Showing posts with label Washington D.C.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington D.C.. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Covid-19 delays Eisenhower Memorial dedication


These are scenes of sculptures of the Eisenhower Memorial behind a fence at the U.S. Department of Education building, taken in mid-April.

The Eisenhower Memorial Commission website describes the scene: "On the right side of the memorial core, Eisenhower as the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force during World War II is commemorated by a bronze heroic-sized statue with sculptures of his soldiers inspired by the famous photograph with the 101st Airborne Division before their jump into France." See below/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020
The left side of the memorial which the Commission describes: "The bronze heroic-sized statue of Eisenhower as 34th President of the United States places him at the center of the White House Oval Office flanked by sculptures of civilian and military advisors, symbolizing the balance Eisenhower struck between conflicting demands of national security and peaceful progress. The bas relief global background depicts a map of the world symbolizing Eisenhower's role as a world statesman and preeminent internationalist pursuing universal peace." See below/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020
President Eisenhower in the Oval Office. The bronze sculptures are classic, lacking ugly modernity to detract from the beauty of the entire presentation/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020
A closer view of General Eisenhower talking to the troops, powerful in the emotion it stimulates of the memory of the great man, gentle, intelligent, forceful, an example of a leader, an extreme contrast to what we endure now day-to-day/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020
The stainless steel tapestry with scenes from D-Day beaches screens the dull and lifeless Education Building, on the left/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020
The tapestry on the right side at the corner of the Education Building/Photo by Patricia Leslie, April 19, 2020



The dedication of the long-awaited and controversial Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial has been rescheduled for 1 p.m. September 17, 2020 from May 8, the 75th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day.

Week-long festivities in honor of our 34th president will precede the event which will be live streamed on Facebook.
 

September 17 is "Constitution Day" formerly called "Citizenship Day" which President Harry S Truman signed into law in 1952.  During President Eisenhower's tenure, the U.S. Congress asked him to proclaim the week of September 17 - 23 "Constitution Week."

The four-acre Eisenhower Memorial site is at the base of Capitol Hill, across the street from the Independence Avenue entrance to the National Air and Space Museum, and in front of the monolithic federal Education Building, screened by a huge tapestry with scenes from  D Day beaches. (Praise Ike!)

Public and private events are planned with more information available at the website after July 1, 2020. 

Ed Perez, the director of government relations, public affairs and special events for the Eisenhower Memorial Commission, answered questions about events which include:

An exhibition at the Library of Congress, Eisenhower and the Essence of Leadership in the Thomas Jefferson Building. "Details to follow the reopening of non-essential DC businesses."

September 14, 6:30 p.m. - a lecture, Eisenhower and Infrastructure, hosted by the U.S. Capitol Historical Society. RSVP required. "Details to follow the reopening of non-essential DC businesses."

September 15, 7 p.m. - a moderated discussion, A Re-Appreciation of Dwight D. Eisenhower, with the U.S. Archivist David Ferriero and Eisenhower historians at McGowan Theater, National Archives. RSVP suggested.  "Details to follow the reopening of non-essential DC businesses."

September 16, 3 p.m. For Kansans, hosted by EMC Chairman Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kansas), Russell Senate Office Building, Kennedy Caucus Room. "By invitation only."

September 16, 7 p.m. - a film, Ike: The Making of an American Hero, hosted by George Colburn, the director. "Details to follow the reopening of non-essential DC businesses."

The designer of the complex was Frank Gehry assisted by the sculptor, Sergey Eylanbekov; the tapestry artist, Tomas Osinski; and the inscription artist, Nicholas Waite Benson. Film of the artists and their work on the Eisenhower Memorial are presented at the website.

Eylanbekov was born in Russia where he attended the Moscow School of Fine Arts and the Surikov Academy of Fine Arts. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1989 and became a citizen. 

Osinski, also an American citizen, was born in Poland where he attended Warsaw's Visual Art High School and the Academy of Fine Art.

