Rarely seen masterpieces on view in new exhibition at Leila Heller Gallery
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, October 6, 2024


Rarely seen masterpieces on view in new exhibition at Leila Heller Gallery
Rudolf Bauer, Composition 115, 1939. Oil on canvas, 51 x 45 1/2 inches © Rudolf Bauer Estate and Archive, San Francisco.



NEW YORK, NY.- Leila Heller Gallery is presenting The Museum of Non-Objective Painting: the Birth of the Guggenheim, including rarely seen masterpieces from Hilla Rebay, Rudolf Bauer, Wassily Kandinsky, László Moholy-Nagy, Charles Green Shaw, Rolph Scarlett, Penrod Centurion, Irene Rice Pereira, Raymond Jonson, John Ferren, John Sennhauser, Albert Gleizes, Lloyd Ney, Ilya Bolotowsky, Fernand Léger, Alice Trumbull Mason, and Alice Mattern, with works portraying the rise and development of non-objective painting, spanning from 1912 to 1951.

This sweeping survey exhibition seeks to exhume from historical misappropriation non-objective painting as a movement of European abstraction re-homed in the vertiginous violence of WWII to the streets of Manhattan and as a historical event in the history of art whose legacy singularly influenced the rise of Abstract Expressionism in the following generation. This exhibition traces the oeuvres of a lost generation of artists whose work nonetheless formed the basis and informed the vision of the founding collection of Solomon R Guggenheim, also known as the Museum of Non-Objective Painting.

Non-objective painting is not simply abstraction by another name, but a distinct movement arisen from the desire to divorce abstract painting from its derivative reliance upon objects in the world, whose mundane existence was considered insufficient for manifestations of spiritual expression. Arguably reaching its apogee between the mid-1930s to mid-1940s, the movement of non-objective painting sought instead to lend color and form to the immaterial experiences of the musical and the mystical. Drawing from the theoretical musings and biomorphic forms of Kandinsky or the utopian urges and cubist tableaux of Albert Gleizes, the work of Rebay and Bauer, Scarlett and Ferren, Rice Pereira and Shaw all contributed to the development of a pioneering ideology and compelling, unique aesthetic, replete with symbolic, angular, and rhythmic geometries.

June 1, 1939: after 10 years of a crusading mission of collecting, Solomon Guggenheim, under the visionary guidance of artist and curator Hilla Rebay, opened the Museum of Non-Objective Painting on West 54th Street in Manhattan with an exhibition entitled The Art of Tomorrow. This first iteration of what is now a global institution spent the first ten years avidly exhibiting the very finest international examples of the proponents and antecedents of this particular avant-garde and predominantly European abstraction, including those who were considered to be the founders, at least according to Rebay, of the movement of non-objective painting: namely Wassily Kandinsky and Rudolf Bauer, both of whom are featured in this exhibition.

This was no small feat; the pervasive mood of a post-Depression era America exuded suspicion of and derision towards what was considered at the time a European art form; the demoralized public and critics alike in the United States throughout the 1930s and 1940s vastly preferred the narrative and representational redemption in Social Realist and Regionalist art which sought to reassure their beleaguered souls of the values which were truly American. Yet, such resistance only made Baroness Rebay and her patron Solomon Guggenheim all the more determined, proclaiming the value of ‘non-objective’ art lay in its ability to transcend the narrow boundaries of material pleasure and nationalist want. For her, non-objective painting was “spirituality made visible … alive and organic with the cosmic order which rules the universe.” For him, the future was not to be built on the mythical narratives of narrative figurative painting, but rather on non-objective painting: “I saw in this Art a medium for the American painter to exceed the past.”

The exhibition is divided into three principal sections, or chronological periods, reflecting the legacy of the movement and Museum of Non-Objective Painting. The first room, featuring works dating from circa 1912 to 1935, seeks to portray the primary influences on the development of non-objective painting and early biomorphic compositions by artists who would form the core of the aesthetic and ideology represented by the Museum of Non-Objective Painting. This section of the exhibition includes an extraordinary work by Wassily Kandinsky from ­­­­1935 entitled Poids Montes whose pools of red are reflecting in the adjacent tableau by Rudolf Bauer, Symphony. These works sit beside a piece by Albert Gleizes, La Vieille Dame (1923); this work is also one of the only representational works in the exhibition, highlighting both the importance of this genre of work to the movement and Museum, and also the striking departure from this style which non-objective painting represents.

