Showing posts with label Gertrude Stein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gertrude Stein. Show all posts

22 July 2014

after Gertrude




“I am I because my little dog knows me.” Gertrude Stein
portrait of Alice Toklas ,1952.(probably with Basket II)


Dora Maar and her portrait of Alice B. Toklas by Michel Sima.


“I always say that you cannot tell what a picture really is or what an object really is until you dust it every day and you cannot tell what a book is until you type it or proof-read it. It then does something to you that only reading it never can do.” ― Gertrude Stein, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
(Stein wrote the book-posing as Alice-it turned out to be Stein's most popular and best selling work.)

When Gertrude Stein died in 1946 she left a portion of her estate to her Alice, her lifelong partner- along with paintings by Picasso. Together since 1907, the 39 year relationship wasn't recognized legally and while Alice was vacationing, Stein's relatives removed the paintings. She had been all things to Stein, living in the background as confidante, lover, cook, secretary, muse, editor, critic. To support herself, Toklas turned to friends and writing after the theft. The Alice Toklas Cookbook reflects on her life with Stein and includes her recipes as well. She lived for 21 years after Stein's death and died in poverty at the age of 89.
She said of Gertrude, “I am nothing, but a memory of her.”





17 July 2014

Craig and Karl, and Gertrude



Don't we all need inspiration?
I do.
Right now-I'm not feeling it, but these 2, are onto something.

Could it be?

(Yes, puts me in mind of  Gertrude Stein.)

Beaton photograph 1936

Craig Redman and Karl Maier best-known as Craig & Karl,create pop-art-based, bold and colourfulwork that has appeared in exhibitions all over the world. They also contribute to British Vogue's The Culture Edit, (here)




 Right now, I'm following Gertrude's lead -and having a lounge.

 Stein at her villa with Pepe and Basket I





25 March 2014

to do:

.


Gertrude and Basket, by Man Ray



have formal portrait made with loved one.









28 January 2012

moving pictures: Midnight in Paris

.
making appearances
  


"The best of America drifts to Paris. The American in Paris is the best American. It is more fun for an intelligent person to live in an intelligent country. France has the only two things toward which we drift as we grow older—intelligence and good manners."

Zelda & Scott





"If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast."

Hemingway,far left




 "Paris loves lovers, for lovers it's heaven above
Paris tells lovers, love is supreme, wake up your dream and make love
Only in Paris one discovers the urge to merge with the splurge of the spring
Paris loves lovers for lovers know that love is everything"

 Cole



Juan Belmonte



J’ai deux amours…..Mon pays et Paris.
(I have two loves…..my country and Paris.)

Josephine Baker





"America is my country and Paris is my hometown."

Gertrude & Alice 



Pablo



Djuna



Dali,2nd from l.seated. Buñuel,top far r.Man Ray, top far l.



T.S. Eliot



Matisse, seated


 

Leo Stein



Lautrec

Gauguin



Degas,at left




a must see-



 

Nominated for Best Picture, Best Director & Best Screenplay


.

22 May 2010

& Ladies of the Club : the 3 Graces



“The two greatest mannequins of the century were Gertrude Stein and Edith Sitwell- unquestionably. You just couldn't take a bad picture of those two old girls.” DV


18 April 2010

a stitch in time II

a pair of Louis XV Chairs

needlepoint executed by Alice B. Toklas, designed by PICASSO



image from the book Picasso and the Lure of Language.
.

07 September 2009

loving Picasso, again






the Nasher


I went to see the Picasso exhibit at the Nasher Museum on Duke University's campus- the ALLURE OF LANGUAGE. The exhibition has been organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, with the Nasher Museum's support.

60 works created between 1900 and 1969 are being shown, with The Nasher being the only traveling venue
scheduled. I will return again, and again. It is a fascinating look at the man, his exuberance for his art- an art he could express in any medium- and this show exhibits that. I wondered -If my esteem for Picasso could be heightened. Yes.




Picasso's love for language was stimulated by the bohemian life in Montmartre . He took up residence there in 1904-His friends were the writers and poets, Max Jacob, Pierre Reverdy and Guillaume Apollinaire. Great friend and patron Gertrude Stein said he "knew painting, and did not need to know painters; so he lived among poets." Wallace Stevens said Picasso was a "man whose center is poetry, whether or not he is a poet."




Firstly, the Nasher is an absolute jewel. Consistently mounting incredible exhibitions. PICASSO AND THE ALLURE OF LANGUAGE may be its best yet.