At age 15 Nicholas Waite Benson became his family's third generation stone carver when he began working with his father, John Everett Benson, at the John Stevens Shop, founded in 1705.  Nicholas studied in Switzerland at the Kunstgewerbeschule, Schule für Gestaltung, Basel, and upon his father's retirement in 1993, he took over ownership and creative directorship of the shop. He has designed and carved inscriptions for the National World War II Memorial and the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial. In 2010 he was named a MacArthur Fellow. 

Among contributors to the Eisenhower Memorial are Gettysburg College, Donald and Joyce Rumsfeld, George and Charlotte Shultz, the Bristol, Tennessee Republican Women's Club, and United Daughters of the Confederacy, Loudoun, Virginia, Chapter 170.

Questions may be sent to info1@eisenhowermemorial.gov.   The website has many pictures, renderings, lesson plans, and graphics for grades 7 - 12.

Typical of all-things Washington, the site and design were controversial from Day One.  Read the lengthy description of the memorial's evolution at Wikipedia which is long enough for a book which it became. 

patricialesli@gmail.com

Monday, March 30, 2020

Love in the time of corona

Wedding joy amidst the cherry blossoms on Constitution Avenue/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Now this is bliss, amidst the cherry blossoms near the Washington Monument. The white figure in the distance is the bride seen in the photo above/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Could this be love in the cherry blossoms?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Between the rows of flags at a famous address in Washington, D.C., the Washington Monument stands center/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Guards making rounds on Sunday afternoon at the White House and leaves blowing in the wind at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue were almost the only things moving outside the gates/Photo by Patricia Leslie

On the 15th St. NW side of the White House on Sunday afternoon/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Department of Justice building, patriot Nathan Hale (1755-1776) stands erect, continuing to serve his country. He was a spy for the Continental Army, captured by the British and executed. "I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country," or a variation of these words were supposedly his last and are carved at the base of the statue./Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Federal Trade Commission building on Constitution Avenue, Gov. Andrew Cuomo  arrives to rein in the rampaging disease /Photo by Patricia Leslie
Parking was easy to find along Constitution Avenue Sunday afternoon, and the sidewalks were almost empty. We went for exercise and biking which is allowable under present rules/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Degas at the Opera will open again, won't it? Before it closes again, this time, scheduled to exit July 5, 2020 at the National Gallery of Art/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Multi-colored red tulips brighten a sad afternoon at the U.S. Botanic Garden. We may not be able to go inside the Botanic Garden building, but we can surely enjoy the scenery outside/Photo by Patricia Leslie
More beauty at the U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie
A host of golden baby daffodils, tulips, and hyacinths at the U.S. Botanic Garden. Is there a fragrance any better than hyacinths'?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
One of the loveliest park scenes in all of D.C. when the Bartholdi Fountain is working. Prithee, Architect of the U.S. Capitol, wherefore are thou, water? Shut off for coronavirus?  We cannot enjoy the park's beauty?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Have the Russians landed in D.C. to join their friend in the White House? What looks like Catherine the Great's gift to her Grandfather-in-Law, Peter the Great (which welcomes visitors at the River Neva in St. Petersburg) is actually General Jose de San Martin (1778-1850) "Liberador" and "Leader of the Argentine Independence," a statue which is found in Triangle Park at Virginia Ave., NW and 20th St., NW. It's a copy of one in Buenos Aires, sculpted by Augustin-Alexandre Dumont who completed the original in 1862.  Argentina gave this duplicate in 1925, and it was rededicated in 1976, according to the Smithsonian Institution Research Information System/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 More about General Jose de San Martin at his statue/Photo by Patricia Leslie
General Jose de San Martin (1778-1850) "Liberador" and "Leader of the Argentine Independence" found in Triangle Park at Virginia Ave., NW and 20th St., NW/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, a gift to Peter from Catherine the Great dedicated in 1782, St Petersburg, Russia. Note the similarities to Gen. Juan de San Martin's statue, the outstretched right hand, the rearing horse (which strikes a serpent under Peter). The "Thunder Stone" which holds Peter is the largest ever moved by humans (1768)/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, St Petersburg, Russia/Photo by Patricia Leslie

 
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, St Petersburg, Russia/Photo by Patricia Leslie


Tiptoe through the daffodils and smell their fragrance at the U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie


PatriciaLesli@gmail.com

Monday, June 25, 2018

'Cézanne Portraits' star in the U.S. only at the National Gallery of Art


Paul Cézanne, Seated Man, 1905–1906, Musco Thyssen- Bornemisza, Madrid, gift of the Pellerin family.  This is an anonymous man from Aix-en-Provence, one of Cézanne's last paintings, finished the year Cézanne died.



