of it, too. Cecil Beaton—photographer, illustrator, set and costume designer, even author—turned that trick, and nicely, too. The fabulous results, even a hint at his motivation, are...
Out of the Past: Peter Sekaer’s signs trace history at ICP

Out of the Past: Peter Sekaer’s signs trace history at ICP

The stunning new exhibition at The International Center of Photography forces you to slow down, ignore the hustle of the city outside, take a deep breath and dive into a world long gone. Signs of Life: Photographs by Peter Sekaer presents the Danish-born photographer’s now obscure work chronicling America under the New Deal, portraying a...
Elements of Art: Cezanne’s wine bottles (1 of 3)

Elements of Art: Cezanne’s wine bottles (1 of 3)

Towering above the other objects in Paul Cézanne’s “Still Life with Oranges and Apples” from 1895–1900 is a wine bottle. There it stands to the left of the frame, dominating the display of comestibles and asserting a curious authority. It is a tribute to thirst amidst the spread of plenty. Cézanne’s painting is one of...
Energy in Blossoms: Benson’s colors and China’s blossoms

Energy in Blossoms: Benson’s colors and China’s blossoms

Trudy Benson’s painting is full of physical energy. The paint is applied so thickly that it turns into an object in its own right; the stripes and circles on the canvas look like moveable parts. Fittingly, most of the pieces in her show at Mike Weiss Gallery, Actual/Virtual, evoke outer space with their names—“Cosmic Comics,”...
Revolution In and Out

Revolution In and Out

David and Delacroix from Louvre to Morgan Back in the 1990s, the Morgan Library lent some 200 drawings to the Louvre Museum. The Louvre has now returned the favor, and in impressive fashion. David, Delacroix, and Revolutionary France: Drawings from the Louvre, currently at the Morgan, is a stunning selection of 80 of the museum’s...
Wet on Wet

Wet on Wet

Eva Hesse responds to de Kooning It is rare to encounter an exhibition as coherent and revealing as Spectre, the Eva Hesse show currently at the Brooklyn Museum. Perfectly installed in a well-lit, airy space, this small group of paintings from 1960 was never seen before last year, when it was displayed at the Hammer...
When Snark Was Art

When Snark Was Art

Met’s history of caricature shocks and delights In our current, celebrity-obsessed media, snark is an attempt at leverage, a means of both wielding and flattering power that deflects from the perpetrator. Snark is cowardly caricature, but the Met’s Infinite Jest show provides an enlightening background to what caricature truly is and why modern day snark...
Painting the Times with Color

Painting the Times with Color

Whitney’s Feininger show takes art to the edge of the world Some artists respond to the traumas of their time by engaging them; consider Goya’s “The Third of May” or Picasso’s “Guernica.” For others (Matisse comes to mind), art became a kind of sanctuary, a refuge for exploring the transcendent. Lyonel Feininger (1871-1956) falls squarely...
Memorial City

Memorial City

Arts responses as diverse as New York itself There is faith—even among those who do not really believe in the power of art—that 9/11-themed art is as essential to our cultural survival as counter-terrorist police, full-body scanners and TSA pat-downs are to our physical survival; that to endure as a nation we must collectively bare...
Record-Breaking McQueen Exhibit

Record-Breaking McQueen Exhibit

Were you one of the 661,509 visitors to the Alexander McQueen exhibit? The retrospective was among the Met’s top ten most visited exhibitions in its 141-year history (#8 overall). Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty featured over a hundred ensembles and seventy accessories beginning with the designer’s first collection as a Central St. Martin’s postgraduate in 1992...
Making a ‘Case’ for Mikhailov

Making a ‘Case’ for Mikhailov

MoMA presents the United States debut of a “deeply disturbing” Russian photographer Boris Mikhailov is among the more celebrated artists to emerge from the former Soviet Union since the fall of communism. This is all the more remarkable given that his medium is photography. One of his signature projects, Case History (the original title might...
The Summer100 (Part 2): Museum & Gallery Shows

The Summer100 (Part 2): Museum & Gallery Shows

The Obama Presidency at Leica Gallery Chief Official White House Photographer Pete Souza’s photographs of President Obama capture him during some of his presidency’s most—and least—significant moments. The contrasting severity and lightheartedness of the photos remind us that, at least in some cases, politicians are human beings too. Ends Aug. 6, 670 Broadway, Ste. 500,...
The Summer100 (Part 2)

The Summer100 (Part 2)

As the summer heats up, we offer the second half of our must list, taking you all the way through Labor Day. If you’re planning a trip out of the city, make sure to check our “Get Out of Town” section—which has everything from performances to museum shows that you won’t want to miss.
Ai Weiwei Photographs on Display at Asia Society

Ai Weiwei Photographs on Display at Asia Society

For the first time in the United States, over 200 photographs taken by the Chinese art-activist Ai Weiwei are on display, offering glimpses of New York City over the span of a decade. The photos range from a self-portrait taken in Williamsburg in 1983 to an image of Bill Clinton campaigning in the city in...
Economy Kills Exhibit at Brooklyn Museum

Economy Kills Exhibit at Brooklyn Museum

Starving artists are all well and good, but things start to get a lot sadder when even museums are strapped for cash. The Brooklyn Museum has canceled its planned presentation of the controversial Art in the Streets, an exhibit about the history of graffiti and street art, due to “the current financial climate.” With the underlying...
The Summer 100: Museum Shows

The Summer 100: Museum Shows

(re)collection at Parsons The New School for Design Newly acquired work and works rarely seen from The New School’s collection are showcased in this exhibition, which traces the history of the institution’s commitment to social change and artistic innovation. June 16–Sept. 17, The Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, 66 5th Ave., newsschool.edu.

Destination: Chelsea

Now known for the hundreds of commercial galleries that have transformed Chelsea into the epicenter of the New York art world, the neighborhood continues to offer an array of other cultural destinations that deserve to be appreciated. Here we highlight a few of the locations that continue to offer vibrant, creative opportunities from theater to...

Value Exchange

Two exhibits show the influence of outside cultures on decorative arts Decorative art tends to reveal a lot about social history. Two exhibits at the newly renovated Bard Graduate Center galleries are making that point clear right now, by studying the household objects—bowls, plates and tools—of two peoples in transition. The main exhibit, Cloisonne: Chinese...