1. U.Va. Art Museum exhibits ‘Fernand Leger ~ 'Contrast of Forms’

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    artwork: Fernand Leger Still Life

    Charlottesville, VA - From Jan. 19 through March 18, the University of Virginia Art Museum presents the special exhibition “Fernand Leger: Contrast of Forms,” curated by Matthew Affron, director of special curatorial projects and associate professor in the McIntire Department of Art.  Featuring one painting and 12 drawings, the exhibition gathers examples from a remarkable sequence of images made by Leger between 1912 and 1914.  Two great stories of modernist art are recognized in this exhibition, the rise of cubism and the beginning of abstract art.  And yet, said Affron, these works remain a puzzle.

    Comprised of major works from public and private collections, this exhibition provides a rare opportunity to study closely Leger’s extraordinary manner of imaging.  In 1915 the painter described this open-ended series of compositions as “fairly abstract investigations (contrasts of forms and colors),” choosing his words in order to highlight the experimental thrust of the series as a whole.  Among the public lenders are the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

    The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue made possible by the Oakwood Foundation, with essays by Affron and Maria Gough, associate professor in the Department of Art and Art History at Stanford University.

    Exhibition sponsors are the Eugene V. and Clare E. Thaw Charitable Trust, the University of Virginia Art Museum Volunteer Board, the Carl H. and Martha S. Lindner Center for Art History in the McIntire Department of Art, the Arts Enhancement Fund, Nicholas Acquavella, Sheila and Ted Weschler, and Sheridan W. and Thomas F. Nicholson.

    Visit the University of Virginia Art Museum Web site www.virginia.edu/artmuseum




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