Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.
It was a really chilly and windy day today, did not enjoy my walk at all.
This week I visited the Louise and Bernard Palitz Gallery at Syracuse University Lubin House at 11 East 61st Street in Manhattan. It’s affiliated with Syracuse University and has a small gallery on the second floor which I’ve visited in the past. I wish they had more exhibitions as it’s an intimate venue and I can’t remember ever being there when I wasn’t the only person in the gallery. This exhibition was, “Selections from the Rona and Martin Schneider Collection of Late 19th and Early 20th Century American and European Fine Art Prints.”
There’s very little information available on the Internet about the Schneiders. They are listed as major donors to Syracuse University in 2017, their donation being the source for this exhibit. This is the brief biography shown.
Schneider, Rona and Martin
An important gift of over 650 original prints to the Syracuse University permanent art collection came in 2017 from Rona and Martin Schneider of Brooklyn, New York. Rona, a well-known print dealer and member of the International Fine Print Dealers Association, specialized in late 19th and early 20th century American and European prints especially those made as part of the “Etching Revival.”
This is a link to an article discussing their gift as well as showing a few images.
https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2018/08/art-exhibition-significant-gift-syracuse-university/ I think the most notable artists in the exhibit were Thomas Moran, Henry Farrer, Joseph Pennell, James David Smillie and Julian Alden Weir. At least they were names I’ve come across previously. Everything in the exhibit was quite nice. I was able to take pictures and took three. I have a Trac Fone and the camera isn’t the best. It doesn’t help that I have trouble keeping my hand steady while I hold the phone and try to press the button. I emailed them to myself but when I got home it wasn’t in my inbox although the first one I composed, which had only one image in it, had arrived although I didn’t send it. So I sent it to myself again and when I checked my desktop both of them had arrived. I wanted to add my Verizon email address to the Gmail account so it would automatically populate when I do this but I saw no access to the address book on the phone. I checked Google help and it appears that is due to no address book being there. Help suggested I add the contact through the desktop which I did. You can see how familiar I am with my phone and its features. I took the photos as the website has no images displayed, just a long view of the gallery space. But happily I was able to find images on the Internet and I’ll link to some I especially liked below.
Charles Frederick William Mielatz – Below are two images by Mielatz, he’s someone new to me as are, for the most part, the others below. These two really struck me for their intricate designs and details. To create an etching a metal plate is covered with a waxy ground which is resistant to acid. The artist then scratches off the ground with a pointed etching needle where he or she wants a line to appear in the finished piece, so exposing the bare metal. The plate is then dipped in a bath of acid which "bites" into the metal where it is exposed, leaving behind lines sunk into the plate. The remaining ground is then cleaned off the plate. The plate is inked all over, and then the ink wiped off the surface, leaving only the ink in the etched lines. So to create a design like these two is to me a remarkable feat.
A Restaurant in Mott Street
http://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/CUS.18.zoomobject5.9733?sid=40441&x=26552862&x=26552863The Golden Door – I wish I could have found a larger image so you can see just how detailed this etching is. If you click on it you can enlarge it a little more.
http://digital.cincinnatilibrary.org/digital/api/singleitem/image/p16998coll67/7/default.jpg?highlightTerms= Henry Farrer – Washerwoman – Something about this really appealed to me, perhaps its sentiment or a kinship to some of Rembrandt’s etchings that I’ve seen. The poor woman hunched over her basin.
http://wordpress.conncoll.edu/ahi246digitalexhibition/2015/05/04/henry-farrer-washerwoman/ Henry Farrer - Old House, Corner of Peck Slip and Water Street (from Scenes of Old New York) – I think he really captured this aged dwelling in all its warped glory. The Met owns this copy.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/380982 John Leon Moran - A JAPANESE FANTASY – I like this as it is reminiscent of Whistler’s Asian etchings like the one in the second link. Another interesting point is this is from a proffered sale from Rona Schneider’s business. I wonder if she wound up keeping it or if the one in the exhibit is another issue from the plate.
https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/A-Japanese-Fantasy/C893C1C95FB63D49https://www.periodpaper.com/products/1904-print-james-mcneill-whistler-princesse-pays-porcelaine-asian-princess-fan-204592-xala5-013 Robert Swain Gifford, Algerian Landscape - (The first plate etched at the New York Etching Club) – The first link is to a blog which discusses The New York Etching Club which is where all of these etchings are from and in particular Gifford. The second link is an enlargement. The actual plate is tiny 2 3/16 x 3 ½.
