This autumn, Tate Modern stages the most comprehensive Modigliani exhibition ever held in the UK, bringing together a dazzling range of his iconic portraits, sculptures and the largest ever group of nudes to be shown in this country. Although he died tragically young, Amedeo Modigliani (1884–1920) was a ground-breaking artist who pushed the boundaries of the art of his time. Including 100 works – many of them rarely exhibited and nearly 40 of which have never before been shown in the UK – the exhibition re-evaluates this familiar figure, looking afresh at the experimentation that shaped his career and made Modigliani one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century. A section devoted to Modigliani’s nudes, perhaps the best-known and most provocative of the artist’s works, are a major highlight. In these striking canvases Modigliani invented shocking new compositions that modernised figurative painting. His explicit depictions als
Although Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (1863–1944) attained notoriety early in his career for his haunting depictions of human anxiety and alienation that reflected modern experience, he believed that his artistic breakthrough occurred around 1913 at the age of 50.Throughout his career, Munch regularly revisited subjects from his earlier years, exploring them with renewed inspiration and intensity. Self Portrait: Between the Clock and the Bed (1940–43) was one of his final such works and it serves as a lens to reassess Munch’s oeuvre. On view at The Met Breuer, the exhibition Edvard Munch: Between the Clock and the Bed features 43 of the artist’s compositions created over a span of six decades, including 16 self-portraits and works that have never before been seen in the United States. The thematic arrangement of the exhibition reveals the frequency with which Munch revisited and reworked certain subjects. It presents him
Continuing the Museo del Prado’s strategy, launched some years ago, of reassessing the great masters of 19th-century Spanish painting, the Museum is now presenting the major exhibition Fortuny (1838-1874), sponsored by Fundación AXA and with the special collaboration of the Museo Fortuny in Venice and the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya. Devoted to one of the 19th-century Spanish artists who has enjoyed the most sustained reputation and greatest international fame, and a notable figure within Spanish art of all periods, the exhibition is on display in Rooms A and B of the Jerónimos Building from 21 November 2017 to 18 March 2018. While Mariano Fortuny has long been celebrated in the specialist literature and through the numerous exhibitions and different initiatives of varying quality and importance that have been devoted to him in recent decades, his stature as an artist and his profound roots in the most authent
Monday, November 20, 2017 – 17:45We’re pleased to offer an exciting opportunity for a Development and Events Coordinator to join the team at Arts Catalyst on a fixed term basis. The Development and Events Coordinator will provide vital support to the organisation, through securing income and assisting with programme delivery. Working closely with the Executive Director and Artistic Director, they will undertake a range of income generation and fundraising activities, including seeking partnerships and funding from higher education, companies, trusts and foundations, and developing patron and friends schemes. They will assist the Programme Curator with events and programme delivery, including research, event management, and documentation and evaluation of activities. Whilst working primarily with the Executive Director and Programme Curator, as Arts Catalyst is a small organisation, the postholder will also work closely at times with the Artistic Director, Communications Officer, artists, freelancers, and associates. The position will suit someone who has worked in arts administration and/or art marketing. Training in fundraising and development will be provided. Please note that this is a new position funded by Wellcome Trust offered on a fixed-term, 2.5-year basis. There is the potential for the position to be extended, subject to further fundraising. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS6pm Monday 18th December 2017Interviews: 4/5 January 2018 DETAILS Please download and complete the application and equal opportunities monitoring forms, and send your completed application along with a CV by email to Claudia Lastra, Executive Director, Arts Catalyst, via claudia.lastra@artscatalyst.org with ‘Opportunity: Development and Events Coordinator’ in the subject line by 6pm, Monday 18 December 2017 (applications after this time will not be accepted).
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents Painted in Mexico, 1700–1790: Pinxit Mexici, the first major exhibition to reposition the history of 18th-century Mexican painting, a vibrant period marked by major stylistic changes and the invention of compelling new iconographies. Co-organized by LACMA and Fomento Cultural Banamex, A.C. in Mexico City, this exhibition foregrounds the connections between Mexican painting and transatlantic artistic trends while emphasizing Mexican painting’s internal developments and remarkable pictorial output. More than 100 paintings are presented in the exhibition, many on view for the first time and restored for this exhibition. Painted in Mexico, 1700–1790: Pinxit Mexici is curated by Ilona Katzew, curator and department head of Latin American art at LACMA, with guest co-curators Jaime Cuadriello, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, and Paula Mues Orts, Escuela Nacional de Conserv