ALICE NEEL: PAINTER OF MODERN LIFE
Gemeentemuseum Den Haag in the Netherlands
November 5, 2016 through February 12, 2017
Fondation Vincent van Gogh Arles
4 March through 17 September 2017
Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Germany
October 13, 2017, through January 14, 2018
This retrospective
of paintings by Alice Neel (1900–1984) – one of North America’s most important
female artists, although largely unappreciated during her own lifetime – is the
fruit of a collaboration between several European institutions. The exhibition
at the Fondation Vincent van Gogh Arles places the US painter and her realist brush
firmly in the spotlight. Imbued with a powerful psychological dimension, Neel’s
portraits bear witness to almost a
century of evolution in attitudes towards gender and ethnicity, and to radical
changes in fashion at the heart of American society.
Working in an epoch that
declared abstraction the new modernism, Neel would always remain a “painter of
modern life” as imagined by Charles Baudelaire, with whom she shared the same
vision of modernity and the artist’s role in relation to it. Hallmarked at once
by expressionism and realism, Alice Neel’s œuvre translates the paradoxical
personality of its maker, who wanted to paint individuals from all social
classes and create a visual history of her time – a Comédie Humaine .
Conceived
by Jeremy Lewison, the leading expert on Alice Neel, the exhibition presents
more than seventy paintings, including a portrait of Andy Warhol “laid bare” under
the artist’s keen gaze.
After the Ateneum Art Museum in Helsinki and the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag in The Hague,
the Fondation Vincent van Gogh Arles welcomes this major exhibition from 4 March to 17 September
2017, after which it will travel on to Germany and the Deichtorhallen in
Hamburg.
Exhibition curator: Jeremy Lewison
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Alice Neel is born
on 28 January 1900 in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, USA. She studies art at the
Philadelphia School of Design for Women, an institution that distances itself
from the formalist approach to art taught during this epoch. In the 1930s Alice
Neel lives in Greenwich Village, a district of New York with a Bohemian
reputation and popular with artists. She is entered on the payroll of the Works
Progress Administration, for which she paints urban scenes. During this period she also meets and paints
the portraits of fellow Communist Party sympathizers.
In 1938 she moves to
Spanish Harlem (today East Harlem), where she embarks on a new series of
portraits featuring Puerto Ricans, among others. In the 1960s she settles in Upper
West Side, where she reconnects with the art world and executes her famous portraits of artists, gallerists
and curators. At the end of the decade she finds inspiration for her art not only
among family members, but also by observing women and children, whom she thus
paints at the dawn of the feminist movement. From this period onwards, too, her
painting is finally recognized by the American art scene and celebrated in the
form of numerous solo and collective shows.
Alice Neel dies on 13 October 1984
in New York.
Catalogue
This groundbreaking book re-evaluates the work of Alice Neel, one of
the most renowned American portrait painters of the 20th century
This insightful catalogue examines anew the full range of Alice Neel’s
(1900-1984) celebrated paintings of people, still life, and cityscapes.
Featuring around seventy paintings spanning the entire length of her
career, this handsome book accompanies a major retrospective of her
work, and reveals her underlying interest in the history of photography,
German painting of the 1920s, and other artists, such as Van Gogh and
Cézanne, all of which provided an important precedent for the veracity
and raw emotional intensity of her figurative works. Neel is renowned
for her visual acuity and psychological depth, and her portraits and
nude paintings of friends, family, strangers, and prominent cultural
figures alike convey an incredibly consistent intimacy regardless of the
relationship to her subject.
The accompanying essays trace the
trajectory of Neel’s artistic language as it evolved alongside
contemporaneous trends in the New York City art world and examine the
manner in which her own work figured into the social and cultural
contexts of her time. Created over a sixty-year period, Neel’s oeuvre
offers a remarkably expressive document of the specific milieus she
navigated through and ultimately transcends the marker of time
altogether.
Main exhibitions (a selection)
• Face Value: Portraiture in the
Age of Abstraction , National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, 18 April 2014 – 11 January 2015
• Alice Neel: Painted Truths ,
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 21 March – 13 June 2010, and subsequently touring
to the Whitechapel Gallery, London, and the Moderna Museet, Malmö
• Alice Neel ,
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 29 June – 17 September 2000, and
subsequently touring to Andover, Philadelphia, Minneapolis and Denver
• Féminin-Masculin, Le Sexe de l’art , Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, 24 October 1995 – 12
February 1996
Alice Neel: The Spanish Family© Estate of Alice Neel
Alice Neel: Frank O'Hara© Estate of Alice Neel
Alice Neel: Jackie Curtis and Ritta Redd© Estate of Alice Neel
Alice Neel: Joey Skaggs© Estate of Alice Neel
Alice Neel: Self-Portrait© Estate of Alice Neel
Alice Neel: Gus Hall© Estate of Alice Neel
José , 1936 Oil on canvas, 58.4 x 46
cm Estate of Alice Neel Photo credit: Malcolm Varon, New York
Pregnant Julie and Algis , 1967 Oil on canvas, 107.6 x 161.9 cm Estate of Alice
Neel Photo credit: Malcolm Varon, New York
Ginny and Elizabeth , 1975 Oil
on canvas, 106.7 x 76.2 cm Estate of Alice Neel Photo credit: Ethan Palme