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    Maurizio Cattelan Explores the Spectrum of Color Photography in a Rome Exhibition

    “Color is bullshit,” the legendary photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson once told his younger colleague, William Eggleston. Less vulgar but equally dismissive, Ansel Adams once likened photographing in color (though he did plenty of it) to playing an out-of-tune piano, and claimed that he could get “a far greater sense of ‘color’ through a well-planned and executed black-and-white image than [he had] ever achieved with color photography.”
    William Wegman, Ski Patrol (2017). Courtesy Galerie George-Philippe et Nathalie Vallois.
    Indeed, color photography had a hard time of it after it was first developed in the mid-19th century, with critics and connoisseurs terming its seductive colors garish as opposed to the supposedly more dignified black and white. But that’s long since changed, and color photography is presently widely accepted, in fine art, fashion, journalism and other fields.
    Walter Chandoha, New Jersey, 1962. ©️ Walter Chandoha Archive.
    Now, multihyphenate artist Maurizio Cattelan has curated an exhibition on color photography along with Sam Stourdzé, director of the French Academy in Rome – Villa Médicis. It’s taking place at that Renaissance villa just moments away from the famed Spanish Steps in the heart of the Italian capital, which was once the residence of Cardinal Ferdinando I de’ Medici and home to the Academy since 1803.
    The show presents the work of some 20 artists, broken up into what the curators call “chapters,” with titles like Early Birds, Raining Cats and Dogs, Femme Fatale, and Stranger Things. On the roster are Miles Aldridge, Erwin Blumenfeld, Guy Bourdin, Juno Calypso, Walter Chandoha, Harold Edgerton, Hassan Hajjaj, Hiro, Ouka Leele, Yevonde Middleton, Arnold Odermatt, Ruth Ossai, Martin Parr, Pierre et Gilles, Alex Prager, Adrienne Raquel, Sandy Skoglund, Toiletpaper (the magazine established by Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari), and William Wegman.
    Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari, Toiiletpaper. Courtesy Toiletpaper.
    “What if color could save us?” said Stourdzé in an email. “In a world of grey where the clouds seem to be pilling up, this exhibition invites you to a chromotherapy session featuring lemon yellow, limitless blue, vibrant red, and sunshine orange.” 
    Animals are frequent subjects. Wegman is perhaps best known for his photos of his Weimaraners in various poses, sometimes sporting human clothes. Chandoha, by contrast, is known as a cat photographer; of his archive of more than 225,000 photos, some 90,000 depict felines. “Cats are my favorite animal subject,” he said, “because of their unlimited range of attitude, posture, expression, and coloration.” A charming photo of his shows a furry specimen perched atop three stacked pillows; another shows a quartet in a loving embrace.
    The back cover of Damiani’s catalogue for the exhibition “Chromotherapia: The Feel-Good Color Photography,” featuring a photo by Walter Chandoha.
    Food also comes in for close study, for example in Martin Paar’s Common Sense [Donut, Ramsgate] (1999), a delightful shot of a child’s hands, poking out of brilliant red jacket cuffs, grasping a sugary treat, and Juno Calypso’s Chicken Dogs (2015), showing a model mysteriously lying face-down on a tile floor near a can of the titular food item, one dog tentatively poking out above the rim. 
    Juno Calypso, Chicken Dogs, 2015.
    Can’t make it to the show? Villa Medici will publish a 224-page book with Damiani, priced at €55, that will be available in U.K. bookstores in March for £50 ($61) and in the States in May at $60. 
    “Chromotherapia: The Feel-Good Color Photography” will be on view at the French Academy in Rome – Villa Médicis, Viale della Trinità dei Monti, 1, February 28–June 9. More

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    Dazzling Jewelry Created by Picasso, Dalí, and More Shines in a New Museum Show

