The Easel

18th July 2023

Measuring Infinity, at the Guggenheim, presents drawings, collages, and sculptures from architect-turned-artist Gertrud Goldschmidt

Gego was long in transition – from pre-war Germany to Venezuela, from architecture to art, from painting to her métier, delicate, abstract wire sculptures. It was worth the wait. These works articulate “the tensions and irregularities of organic form”. Some are small and, hung from a wall, resemble “drawings in space”. This is “magical, slippery engineering”, distinctive and infinitely varied. Says one critic “some of the most radically beautiful sculpture of the second half of the 20th century”.

Watercolors at Harvard and MoMA

Does watercolour painting need a PR pep-up? Because its materials are relatively cheap and portable, the medium is often associated with “amateurism”. In fact, many great artists were exponents, using it to quickly capture an image or for experimentation. Its great quality though, is unpredictability, the way paint can “flow and bloom into darker and lighter areas”. That process gives a work a spontaneity and energy that offers the viewer “emotional experiences”. Images are here.

Mary Jackson has turned sweetgrass basketry into a fine-art form

Growing up, Jackson regarded basketry as a summer “chore”. Returning to the craft in adulthood, she combined traditional materials – coastal sweetgrass – and basketry techniques with a contemporary aesthetic. Her baskets, distinguished by bold shapes and exquisite, demanding weaving skill – abandon utility and become an artform. Says one collector, “like great sculpture, Mary Jackson baskets beg to be touched.” A backgrounder is here.

Ansel Adams: Eight of the most iconic photos of the American West

Adams “stirring” black and white images remain hugely popular. His aesthetic was shaped by the romantic idea of manifest destiny – an America, expanding ever westward to find prosperity and fulfillment. An immediate motivation, though, was to make images that promoted the new idea of national parks. With Yosemite in his image finder, Adams hoped to capture the spirituality of the wilderness, thus tapping into nostalgia for a “pure” frontier America that no longer existed.

12th July 2023

How Hokusai’s art crashed over the modern world

Less a review than a contemplation om artistic influence. Hokusai, “one of the greatest of all printmakers”, revitalized the “visual vocabularies” of 1870’s Paris. Part of this was his “blocky colors and flattened spaces”, as was his choice of subjects – the stage, the street, the bathhouse. His work encouraged the Impressionists, in particular, that city life was worth observing. Hokusai affirmed repeatedly that “there’s no such thing as a pure “culture” divisible from others”.

American Illustration at Its Most Stylish

In the early 20th century, Leyendecker was America’s pre-eminent illustrator. Creator of the Arrow Collar Man, his imagery portrayed “square-jawed young hunks” as the mainstream male ideal. Daringly, his work also carried a barely disguised homoerotic charge, with his men exchanging long, lingering looks, oblivious to adjacent women. His images amply justify his fame. One pinstripe outfit shows “the movement of crisp material … a tour de force of painted material, meant to sell material.”