Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Tea Day at Mattatuck Museum



The Mattatuck Museum
The Mattatuck Museum





Tea Day 1931: The art Community at Old Lyme


Edward Volker

When I saw the announcement for the exhibition at the Mattatuck Museum on life in the Old Lyme Art Colony, I knew I had to return to this small but interesting museum.  I invited my friend June and we made the trip to Waterbury.  On our way, one wrong turn gave us the chance to tour around the city.  Ultimately, we found a parking space and entered the Museum.  

The exhibition was inspired by the painting by Edward Volkert which captured the annual garden party hosted by the Lyme Art Association.  The show included many old friends as well artists I was not familiar with which is the best mix in any show.  What I particularly pleased by the fact that this show included a number of women artists.  Below are just a few of my new favorite artists from the show - although the painting are not necessarily the ones on display.

Margaret Miller Cooper      





A painter of landscapes, especially of Connecticut, Margaret Cooper Studied at the National Academy of Design and the Pratt Institute in New York and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fie Arts in Philadelphia.  In 1935, she moved to Lyme, Connecticut, and painted with artist colony residents William Chadwick and Gertrude Nason.





Bessie Onahotema Potter Vonnoh

A Saint Louis native, Bessie Onahotema Potter Vonnoh produced genre statuettes depicting domestic and feminine subjects that not only captured a refined segment of turn of the century society, but also contributed to the vitalization of small bronze sculpture in America.




Helen Savier Dumond was raised in Portland Oregon but went to New York City to study at the Art Students League.  She also studied in France and exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1897 and 1898.  She moved with he husband Frank to Old Lyme in 1906.  

I simply love the green on her palette.



There were also other artists whose works I enjoyed, including Harry Leslie Hoffman, E. Gregory Smith, Charles Vezin and Ruth Middleton.  June and I also took a quick peak at the famous Waterbury Button Museum which is housed within the MATT.

A final walk through of the small exhibition entitled Out of the Shadow: Edwin Augustus Moore. Moore was a talented Connecticut artist who studied at the Art Students League and National Academy of Design.  His early art specialized in painting of animals, but later he moved on to watercolors.  While never a big fan of portraits of farm animals, I did enjoyed his landscapes.



We ended our day with a delightful lunch at a nearby restaurant.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Paris at the Bruce


Paris at the Bruce Museum,

Greenwich, CT



The delightful Bruce Museum in located in Greenwich, Ct.  Whenever I think about visiting the Bruce I always weigh the drive down I95 against the potential pleasure of the exhibition.  When I saw the announcement of  Electric Paris and the website video, I knew I have to take the drive south.  




The exhibition displays 50 works by well known reflecting on how lights and lighting can be viewed in Paris at the turn of the 20th century.  I have to admit that some of my favorite  artists were on display.  I suspect that there are many museum goers like myself who travel to shows such as this as an escape of the harshness of our contemporary culture.  I am glad there are so many creative curators who can find themes to collect and display the art I find so pleasing.


The show opens with a work by one of my favorite artist John Singer Sargent.  His Luxembourg Garden  at Twilight captures the theme of the show.




Ever since I saw a large exhibition on Prendergast at Williams College, he has become one of my favorites.  He had one small picture of display but I couldn't find a image of that picture to share.  But I can share the work by Alfred Mauer who I discovered in a glorious show at the Addison Galley of American Art on the Phillips Academy campus.  Since that experience, I am always pleased when I see yet another of his paintings on display.



Of course, the joy of going to a museum to visit with old friends is not the only reason to seek out various collections.  It is always a treat to discover new artists that one is not familiar with.  The following are several works that truly capture the spirit of Electric Paris as well as introducing me to new friends.


Theodore Butler

Charles Coutney Curran, Paris at Night
Jean-Louis Forain

While many of the art on the walls were of street scenes, not all.  Several that particularly caught my attention and made me applaud the curator's ability to gather a variety of scenes and artists within her topic are shown below.  
Alexandre Lunois

Electric Paris also included more than painting.  There were a number of black and white photographs of lamp posts located thoughout Paris which gave one the feeling of the actually walking on the streets.  

The show concluded with a wonderful film clip of Loie Fuller 's Danse Serpertine.  This was truly amazing footage which was all the more impressive because Loie designed the lighting with its innovative use of color.  After watching Loie dance several times, I left that gallery very glad I came to The Bruce once again and I look forward to my next visit.


                                                                Danse Serpentine







Thursday, July 21, 2016

Lyman Allen Museum - A Visit to Southern Connecticut to Explore Impressionism




The Lyman Allyn Art Museum has been offering its collection to art lovers of Connecticut since 1932.  It has been some time since I visited this handsome neo-classical building, but when I heard about their summer exhibition  A Good Summer's Work: J. Alden Weir, Connecticut Impressionist I knew a trip was required.  My friend June and I set out for New London on a beautiful summer day to learn more about J. Alden Weir and his painting colleagues.  Weir and the art colony based in his studio at his farm painted in western Connecticut for nearly 40 years.  

The exhibition begins with several portraits of Weir and his family.
J. Alden Weir, 1852 -1919



Anna Weir and her husband Alden

Ella Baker Weir, Anna 's Sister. .Ella and Alden married after Anna's death

The exhibition video Love at First Sight makes clear, Alden's Windham Connecticut retreat greatly impacted his work.   The documentary film is very well done and most interesting.




The following are some of pictures that reflects Weir's love for Windham.

Windham Village



 One of Weir most famous painting is picture of a railroad bridge which critic say is influence by the Japanese art that was being studied and purchased by many of the Impressionist painters of the time.

The Red Bridge

Weir's other Connecticut home in Branchville is now the National Historic Site - the first national park dedicated to an American artist.  The Weir Farm National Historic Site was home to several generations of American Artists.  Julia Alden Weir  purchased the farm in 1882 .  Dorothy Weir and husband Mahond Young continue to the artistic tradition of the farm.
It was celebrate in an exhibition at the Bruce Museum entitled


Weir Farm House  on the property of the National Historic Site


The Laundry, Branchville

The Fishing Part

The exhibition also includes the works of other American impressionist.  One of the artist included in this show was Emil Carlsen and was a wonderful discovery.

                   
Soren Emil Carlsen, 1853 - 1932








Night, Old Windham

October  Summer


Another painter I enjoy being introduced to was Guy C. Wiggins.  There seems to be no end to impressionist I can discover.  Life is good!

Church on the Hill