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Everson Museum of art
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The Everson Museum

Object of the Week: Vase, by Gertrud and Otto Natzler

Apr 2, 2018, 8:14 AM
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Gertrude and Otto Natzler are one of several collaborative husband and wife teams that made a significant impact on American ceramics in the twentieth century. After meeting in Austria in 1933, they immediately began a collaboration; Gertrud had recently started studying ceramics, and Otto took an interest in the medium in order to better connect with her. The couple opened their first studio in 1935 in Vienna and received their first prize in 1938 for works submitted to the 1937 World Fair in Paris. The invading Nazi regime cut short their careers in Austria, and Gertrud and Otto immigrated to the United States in 1938, just months after getting married. Read More
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Object of the Week Gertrud and Otto Natzler

Object of the Week: Untitled Jar, by Adrian Saxe

Mar 26, 2018, 10:33 AM
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Based in Los Angeles, Adrian Saxe combines traditional materials with unconventional or personal iconography to create technically brilliant sculptures that often contain subtle elements of humor. Inspired by the history of ceramics, contemporary culture, and his fellow West Coast-based ceramic artists, Saxe sculpts, carves, and molds ceramics that addresses the complex relationships between decorative arts, crafts, and fine art. By adapting methods traditionally used on decorative works, Saxe subverts expectations and creates self-reflective ceramics that both reference and question the history of the medium. Read More
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Object of the Week Adrian Saxe

Object of the Week: Gleam through like heaven through a needle, by Angela Fraleigh

Mar 19, 2018, 6:23 AM
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Based in New York City and Allentown, Pennsylvania, Angela Fraleigh co-opts the techniques and styles of European Old Masters to create works that explore social constructs of gender, power, and identity. Weaving together elements of realism and abstraction, Fraleigh recasts marginalized female figures from male-dominated sources as daring protagonists within newly constructed narratives. While she typically creates intimate and monumental figure paintings, Fraleigh sculpted several works in clay for her exhibition Between Tongue and Teeth at the Everson in 2016, including Gleam through like heaven through a needle. Read More
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Object of the Week Angela Fraleigh

Object of the Week: Freight Yards, by Gifford Beal

Mar 12, 2018, 5:17 AM
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Born to a wealthy family in New York City, Gifford Beal (1879-1956) began studying painting at the age of twelve with American artist William Merritt Chase. Beal’s tutelage under Chase, who established the first school of plein air painting in the United States, inspired a life-long commitment to painting his surroundings. Beal continued his education at Princeton University and the Art Students League, where he studied with Frank Vincent DuMond and George Bridgeman, two extremely influential teachers in the twentieth century. Over the course of his long career, Beal encountered numerous artistic influences, but his style remained distinct due to his profound interest in revealing the beauty of both urban and non-urban settings. Read More
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Object of the Week Gifford Beal

Object of the Week: Helen Taylor Sketching, by John Sloan

Mar 6, 2018, 8:20 AM
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John Sloan (1871-1951) began his career as an illustrator for Philadelphia newspapers before moving to New York City in 1904, where he joined a group of artist friends who, together, made a significant impact on early twentieth century American painting. In 1908, Sloan and seven of his peers organized an exhibition of their work as a protest against the stringent policies of the National Academy of Design, which was the driving force behind modern art tastes in the United States. Dubbed The Eight, these artists broke free from academic traditions and European-centric styles of painting. Several of The Eight, including Sloan, also belonged to the Ashcan School, a group of painters known for depicting gritty scenes of everyday life in New York City. The Ashcan artists typically painted residents of the city’s poorer neighborhoods, showing what life was like for a large portion of the population. Read More
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Object of the Week John Sloan
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