Title
Brancusi in New York 1913-2013Posted In
Sculpture, Book, ExhibitionArtist
Constantin BrancusiCurator
Markus DochantschiDuration
07 November 2013 to 24 January 2014Venue
Paul Kasmin GalleryLocation
Visit Website
paulkasmingallery.comDetailed Information | |||||
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Title | Brancusi in New York 1913-2013 | Posted In | Sculpture, Book, Exhibition | Artist | Constantin Brancusi |
Curator | Markus Dochantschi | Duration | 07 November 2013 to 24 January 2014 | Venue | Paul Kasmin Gallery |
Location |
515 West 27th Street New York, NY
United States | Visit Website | paulkasmingallery.com |
‘Head’, ‘Mademoiselle Pogany II’, ‘The Newborn’, ‘Sleeping Muse II’, and the ‘Fish’ are the five bronze masterpieces on display which testify to Brancusi’s unsurpassed sculptural frugality and witness how much he was inspired by the Romanian folk art and African sculpture. Admiration of Brancusi’s oeuvre and his influence on modern sculpture history has never waned seen by the likes of artists such as Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Jeff Koons and Richard Serra who have dedicated some of their artworks to him. As for his relevance in today’s art world, suffice it to say that on February 23, 2009, his rare wooden ''Madame L.R.'' sculpture sold for $37.6 million at the Yves Saint Laurent/Pierre Bergé sale at Christie's in Paris, hitting number eight in the list of the ten highest prices ever paid for a sculpture as of November 2013.
Brancusi’s exhibition at Paul Kasmin Gallery has been designed by studioMDA’s founder Markus Dochantschi and invites the viewer to experience the non-linear geometry of the five sculptures within the linear pattern of the exhibition layout, which Dochantschi modeled after the Manhattan grid. ''Manhattan is my large-scale studio. ...How is it similar to my studio? Because nothing is static. Nothing is fixed. All these buildings, all these forms, are interchangeable and can move as experience evolves and changes.''- Constantin Brancusi.
On the occasion of the exhibition ''Brancusi in New York 1913 2013'', a fully illustrated catalogue published by ASSOULINE, chronicles the artist’s success in New York City and his impact on its artistic milieu with astonishing archival imagery. According to Brancusi: ''When one is immersed in beauty, there is no need for explanations''. The beautiful story of the mutually beneficial relationship between the so called ''patriarch of modern sculpture'' and the Big Apple which you will find inside ASSOULINE’s publication couldn’t have been better explained by the authority on Brancusi, Jérôme Neutres and Theodor Nicol, the owner of the Brancusi Estate and the sole holder of Brancusi’s copyrights.
{YatzerTip}: Discover Constantin Brancusi’s spiritual roots through an essay written by Aidan Hart, an ordained Reader of the Greek Orthodox Church who lives in the United Kingdom. Hart has also been a professional icon painter and carver for over twenty-five years. An extract from the essay follows: ''His aphorisms show a marked similarity to the teachings contained in the hymns that he would have chanted and to other mystical writings of the Orthodox Church, most notably the teaching on the inner essences or logoi of things. Compare, for example, the text below from the seventh century saint, Maximus the Confessor, with the aphorism of Brancusi which follows it: 'Do not stop short of the outward appearance which visible things present to the senses,' writes Maximus, 'but seek with your intellect to contemplate their inner essences (logoi), seeing them as images of spiritual realities...' And Brancusi’s words: 'They are imbeciles who call my work abstract; that which they call abstract is the most realist, because what is real is not the exterior form but the idea, the essence of things.' ''