In the second, or main room of the gallery, an exemplary collection of works from 1935 to 1945, including the work Colored Swinging (1935) by Bauer featured in the mission statement for the Museum of Non-Objective Painting and in the exhibition, and rare works by Ilya Bolotowsky, Raymond Jonson, Rolph Scarlett, Hilla Rebay, Fernand Léger, Alice Trumbull Mason, and Alice Mattern, presents the coalescence of the aesthetic of non-objective painting which moved, by in large, from the organic presentations of the earlier years, towards more concise hard-edge geometric forms, floating on an indistinct ground, portraying compositional relationships between, as Rebay states above, “cosmic” forms. Symbolism, attributed to both color and form, pervades these works, with the emphasis on circular forms connoting ‘wholeness,’ triangles and pyramids denoting the heritage of Kandinsky’s theory of the advancement of humanity, and notions of line connecting, for the artists, the spiritual force between bodies in space, as well reflecting sonic or musical elements in rhythmic form. Also featured is a distinctive jewel-like piece, Space Modulator (1945), by László Moholy-Nagy, who, along with Shaw and Kandinsky, was one of the few artists featured in a solo exhibition during the tenure of the Museum of Non-Objective Painting.

The final section of the exhibition presents work from the late 1940s to early 1950s, including quintessential paintings by Irene Rice Pereira, whose compositions challenge the edge of the frame and make evident the push to be what will later be the ‘all-over’ in the development of Abstract Expressionism. Rice Pereira, along with Rebay, Mason Trumbull, and Mattern, all render this exhibition also a subtle exposition of the power and importance of the female quotient in both the curatorial and creative vision of women artists in the history of the movement and Museum of Non-Objective Painting.

This exhibition is presented and curated in partnership with Rowland Weinstein and Weinstein Gallery, San Francisco.










Today's News

January 30, 2017

Works by women artists from Aboriginal Australia on view at the Frost Art Museum

Anthropologists uncover art by (really) Old Masters-38,000 year-old engravings

Why use an aggregator for art? Barnebys is revolutionising the art market by its powers of aggregation

Scientists discover giant new otter from the latest Miocene Shuitangba site in China's Yunnan Province

Museum Brandhorst presents a new series of paintings by Wade Guyton

Jules Verne adventures at Drouot: The first stage of the sale of an exceptional Vernian Collection

500-year-old rare book paints a vivid portrait of life in the 12th Century

Contemporary Fine Arts opens first exhibition with works by Spencer Sweeney

Rarely seen masterpieces on view in new exhibition at Leila Heller Gallery

Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens presents masterworks from the Dahesh Museum of Art

Turner Contemporary exhibits works by artists who expand the possibilities of embroidery, weaving, and sewing

Tina Kim Gallery opens exhibition of new works by New York-based Italian artist Davide Balliano

Milwaukee Art Museum opens new exhibitions to engage visitors this winter

Peter Finch's Golden Globe Award for 'Network' up for auction

Magma gallery in Bologna presents Misplaced: A project by Tellas/Ciredz

SmithDavidson Gallery open location in Miami

Kunstverein in Hamburg celebrates its 200th anniversary with exhibitions

The allure of Napoleon: The Bowes Museum exhibits works from its collection

Exhibition explores the treatment of perspective, depth and perception in two and three dimensions

ICP opens the first of three exhibitions exploring the impact of photography and visual culture on society

Hammer Museum opens Jimmie Durham's first North American retrospective

First solo exhibition in London by Glasgow-based artist Jamie Crewe opens at Gasworks

Sprüth Magers, Los Angeles exhibits films and animations by Jon Rafman and Stan VanDerBeek

Early aviation collection exhibited for the first time




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful