First a jaunt through the Asian wing and a quick peek at innovative uses of bamboo in Japan. |
Chinese scrolls - here, a solid sense of home encircled by expressive pines. |
Many ideas in this scroll in which deities appear in a bubble. |
Landscape vase in cloisonne |
The incredible Age of Empires exhibition at the Met. Exhibition Link |
To think, 221 BC. But Michael Woods' Story of China makes clear how advanced the cultural achievements always have been. About the PBS series |
Playing the zither |
Ancient textiles |
Pair of Goats, Western Han Dynasty (206 bc-AD 09), earthenware with pigment |
Lamp with Sixteen Branches, AD 25-220 (Eastern Han) |
Plant candelabra |
Tomb Gate, Eastern Han |
Star of the show: a confident warrior, as recognizable as someone glimpsed on the street. |
Shifting gears radically: Rei Kawukobo's iconic fashion works. in Art of The In-Between. Exhibition Link |
Matisse, just because. |
Greek sculpture, just because. |
Also a constrast with China |
Indian botanical studies, 1773 |
Irving Penn Exhibition at the Met Exhibition Link |
Sevres Porcelain |
Samira Abassy, detail, from Outcasts: Women in the Wilderness at Wave Hill (through July 9, 2017) Gallery Link |
Abassy's beautiful graphite drawings, solid and satisfying. |
Detail of Marie Watt's subtle embroidery overlays on fabric |
Nancy Spero's works inspired the wild, 'outcast' artists in the exhibition, curated by Deborah Frizzell, Harry J. Weil, Jennifer McGregor and Gabriel de Guzman. The exhibition was reviewed by Paul Laster in Whitehot Magazine. Exhibition Review by Paul Laster |
Fay Ku's overlayed graphite and watecolor drawings |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.