Ladies and Gentlemen, we have before us once again another treasured and rare exhibition, only to be seen at one venue in the U.S., the National Gallery of Art now through July 8, 2018.

The show is by Paul Cézanne (1839-1906), the revolutionary who eschewed established practices and set the stage for other artists, "the father of us all," according to Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso.

Cézanne was one of "the most influential artists in the history of modern painting," an inspiration to generations of artists, according to an essay by a curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
 
Paul Cézanne, Uncle Dominique in a Turban, 1866-1867, private collection, one of ten portraits Cézanne made of his maternal uncle. 
 Paul Cézanne, The Artist's Father, Reading "L'Événement," 1866, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon

This is a large painting, approximately 78 x 47 inches unframed, which shows Cézanne's father reading an unconventional newspaper (for him) with a touch of his son's artistry included, according to the National Gallery wall label. One of Cézanne's art works hangs on the wall (unseen in this photograph of the painting) and the dark right corner opens to Cézanne's studio. 

The National Gallery of Art strategically placed the painting to dominate the show's second room where smaller paintings of Cézanne's friend, Antony Valabrègue, seem to pay homage to Cézanne's dad, from their placement on both sides of The Artist's Father. (See * below.)  

As with many fathers and sons, Cézanne's relationship with his dad was complex.  His father owned a bank and wanted his son to be comfortable like he was, but Cézanne was dreamy and fond of "arty" things.  To satisfy his father, Cézanne attended law school for a while but abandoned it to keep up with his passion. 
In the third room at the exhibition, visitors admire three of Cézanne's portraits of his wife, Marie-Hortense Fiquet, (1850-1922) four which show her in the same dress, and all in the show. It is estimated that her husband made 27 portraits of her between 1869 and the late 1890s, although the couple was estranged much of the time. For years Cézanne kept his relationship with his wife secret from his father, afraid his dad would end financial support. His and Hortense's son, Paul, was born in 1872, and the couple married in 1886 in front of his parents, but by that time, Cézanne had separated himself from his wife and they did not live together consistently.  

Although she remained one of his subjects, he depicted her like a piece of wood, void of joy and enthusiasm. He excluded her from his will and left everything to Paul who supported his mother who, Wikipedia reports, used the money for gamblingHortense lived for 16 years after her husband died.

A book about that relationship would be a hot seller, I would think, and perhaps one has been written.  They met at art school in 1869 when Hortense was a model. 
Paul Cézanne, Madame Cézanne in a Red Dress, 1888–1890,
Fondation Beyeler, Richen/Basel Beyeler Collection

Paul Cézanne, Madame Cézanne in a Red Dress, 1888–1890, The Art Institute of Chicago, Wilson L. Mead Fund

Note Mrs. Cézanne's solemnity, lack of warmth, hands clasped, and stiff pose.  By this time the Cézannes were not happy lovers.  Her expression suggests she would rather be anywhere but here.

The exhibition represents 60 of his approximately 200 portraits gathered from around the world, including some seen publicly for the the first time in the U.S., and on display in seven rooms at the National Gallery of Art.

Twenty-six of Cézanne's total portraiture output are of the artist, and 27 are portraits of his wife, as well as paintings of their son, other relatives, friends, and critics, many which are in the show.
Paul Cézanne, Self-Portrait, 1880–1881, The National Gallery, London. Bought, Courtauld Fund, 1925
 
Paul Cézanne, Self-Portrait with Bowler Hat, 1885–1886, Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen

Cézanne started his art career with portraits, and he ended his career with portraits.

