NEW YORK, NY.- Gerald Peters Gallery is presenting the exhibition, Max Weber: Becoming Modern. Spanning the years 1905 to 1930, the paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptures that make up the exhibition explore Webers transformation from art student to arbiter of the avant-garde.
Weber arrived in Paris in 1905 and enrolled at the Académies Julian and Colarossi, pursuing a traditional, academic course of study. He left Paris four years later an avant-garde artist, an acolyte of Matisse, Picasso, Cézanne, and Rousseau, determined to change the course of art in the United States. By 1930, Weber had become a superstar, with a retrospective that year at MOMA, the first that institution had devoted to an American artist. Webers rise to stardom, however, was not marked by an easy line of successes, but rather by a trail of baffled critics, financial hardship, and a public whose tastes and perceptions were years behind Webers evolved vision.
Between 1905 and 1930 Weber redefined art in America: he introduced modern European art but, more importantly, he established American art and artists as part of transatlantic modernism. Before the 1913 Armory Show, Weber was faced with an environment with only one established outlet for showcasing modern art (Stieglitzs 291) and a public that was still enthralled by Impressionism. Weber persevered in filtering European modernism through an American lens. His works from these years gave visual expression to the new and exist, in the words of Lloyd Goodrich, as the most advanced experimental painting
produced in America in these years. Max Weber: Becoming Modern focuses on these twenty-five years of struggle and experimentation during which Weber matured from student to master, guiding a reluctant public through a crash course on modern art and becoming a lodestone for American Modernism.
The exhibition continues in New York through December 14th and will open in Santa Fe on March 15th, 2019.