Oklahoma City Museum of Art presents 57 works from the collection of the Brooklyn Museum
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Oklahoma City Museum of Art presents 57 works from the collection of the Brooklyn Museum
George Wesley Bellows (American, 1882-1925). The Sand Cart, 1917. Oil on canvas, 30 1/4 x 44 1/16 in. (76.8 x 111.9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, John B. Woodward Memorial Fund, 24.85.



OKLAHOMA CITY, OK.- The Oklahoma City Museum of Art will present American Moderns, 1910–1960: From O’Keeffe to Rockwell, featuring fifty-seven artworks from the collection of the Brooklyn Museum. This unique exhibition will explore the myriad of ways in which American artists have engaged with modernity. Ranging widely in subject matter and style, the fifty-three paintings and four sculptures were produced by leading artists of the day, including Georgia O’Keeffe, Milton Avery, Marsden Hartley, Stuart Davis, Arthur Dove, Rockwell Kent, Joseph Stella, Elie Nadelman, and Norman Rockwell. Significant works by these and other artists in the exhibition exemplify their unique contributions to modern culture. “American Moderns, 1910-1960 complements the Oklahoma City Museum of Art’s permanent collection, with its strong focus on American art,” said Alison Amick, curator of collections. “As the opening venue for this exhibition, the Museum is excited to showcase important works from the Brooklyn Museum that highlight the stylistic range and breadth of content being produced by American artists during this period.”

Between 1910 and 1960, both American society and art underwent tumultuous and far-reaching transformations. The United States emerged as an international power of economic, industrial, and military might, while also experiencing two world wars and the Great Depression. New technologies fundamentally changed the pace and nature of all aspects of modern life. America’s increasingly diverse and mobile population challenged old social patterns and clamored for the equality and opportunities promised by the American dream. Art witnessed similarly dramatic changes as many artists rejected or reformulated artistic traditions, seeking new ways to make their work relevant in a contemporary context.

American Moderns explores themes such as the city, the body, landscape, still life, and Americana through the range of works in the exhibition. The American city was a common motif in art of this period as artists found new iconographic and aesthetic possibilities in the architectural forms and gridded geometries of the modern metropolis. Other works address the human experience of the city—the vast diversity of urban populations; the hustle and bustle of urban living; and the sociological effects of alienation, lack of privacy, and increasing female independence. Artists captured the nation’s self-confidence in heroic depictions of the muscled, active bodies of laborers who fueled the economy and of athletes who embodied the new cult of physicality.

The conventional artistic genres of landscape and still-life painting also enjoyed revitalization: both nature and everyday objects were the focus of creative experimentation with new styles, decorative compositions, and the formal properties of line, color, and space. In addition, the natural beauty of the seaside, rural locales, and the Southwest inspired many artists to explore universal and spiritual concerns. As a counterpoint to works that address the modern and the new, the exhibition will include images steeped in nostalgia, which evoke the past and simpler ways of life. This highly popular imagery fostered American nationalism and suggested the continuity of cherished traditions during times of war, economic depression, and social change.

Across these themes and iconographies, American Moderns investigates a wide array of artistic styles, including cubism, synchromism, precisionism, expressionism, and social realism. Cubism was particularly influential on modern American art and bred many individualized expressions and variations. Other artists remained committed to realism but took a pared-down, refined approach to their subjects, creating an aesthetic inspired by such diverse sources as folk art or the streamlined forms of the Machine Age.










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