Traveling Exhibitions

 

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American Art and Artists

Posing Beauty In
African American Culture

Sally Mann:
The Family and The Land

Paul Outerbridge:
New Color Photographs
from Mexico and California

Stefan Sagmeister: Things I have learned in my life

Yosuf Karsh:
Regarding Heroes


Modern/Contemporary Art

Uncanny Likeness: The
Contemporary Self-Portrait

Artists, Poets & Intimates:
Portraits of a Life
by Françoise Gilot

Modern Photography of the
Russian Avant-Garde

Almost Alice: New Illustrations of Wonderland by Maggie Taylor

The Great Picture

Cuba Avant-Garde:
Contemporary Cuban Art from the Farber Collection

Book of Lies:
Volumes I, II, and III

André Kertész: On Reading


Artist Retrospectives

SAGA: The Journey of
Arno Rafael Minkkinen
Thirty-Five Years of Photographs


Architecture/Decorative Art

Peter Shire: Chairs

Julius Shulman:
Desert Modern

Hollyock House and
Olive Hill:
Frank Lloyd Wright and
Edmund Teske


History and Culture

E. O. Hoppé:
The Indian Subcontinent
on the Cusp of Change

The Black & White Fifties:
South Africa Photographs by Jurgen Schadeberg

number of works:
45

frame sizes:
various

space requirements:
200 linear feet

tour dates:
2009–2011

participation fee:
*medium

see booking information

 

*Because projects are planned years in advance, the final participation fee may not be published. Fees fall within the following ranges:

low: under $10,000
medium: $10,000–$20,000
high: over $20,000


Artists, Poets & Intimates:
Portraits of a Life by Françoise Gilot

Curated by Mel Yoakum, Ph.D., Director, F. Gilot Archives and
organized by the Philip & Muriel Berman Museum of Art,
Ursinus College, Collegeville, Pennsylvania


The legendary artist, biographer and socialite Françoise Gilot is one of the enduring personalities of the postwar School of Paris. A precocious painter at the age of twenty-one, the year of her first major exhibition in Paris, Gilot was already admired for her bold and vibrant portraits. Some sixty-five years later, she continues to create bold and expressive portraits in her vivid signature style.

This exhibition gathers many of Gilot’s best-loved portraits on paper, made over the length of her remarkable career. Drawn from the rich collection of Gilot’s art held at the Berman Museum of Art at Ursinas College, combined with loans from the Gilot Archive, it includes portraits of family, friends, and literary and historical figures reflecting the diversity of influences on her extraordinary life.

In 1943, Gilot met Pablo Picasso, then 40 years her senior. In 1946, the two began a decade-long relationship, which Françoise later chronicled in a bestselling book (and movie), entitled Life with Picasso. At his side, Françoise became part of one of the great periods of the modern art movement in Europe. Their glittering circle of legendary artists, poets and philosophers included such names as Chagall, Matisse, Cocteau, and Braque. More personally, Françoise also included their two children, Claude and Paloma, in many of her drawings and paintings.

Gilot and Picasso remained married for seven years. Gilot subsequently married and divorced the painter Luc Simon, and then married scientist Jonas Salk, with whom she lived for twenty-five years until his death. The works in the exhibition range from her earliest self-portrait in oil, painted in 1939, to mature works produced in the 1980s. Included are portraits of each of her husbands, children and friends, as well as an eclectic group of historical figures, such as Louis XIV, George Sand, and Virginia Woolf.


Image:
Self Portrait, 1939, oil on paper, 27-1/2 x 19-3/4 inches. Courtesy of the artist.

 

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