Art’s finest ‘isms’
Paul Saitowitz
Intertwined among the white buildings, white traffic lights and wide,
sparsely populated streets of Newport Beach lies a varied exhibition
of 20th century world-class art surprisingly contrary to its
surroundings.
A mixed bag of brilliant images -- colorful and bland --are
conveyed through modernism, surrealism and cubism by the likes of
Pollock, Picasso, Dali, O’Keeffe, Matisse and more. The works will be
on display at the Orange County Museum of Art through April 25, as
part of the Modern Masterpieces exhibit.
Fifty-nine pieces are on loan from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum
of Art -- the oldest art museum in the country -- in Hartford, Conn.
The breadth of the paintings on the wall have drawn people all of
Southern California, and schools have been touring the exhibition
since it opened.
“We secured this exhibit a year ago, and it has had the greatest
response of anything we’ve had here in the past five years,” curator
Sarah Vure said. “We hope this will help us get other important
exhibits in the future.”
The standout works include “Ostrich-Feather Hat” by Matisse;
“Apparition of the Face Fruit Dish on a Beach,” by Salvador Dali;
“Women of Algier’s,” by Pablo Picasso; and “Lawrence Tree,” by
Georgia O’Keeffe.
The common thread among all the artists represented in the
exhibition is rebellion against the norm. They were searching for new
ways to express what they were seeing in everyday life as well as
politics.
Artists like Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko approached art from a
different vantage point, choosing to use color and shape to convey
their emotions rather than depicting images.
“Those artists were into experimenting with unconscious,” Vure
said. “A lot of it was a way to show democracy versus totalitarianism
by simplifying the subject to evoke emotion.”
There are five Picasso works on display representing the roots of
Cubism.
“Picasso was the first person to give you a different perspective
of something rather than just seeing it from the vantage point of
looking through a window,” Vure said.
Surrealism was derived from the psychoanalytical theories of
Sigmund Freud and focused on finding pathways to the unconscious.
Dali was one of the leaders of this movement, and he embraced the
surreal by depicting the world he lived in through paintings filled
with an amalgamation of images brought together to represent a larger
image.
“Apparition of the Face Fruit Dish on a Beach” combines everything
from the profile of a dog, to a vase and a lifeless body, to show the
image of a face on the shore surrounded by cliffs.
The vast array of art, which is headed to a museum in Texas after
its stay in Newport, was not easy to set up for display within the
gallery.
“We tried to put it together chronologically and at the same time
tell a story,” Vure said.
The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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