Friday, May 14, 2021

American Art Week from May 15-22

 


From Debra Force, Maurice Brazil Prendergast (1858-1924) Bathers, circa 1912, oil on canvas, 22 ¼ x 34 ¼ in.
From Avery Galleries, John Whorf (1903 – 1959) Venice , 1925. Watercolor, 14 ½ x 21 inches. Signed and dated lower right: John Whorf 25.
From Jonathan Boos, Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones, In Apron Strings, 1911. Oil on canvas. 30 x 32 inches. Signed lower right.
From Meredith Ward Fine Art, Frederick Kann (1884-1965) Untitled, c. 1938. Oil and cork on canvas board, 18 x 24 inches.

The American Art Fair celebrates spring 2021 American Art Week from May 15-22 with Open Houses by appointment at most galleries during the opening weekend, featured in-gallery exhibitions, as well as online highlights at theamericanartfair.comthrough June 30.

The Spring 2021 American Art Week heralds new May dates for The American Art Fair beginning in 2022. As announced by the Fair’s Founder, Tom Colville: “We are initiating a comprehensive collaboration under the umbrella of American Art Week with The American Art Fair, lectures and other programming, museum and gallery exhibitions, and the spring American paintings sales to make New York in May a destination for collectors and curators.”

Exhibitors in American Art Week include Alexandre Gallery, American Illustrators Gallery, Avery Galleries, Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts, Conner • Rosenkranz, D. Wigmore Fine Art, D C Moore Gallery, Debra Force Fine Art, Forum Gallery, Godel & Co., Graham Shay 1857, Hirschl & Adler Galleries, John H. Surovek Gallery, Jonathan Boos, Kraushaar Galleries, Menconi + Schoelkopf, Meredith Ward Fine Art, Questroyal Fine Art, Taylor | Graham, Thomas Colville Fine Art, and Vose Galleries.

Gallery highlights include works by Reynolds Beale, Ludwig Bemelmans, George Wesley Bellows, Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, Robert Indiana, Jacob Lawrence, Frederick Kann, Edward Lamson Henry, Doris Lee, Harriet Frishmuth, Frederick MacMonnies, Willard Leroy Metcalf, Paul Howard Manship, Reginald Marsh, Alfred Maurer, George L.K. Morris, Dale Nichols, Maurice Brazil Prendergast, Raphael Soyer, and Elizabeth Sparhawk-Jones.

American Art Week gallery exhibitions include Debra Force Fine Art’s American Impressionism and An Adventurous Spirit: Julian Alden Weir (both through June 18; Hirschl & Adler Galleries’The American Dream: Eight Decades of Reality and Imagination in American Art; and Godel & Co., Inc.’s Director’s Choice: 19th- and Early 20th-Century American Paintings.

Meredith Ward Fine Art’s exhibition Frank Diaz Escalet (1930-2012) features the Puerto Rican-born artist who lived in New York City and Maine, where he created bold and innovative images based on the everyday lives of working people. Largely self-taught, Escalet was a painter and master leather crafter and developed his own technique for creating images out of cut leather that vividly capture the mood of the scene.

Two gallery exhibitions relate to the founding of American Abstract Artists. D. Wigmore Fine Art’s The Birth of American Abstraction: Revisiting the 1936 Concretionist Exhibition considers the 1936 exhibition organized by Albert Eugene Gallatin as a protest against Alfred Barr’s exclusion of American artists in MoMA’s Cubism and Abstract Art. Gallatin’s exhibition included works by Charles Biederman, Alexander Calder, John Ferren, George L. K. Morris, and Charles Green Shaw. In the summer the exhibition traveled to Paris (Galerie Pierre) and London (Mayor Gallery) and Gallatin replaced Calder as the fifth exhibitor. Menconi + Schoelkopf’s The Park Avenue Cubists focuses on Gallatin’s circle which established American Abstract Artists later in 1936 to create opportunities for abstract artists decades before abstract painting would become synonymous with New York painting. A related exhibition focused on American abstract artists is Kraushaar Galleries’ The Contours of Abstraction (through July 2) with works by Esphyr Slobodkina and Dorothy Dehner among others.

From American Illustrators Gallery, Ludwig Bemelmans (1898-1962) IN THE AUTUMN WIND HE BOASTED, THAT HE FLEW THE HIGHEST KITE, c. 1956 Gouache and blank ink on artist's board 18 3/4" x 31 5/8" Signed and dated lower right: Bemelmans and Paris ‘56 Madeline and the Bad Hat, by: Ludwig Bemelmans, New York, 1956, pp. 14-15
From D. Wigmore Fine Art, Doris Lee (1904 - 1983) Archer. 39 ½ x 51 ½ inches. Oil on canvas. Signed lower right: Doris Lee
From Graham Shay 1857, Andrew Dasburg (American, 1887 – 1979) Fauve Still Life, circa 1920. Oil on canvas, 20 H. x 16 W. in.
From DC Moore Gallery, Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000) Supermarket - Celebration, 1994. Gouache on paper, 26 x 20 1/2 inches.