In the Company of Artists: Photographs from the DIA's Collection |
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| Monday, 01 December 2008 02:19 |
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A highlight is a portfolio of portraits by contemporary photographer Ari Marcopoulos, who immersed himself in underground life on New York’s lower east side throughout the 1980s and 1990s. His portraits are informal and intimate depictions of famous artists such as Andy Warhol and young art stars like Jean Michel Basquiat, who was photographed shortly before his untimely death in 1987. Also included are portraits made during visits to other artists’ studios, including Kiki Smith, Michael Heizer, Richard Serra, the elusive David Hammonds, and the eccentric Jeff Koons. The exhibition also includes portraits of renowned artists of the past. French photographer Paul Cardon’s (1859-1941) series of Paris’ cultural elite around 1887 includes a quiet portrait of the notoriously flamboyant painter and American artist James McNeill Whistler, who appears in his studio on the Rue Notre Dame des Champs in 1892, the year he settled in Paris. Also on view is selection of portraits by Armenian-born Yousuf Karsh, recognized internationally for his portraits of politicians, writers, athletes, and artists. In one of his most famous photographs, Karsh traveled from Ottawa, Canada, to Abiquiu, New Mexico, to meet Georgia O’Keefe in 1956. He hoped to find in her “some of the poetic intensity of her paintings.” Instead, he found “the austere intensity of dedication to her work.” He made a quiet portrait of the distant O’Keeffe during a moment of repose in her home. A supplement of 19th century portraits from the collection of Novi, Michigan-area collectors Leonard and Jean Walle will also be on view. Highlights include several rare cartes-de-visite portraits (small albumen prints mounted on 2 ½ x 4” cards) of artists including Rosa Bonheur, George Lance, and John Millais. This exhibition is organized by the Detroit Institute of Arts visit : www.dia.org/ |
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The exhibition also includes portraits of renowned artists of the past. French photographer Paul Cardon’s (1859-1941) series of Paris’ cultural elite around 1887 includes a quiet portrait of the notoriously flamboyant painter and American artist James McNeill Whistler, who appears in his studio on the Rue Notre Dame des Champs in 1892, the year he settled in Paris. Also on view is selection of portraits by Armenian-born Yousuf Karsh, recognized internationally for his portraits of politicians, writers, athletes, and artists. In one of his most famous photographs, Karsh traveled from Ottawa, Canada, to Abiquiu, New Mexico, to meet Georgia O’Keefe in 1956. He hoped to find in her “some of the poetic intensity of her paintings.” Instead, he found “the austere intensity of dedication to her work.” He made a quiet portrait of the distant O’Keeffe during a moment of repose in her home. 