The self-portraits show his appearance as he aged and his changing style.  Most of the other portraits were never intended for the subjects and he accepted no commissions for them.  His best subjects were family and friends, those who could tolerate his slow style.  They were lifelike, mostly drawn according to Cézanne's style of lines, colors, and geometric angles.
Paul Cézanne, Gustave Geffroy, 1895–1896, Musée d'Orsay, Paris, gift of the Pellerin family
 
 
This was a "thank you" portrait of the critic, Gustave Geffroy, begun a year after Geffroy defended Cézanne in a well-known article in 1894. Cézanne worked on the painting for three months, becoming weary and never finishing the face, the label says. Still, Geffroy called it "one of Cézanne's most beautiful works."
Paul Cézanne, Old Woman with a Rosary, 1895–1896, The National Gallery, London

The lady above was a former servant and resident of Aix-en-Provence,
Cézanne's home for most of his life.  Her demeanor, clothing, and grimace suggest a rough life.  (Tempus fugit.) "Hard-hearted critics," says the catalog, "found it to be explicitly sentimental, too much an image of a character and a conventionally touching one at that."
Paul Cézanne, Still Life with Skull, c. 1885, The White House Collection
 

The label copy says skulls appears in many of Cézanne's later works, perhaps as a reminder that life is finite. As he aged, Cézanne painted the reality that death approaches every day. Still Life with Skull, however, was made 21 years before he died.
In the second room at the exhibition, Cézanne's The Artist's Father, Reading "L'Événement," 1866, is flanked by Antony Valabrègue, 1869-1870, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, on the left (with a National Gallery guard) and Antony Valabrègue, 1866, from the National Gallery of Art, on the right.

Valabrègue was Cézanne's close friend who thought Cézanne would be rejected by the Salon for the 1866 portrait (above) since a jury member "exclaimed on seeing my portrait that it was not only painted with a knife but with a pistol as well." It took 16 more years before Cézanne was admitted to the Salon.


In 1863 Napoleon III created the Salon des Refusés for paintings rejected by the Salon of the Académie des Beaux-Arts. Des Refusés was a gallery for some of Cézanne's works, but in 1882 Cézanne's first and last painting was accepted at the Salon which was probably the portrait in the show, Portrait of Louis-Auguste Cézanne, The Artist's Father, Reading "L'Événement," 1866.

Cézanne grew up in a wealthy family in southeastern France which was his home most of his life.  Financially supported by his father, Cézanne trained in Paris and sold few works until late in life.

His"thick applications of paint, coarse brushwork, and lack of detail" exemplified "an utter disregard for the conventional niceties of the genre," according to a wall description, and they drew ridicule and scorn. Cézanne wanted to separate himself from "the urban sophisticates of the French capital whom he so disdained," and make
"a harmony parallel with nature," in the Impressionists' style.

Many of his subjects were the workers and residents of Aix, in southern France where he admired and respected the working people, unlike his feelings for wealthy admirers whose paintings he often left unfinished. 

From The Art Story:  In retrospect, his work constitutes the most powerful and essential link between the ephemeral aspects of Impressionism and the more materialist, artistic movements of Fauvism, Cubism, Expressionism, and even complete abstraction.

The exhibition is the last of three stops after appearances at the Musée d’Orsay, Paris, in 2017 and the National Portrait Gallery, London, in 2017 and 2018. Cézanne Portraits was organized by the National Gallery, London's National Portrait Gallery, and the Musee d'Orsay in Paris.

It is curated by John Elderfield, chief curator emeritus of painting and sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Mary Morton, curator and head of the department of French paintings at the National Gallery of Art; and Xavier Rey, director of the Musées de Marseille.

What:
Cézanne Portraits
 
When: The National Gallery of Art is open 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday, and 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sunday. The exhibition closes Sunday, July 8, 2018.

Where: West Building, the National Gallery of Art, between Third and Ninth streets at Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. On the Mall.

Admission charge:
It's always free at the National Gallery of Art.


Free introductory slide lectures:  12 p.m., June 28, 2018, and 1 p.m., June 29, 2018 in the West Building Lecture Hall by David Gariff (50 minutes)

 
Metro stations for the National Gallery of Art:

Smithsonian, Federal Triangle, Navy Memorial-Archives or L'Enfant Plaza

For more information: 202-737-4215

Catalog: 257 pages with 180 full color illustrations, organized by date and subject. Available in softcover ($28) or hardcover ($45).

patricialesli@gmail.com