http://adventuresintheprinttrade.blogspot.com/2011/03/new-york-etching-club-r-swain-gifford.html http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-r7vqZMASwqA/TZCukzVHdLI/AAAAAAAAC0A/6Duy3q6JX4A/s1600/Gifford+-+Algerian+scene.jpg Robert Swain Gifford – Near The Coast – The first link is to the etching while the second link is to an oil painting that Swain also did. Both are in the Met collection although for some reason no image is available on the Met website for the etching. I think this could illustrate, “it was a dark and stormy night.”
https://www.pafa.org/sites/default/files/artworkpics/1933_13_2_l.jpg https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/10944 Otto Henry Bacher - FONDAMENTA DEI TOLENTINI – This is another item listed for sale by Rona Schneider and in her notes she points out, “Amazingly, the nearest building still stands, with the shop occupied by a watchmaker.” It must be very difficult for etchers to show depth, such as the man shown inside the shop. Having no depth perception myself it’s beyond me. This is another one where I could only find a small image unfortunately.
https://media.mutualart.com/Images/2013_05/31/07/070817749/ae568379-cd58-4ba7-a457-1cbd4368b5ea_570.Jpeg Samuel Colman - The Belfry of Bruges – I thought this ornate structure was well depicted along with the wagon, horses and people.
http://www.robinprints.com/shop/prints/the-belfry-of-bruges-1882/ Thomas Moran – The Rainbow – Moran is a famous Hudson River painter and I’ve mentioned him numerous times from auctions and exhibits I’ve seen. I would think he’s probably the most noted of all of the artists I’ve mentioned here. Interesting the way he suggests the rainbow without using any color
https://www.dia.org/art/collection/object/rainbow-54874 There were many more and as I noted above I enjoyed seeing everything in the exhibit. I look forward to the next one although their website says they only do one twice a year.
I also visited the Di Donna Gallery at 744 Madison Avenue, a site I had never been to, for A PASSION FOR COLLECTING: MODERN WORKS FROM THE PÉREZ SIMÓN COLLECTION. This is a brief biography of Jose Antonio Perez Simon from Wikipedia.
Juan Antonio PĂ©rez SimĂłn (born 1941) is a Spanish businessman and art collector, resident in Mexico, who became rich in the telecommunications business.PĂ©rez SimĂłn has assembled a collection of over 3000 paintings, including works by DalĂ, Goya, El Greco, Rubens, Van Gogh and Monet. In 2010, Paris Match described the collection as the largest in private hands in the world.
It’s a remarkable collection and he’s been good about lending it to museums and galleries for exhibits. There are no images on the website and when I asked if I could take pictures with my phone I was told no. This link is to their press release with a description of the exhibit and a few illustrations, ironically one of his Rothko; you know my feelings about Rothko’s art.
http://www.didonna.com/attachment/en/592dccf9dca837ed225523d3/TextOneColumnWithFile/5b6c52c92cd850257070bb5a I also found this review from Bloomberg which has several illustrations including a Magritte I particularly liked and a Miro.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-09-12/telecom-tycoon-s-paintings-return-to-n-y-10-years-after-lehman And this shows his Cezanne among others, be sure to click to enlarge.
https://deskgram.net/explore/tags/P%C3%A9rezSim%C3%B3nCollection Two nice shows made for a very pleasant morning.
Let’s visit the Flickrs now.
Andy G.
christmas dress – Hi Samantha, new pictures I see
https://www.flickr.com/photos/sissysamantharebecca/45418338934/ CIMG4287.jpg
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tsukiko/44733883121/Short bridal dress 3
https://www.flickr.com/photos/136587301@N08/44718870162/549
https://www.flickr.com/photos/91894461@N07/30791282692/Brenda
https://www.flickr.com/photos/boyswillbegirls/35184187290/Wedding dress
https://www.flickr.com/photos/wendiw/4838016640/As a sexy bride last night at translivings event in Bournemouth
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ninajay/38783256971/S1050121
https://www.flickr.com/photos/167027157@N06/44829149714/Fairygirl is back :-)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/fairyboyprincess/43696162520/20180525_184853
https://www.flickr.com/photos/slavejane/43976699764/