I am captivated by this exhibit-Perhaps for me- it is just because it's Picasso, having been fascinated with the man and his art since my early college days. This particular exhibition is everything I love, Art & the Written Word.

I'm not going to go through a litany of this piece and that. I am not expert on Picasso- the show is curated beautifully by Susan Greenberg Fisher and Patricia Leighton- I will leave that to them.

My Impressions From the Allure of Language:

Immediately upon entering the gallery- I was struck by the bold Picasso RED used to highlight the gallery's walls. Inspired. It is much to an orange, but the exhibit speaks of RED so RED it is. That color pulses throughout and breathes an energy into the show- culminating in Picasso's divine calligraphic work LE CHANT DES MORTS for Pierre Reverdy (The Song of the Dead)- 125 lithographs in red.





Picasso's energy is present, so much to see , but little in terms of the volume of his work. It is mind boggling-this exhibit is too-with 60 works, it seems like more. I think it is this energy reverberating in the venue that makes the content a bit overwhelming. The artist giant of a man was game for everything.

The works in the show range from drawings, illustrations, formal paintings- and most fascinating of all to see is the canvas Picasso worked on. Everything was a canvas for Picasso- a frilly postal carte, a newspaper for studies, a cigarette label, a calling card, a photograph. His canvas- was LIFE. It seems he gave of himself to all the projects that his admirers and friends proposed. His range, along with his joie de vivre was collosal.




Stein with her portrait by Picasso
image from Hemingway's Paris


In 1905, Picasso met Gertrude Stein, an expatriate American writer who became the artist’s principal patron in Paris. Threaded throughout the gallery is evidence of Picasso's relationship with Gertrude Stein. I think-She may be his feminine ID. A book- Pablo Picasso Gertrude Stein CORRESPONDENCE promises to enlighten me on their relationship. I am always drawn to these staunch relationships with artists and their followers. Perhaps, Stein, his patron, was his equal. He maintained a fascination with her throughout his life.





One on the works- that fascinated me was the collage he created for Misses-



Photo: 2008 Estate of Pablo Picasso

Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

via the NYTIMES

with its single calling card from Stein & Tolkas, a known pair, a packet of cigarettes drawn and a touch of realism- the label from a cigarette pack.

The story too fascinates. Gertrude Stein and Alice Tolkas dropped in for a visit and finding their friend out- left the Miss Gertrude Stein- Miss Alice Tolkas calling card with the right corner turned- properly notifying its recipient of their visit. Always ever clever, Picasso, created this assemblage and presented it to them.


The work FIRST STEPS was shown in Paris at the exhibition- Salon de la Liberation- after the War. According to the Yale University book, Picasso: The Allure of Language, Picasso was a liability during the war because the Nazi's saw him as a "degenerate artist," and though his work was occasionally seen in group shows, for the most part it was invisible to the art world during World War II.





I am drawn to this and see much innocence and a mother's love. The critiques of this work in the Yale Press book are esoteric -with much about the war being at its root, the placement of the mother in the work,etc. I see the initial first step, a mother's care, her knowledge that this is just the beginning, a full expression of joy. Picasso explained his tight fit of the mother as having to be added- "He would have fallen" laughing "because he doesn't know how to walk yet. So I added his mother to the canvas later, to hold him up." (from Picasso and the Lure of Language, Yale Press) For Picasso-it was simple enough. Along with First Steps, the exhibit includes a wonderful study of First Steps on a full page of newspaper working out the position of the feet.



The book of illustrated poems LE CHANT DES MORTS for Pierre Reverdy (The Song of the Dead)- 125 lithographs in red is the Highlight of the showing.




image from Christies here


I took in Picasso at the Nasher with a darling friend- as children we shared a love of poetry. She paints- an inherited gift from her great grandmother. We observed together, we wandered off & we commented on many things.

"Picasso was sexy. Don't you think he was sexy? " KCS
"Well-Yes, the genius, the greatness was and he obviously was devastatingly so to many women." PGT

She followed up later with an email saying her 20 year old thinks he's HOT too.


photograph by Edward Quinn via (here)

the photographer's site (here)



As I think about it -Sure he was sexy- but It must have been his energy-for everything- ART, POETRY, LOVE & LIFE,
that's what drew so many women to Him,
that's what will draw me back.

read More at Style Court: Maybe a road trip to ...
here

THE ALLURE OF LANGUAGE runs at the NASHER MUSEUM OF ART AT DUKE UNIVERSITY from
August 20, 2009- January 3, 2010.

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