The Masterful Matisse June 7, 2026
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Aquavella, art, Art exhibit, Fauves, Henri Matisse, NYC, painting, photography
add a comment
I confess that Henri Matisse (1869-1954) is my favorite artist. No one comes close to his talent in my eyes. When the Aquavella Galleries recently had an exhibition of over 50 Matisse paintings, works on paper and sculpture clearly it made the top of my ’to do’ list. This beautiful exhibit closed May 22nd, 2026 and was attended by thousands. What is it about Matisse’s art that vaults him to #1 in my book? His work I painterly, luminous, decorative, sensuous and he also led the Fauve (wild beasts) movement in the early 1900’s championing the use of raw, arbitrary colors and bold brushstrokes to convey feelings rather than the actual color of the subject. Back in 2022, MoMA had an exhibit of Matisse’s cutouts. Here is my montage from that extraordinary exhibition.
A Poem for Deep Thinkers July 27, 2025
Posted by judylobo in Zoo.Tags: Art exhibit, Guggenhiem Museum, NYC, painting, photography, poetry, Rashid Johnson, sculpture
2 comments
Truth be told, I am not a fan of the Guggenheim Museum. I find the building design a distraction to viewing the art. That said, I do occasionally visit if there is a show I am interested in seeing like the Jenny Holzer exhibit last year. Add to that short list the present exhibit called ‘Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers’ which is there thru January 2026. On view are almost 90 works—from black-soap paintings and spray-painted text works to large-scale sculptures, film, and video. They fill the museum’s rotunda, including Sanguine, a monumental site-specific work on the building’s top ramp with an embedded piano for musical performances. Additionally, a dynamic program of events, developed in collaboration with community partners across New York City, activate a sculptural stage on the rotunda floor. If you plan your visit you can easily experience one of these special performances. For nearly 30 years, artist Rashid Johnson has cultivated a diverse body of work that draws upon an array of disciplines such as history, philosophy, literature, and music. This major solo exhibition highlights Johnson’s role as a scholar of art history, a mediator of Black popular culture, and as a creative force in contemporary art. We thoroughly enjoyed this amazingly multi-talented artist.