A bursting emotional path in Brigitta Stritezskyâs Abstract Expressionism (IE)
There are artists who are born as such and assume the awareness of their creative nature right from the start, even though they carry out in their evolution a route of discovery of the style more akin to their own creative nature, and there are others to whom the impulse to manifest their interiority through images is revealed late, following different paths that were however necessary to store emotions and sensations then released on the canvas. Today’s protagonist is among those artists, those for whom the approach with the canvas represents a liberation of everything that until just before had remained in the depths of the most intimate world.
Largest US Museum Considers Dumping Art At Auction To Fund $150 Million Shortfall zerohedge.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from zerohedge.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Museum of the Invisible Woman, an ongoing project with artist Adam Milner, culminates in publication
Adam Milner sleeps in Clyfford Still Museum south painting storage. Photo: Matt Slaby.
DENVER, CO
.- Artist Adam Milner recently completed a unique, two-year project with the Clyfford Still Museum (CSM), concluding with the forthcoming publication, Museum of the Invisible Woman. During the project, Milner combined archival research with in-situ interventions at the Museum to center explorations around Patricia Still, Clyfford Stills second wife, who dedicated her life to his painting career and eventually to fulfilling Stills vision for the Museum.
The book repositions Clyfford Still as an artist dependent on community and the labor of loved ones, rather than the usual narrative of outsider, rebel, or loner genius. In the publication, themes surrounding love, labor, gender, ego, and legacy ultimately shift attention from the abstract expressionist master to his wife and to m
New Yorkâs biggest art museum prepares to sell works to pay bills
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Facing a potential shortfall of $US150 million ($197m) because of the pandemic, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has begun conversations with auction houses and its curators about selling some artworks to help pay for care of the collection.
âThis is the time when we need to keep our options open,â Met director Max Hollein told the
New York Times. âNone of us have a full perspective on how the pandemic will play out. It would be inappropriate for us not to consider it when weâre still in this foggy situation.â