Tag Archives: Manet/Degas

Arts Preview: Artforum Magazine – December 2023

Artforum Magazine (December 5, 2023) – The latest issue features Fifteen Artists reflect on 2023, “Manet/Degas” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC, The Top Museum Exhibitions of 2023, The top ten art exhibitions of 2023, and more…

Manet/Degas

Edgar Degas, Monsieur and Madame Édouard Manet, 1868–69

Metropolitan Museum of Art

By Jordan Kantor

Curated by Stephan Wolohojian and Ashley E. Dunn

“MANET/DEGAS,” the fall blockbuster at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, begins with an unabashed, double-barreled bang: Édouard Manet’s last great self-portrait, paired up alongside one of Edgar Degas’s first. The juxtaposition provides a thrilling object lesson in the stolid compare-and-contrast curatorial methodology that defines the exhibition, but if it’s meant to show the two artists on an equal footing, it doesn’t stage a fair fight. Forty-six years old when he executed Portrait of the Artist (Manet with a Palette), ca. 1878–79, Manet is at the height of his painterly power, looking backward and forward at once. 

THE ARTISTS’ ARTISTS

Fifteen artists reflect on 2023

By Kenturah DavisVaginal DavisAnri SalaTracey EminDoron LangbergDena YagoAdam AlessiOto GillenMire LeeNigel HowlettLúcia KochK.R.M. MooneySula Bermúdez-SilvermanNiklas TalebParty Office

Lauren Halsey
Lauren Halsey, the eastside of south central los angeles hieroglyph prototype architecture (I), 2022, glass-fiber reinforced concrete. Installation view, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2023. Photo: Hyla Skopitz.

To take stock of the past year, Artforum asked an international group of artists to select a single exhibition or event that most memorably caught their attention in 2023.

KENTURAH DAVIS
Lauren Halsey (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)

Emerging onto the Met’s rooftop, I’m greeted by sphinxes with faces carved in the likeness of the artist’s loved ones. These figures surround and protect a large architectural monument, its surfaces engraved with coded inscriptions that pay homage to the people and energy of South Central Los Angeles. The structure forgoes the exuberant color I’ve come to expect in Halsey’s work, making me think about the ways Egyptian art and architecture have changed over time—once colorfully embellished, and now animated purely by shadows. In this way, Halsey’s sanctuary suggests that it’s been standing there for millennia, transformed by the sun and communing with the cosmos.

Annette Frick
Annette Frick, Ein Augenblick im Niemandsland (A Moment in No Man’s Land), 2010, twenty-one gelatin silver prints, each 15 3⁄4 × 11 3⁄4″.

VAGINAL DAVIS
Annette Frick (MARTa Herford, Germany) 

You can easily get royally preggers if you stand too close to the hairy eyeball of Annette Frick. For more than forty years, the Berlin-based photographer-filmmaker and consummate artiste has been known mainly for her captivating chronicles of underground queer scenes. At her retrospectacle “A Moment in No Man’s Land,”  was enchanted by her sensual large-format self-portraits and stunning nude cycle “Aus dem Wasser” (Out of the Water), 2007–2008, referring to mythological figures such as Ondine and Lilith. I had never seen her architecture-portrait hybrids and was mesmerized, wondering just what else she has hidden in her voluptuous archive.

Saâdane Afif
Saâdane Afif, The King Coal Laments, 2023, coal sculptures by miners, UV prints on aluminum, wood, aluminum trusses. Installation view, Wilhelm Hallen, Berlin. Photo: Andrea Rossetti.

ANRI SALA
Saâdane Afif (Wilhelm Hallen, Berlin) 

It’s difficult to express the poetry and poignancy of Saâdane Afif’s exhibition “The Coalman,” part of the artist’s larger endeavor to give form to a heptahedron. Here, the artist installs his personal collection of coal sculptures handcrafted by miners in their spare time alongside Is it possible that you have no coal left?, 2023, a facsimile of a letter from French composer Claude Debussy to his coal merchant, penned during the particularly severe winter of 1916–17. The repurposed missive serves as a coda to the exhibition as a whole, posing a question that resonates in manifold ways in the present (perhaps even applying to a shortage of new forms).

Ken Kiff, Man and Blue Mask, ca. 1975, oil on panel, 31 7⁄8 × 24″.

New Museum Exhibitions: ‘Manet/Degas’ At The Met

Photo collage of two paintings, with the words Manet/Degas overlaid on top; Left of boy wearing pink shirt and hat sitting on a red couch with a dessert; Right: Two people wearing tan and black sitting at a table against a tan wall.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art (September 4, 2023) – This exhibition examines one of the most significant artistic dialogues in modern art history: the close and sometimes tumultuous relationship between Édouard Manet and Edgar Degas. Born only two years apart, Manet (1832–1883) and Degas (1834–1917) were friends, rivals, and, at times, antagonists who worked to define modern painting in France.

Manet/Degas

Manet/Degas - Yale University Press London

September 24, 2023–January 7, 2024

Through more than 150 paintings and works on paper,  Manet/Degas  takes a fresh look at the interactions of these two artists in the context of the family relationships, friendships, and intellectual circles that influenced their artistic and professional choices, deepening our understanding of a key moment in nineteenth-century French painting.

Manet/Degas is organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie, Paris.

Reviews: ‘The Week In Art’

March 31, 2023: The Art Newspaper’s annual report on museum visitor figures around the world has been published.

We talk to Lee Cheshire, who co-edited the report, and to Charles Saumarez Smith, a former director or chief executive of three London museums and galleries—the National Portrait Gallery, National Gallery and Royal Academy of Arts—about how important the figures are to museums and whether they are a valid gauge of institutions’ success.

The exhibition Manet/Degas opened at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris this week, before travelling later in the year to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Ben Luke visits the show in Paris and speaks to Laurence des Cars, the former director of the Musée d’Orsay and now president-director of the Musée du Louvre, and Stéphane Guégan, the co-curator of the exhibition.

And in London, a show of the paintings of Berthe Morisot, the pioneering Impressionist with artistic and familial connections to Manet and Degas, has opened at the Dulwich Picture Gallery.

This episode’s Work of the Week is Morisot’s Woman at Her Toilette (1875-80). Lois Oliver, the curator of the exhibition in Dulwich, tells us about this pivotal picture.Manet/Degas, Musée d’Orsay, Paris, until 23 July; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 24 September-7 January 2024Berthe Morisot: Shaping Impressionism, Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, until 10 September, Musée Marmottan Monet later in 2023 (dates to be announced).