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Still Life

Variations on a Theme

February 18 – April 2, 2016

Still Life
Still Life
Still Life
Still Life
Still Life
Juan Gris, Bouquet de fleurs, early 1920s
Juan Gris
Bouquet de fleurs, early 1920s
pencil on paper
10.31 x 8.15 in
Henri Hayden, Still Life with Compote, 1920
Henri Hayden
Still Life with Compote, 1920
oil and gouache on paper
10.24 x 11.61 in
Edmund de Waal, Certosa III, 2015
Edmund de Waal
Certosa III, 2015
porcelain vessels with gilding on wooden shelf
1.57 x 27.56 x 3.94 in.
edition 3/3
Donald Hamilton Fraser, Table with Blue Flowers , 1957
Donald Hamilton Fraser
Table with Blue Flowers , 1957
oil on canvas
30 x 20 in
Kenneth Stubbs, Geometric Still Life, c. 1954
Kenneth Stubbs
Geometric Still Life, c. 1954
casein on paper
8 x 4.5 in

Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Rosenberg & Co. Opens Group Exhibition

STILL LIFE: VARIATIONS ON A THEME

February 18 – April 2, 2016

 

Rosenberg & Co. is pleased to present Still Life: Variations on a Theme, a group exhibition examining how artists through the years have addressed the classic fine art subject of the still life. The show features works spanning nineteenth-century Impressionism to twentieth-century Modernism to the contemporary, and comprises a range of media such as painting, photography, and sculpture.

 

According to Pliny the Elder, the painter Zeuxis of fifth-century B.C.E. Greece unveiled a sumptuous still life painting of grapes so convincingly hyper-realistic that birds flew at the canvas to peck at the image of the fruit. Over the centuries, the emphasis on different values and aspects of still life painting has shifted from an overarching importance on the illusionistic in ancient Greek art to, for example, the symbolic and metaphysical in an Italian Baroque or Dutch Golden Age vanitas painting. The Cubists utilized the conventional theme of the still life as a starting point for radical stylistic experimentation and innovation, fragmenting the ordinary accoutrements of daily life. Today, contemporary treatment of the still life encompasses both Maureen Chatfield’s vivid-hued, abstract paintings which develop Modernist concepts, as well as Edmund de Waal’s serenely restrained, monochromatic ceramics inspired by traditional Japanese pottery. 

 

Rosenberg & Co.’s Still Life exhibition offers visitors an illustrative glimpse of a vast genre, with selections including sculpture by de Waal; photographs by Fred Stein; works on paper by Roger de la Fresnaye, Alberto Giacometti, Juan Gris, and Ben Nicholson; and paintings by Georges Braque, Prunella Clough, Henri Fantin-Latour, Donald Hamilton Fraser, and Louis Valtat.

 

 

 

Rosenberg & Co. renews a salon-style space with a focus on the highest standards of connoisseurship and expertise. With an emphasis on the secondary Modern art market, Rosenberg & Co. also continues the legacy of working with contemporary artists.

 

ROSENBERG & CO.

19 EAST 66TH STREET

NEW YORK, NY 10065

T: +1 (212) 202-3270
E: info@rosenbergco.com 

 

HOURS: Tuesday-Saturday, 10:00am-6:00pm

 

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For further information, please visit www.rosenbergco.com or contact Preeya Seth at preeya@rosenbergco.com or +1 (212) 202-3270.