    In the 1980s, in lieu of a wedding ring, French sculptor Bernar Venet bent and looped a thin silver band around the ring finger of his soon-to-be-wife Diane. It was a playful, spontaneous act, but one that kindled in its recipient a fascination with artist-crafted jewelry. As she recalled, it drew her toward “the too-little-known world of these unique objets d’art, priceless for their rarity, and the symbolic meaning that is often the genesis of their creation.”
    Over the next three decades, Diane Venet would build one of the most enviable collections of artist jewelry, numbering upwards of 220 pieces. Among them are creations by Dalí, Picasso, Braque, Lichtenstein, and Koons, as well as some others commissioned by Venet herself. So vast is the collector’s trove that it’s filled exhibitions, notably at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design in 2011 and Paris’s Les Arts Décoratifs in 2018, among other shows.
    Salvador Dalí, Montre petite cuillère (1957). Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Philippe Servent, Collection Diane Venet.
    It’s now set for another outing, at the Norton Museum of Art in Palm Beach, Florida, in April. The exhibition, titled “Artists’ Jewelry: From Cubism to Pop,” will see more than 150 objects from Venet’s collection displayed alongside companion works by the same artists, pulled from the museum’s holdings.
    “Diane Venet’s collection is second to none,” said Ghislain d’Humières, the museum’s director and CEO, in a statement. “The necklaces, rings, brooches, earrings, headpieces, and more that she has collected feature incredible details rendered in interesting materials by some of the most famous artists of our time.”
    Pablo Picasso, Le Grand Faune (1973). Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Sherry Griffin, Collection Diane Venet
    Gathered here is a veritable who’s who of modern and contemporary art. Jean Cocteau and Picasso offer parallel gold recreations of a human face on a brooch and pendant respectively; Niki de Saint Phalle’s signature Nana figure is reimagined in gold and multi-colored enamel; Dalí has similarly installed his trademark clock on the head of a hair brooch.
    Niki de Saint Phalle, Nana Ange (1991). Courtesy of the artist. Collection Diane Venet.
    Elsewhere are rings by Frank Stella, Lowell Nesbitt, and Rashid Johnson, as well as a bracelet by Lucio Fontana and a rare geometric necklace by Meret Oppenheim, one of only nine produced.
    The line-up, noted the museum, boasts artists who were prolific jewelry makers like Calder as much as those who created one-of-a-kind works, including Stella. These pieces also bear out a diversity of craftsmanship—some are dotted with precious stones, some created out of hammered metals, while others were made from non-traditional materials (see John Chamberlain’s aluminum and paint design).
    John Chamberlain, Untitled (1998). Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Philippe Gontier, Collection Diane Venet.
    “Since the beginning of humanity, individuals have adorned themselves with fine metals and precious stones—as modes of class distinction and personal expression,” said J. Rachel Gustafson, the museum’s chief curatorial operations and research officer. “This exhibition bridges the gap between craft and fine art, two creative forms that seldom intersect or are interpreted within one exhibition.”
    Man Ray, Optic Topic (1974). Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Alain Leprince, Collection Diane Venet.
    Woven through these objects, too, are personal narratives, particularly Venet’s. Man Ray’s sculptural mask, Optic Topic (1974), one of the show’s centerpieces, was snapped up by Venet for her husband. Originally conceived as a pair of gold sunglasses, the Dada pioneer’s final design instead obscures its wearer’s vision, giving new meaning to the word “mask.” Throughout the show are also gems that emerge from Venet’s friendship with artists including Stella and Rauschenberg, from whom she received an avant-garde brooch. The coiled wedding ring she received from Bernar is included here, too.
    These displays will be accompanied by paintings, sculptures, and photographs to further contextualize the objects, and a sound-based work by Sheila Concari, which features audio snippets of Venet’s reflections on her remarkable collection.
    Bernar Venet, Indeterminate Line (1985). Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Damian Noszkowicz, Collection Diane Venet.
    “The story of this collection is largely that of my friendships in the art world over the past 40 years,” said Venet in a statement. “In my rather itinerant life, this collection of jewelry is thus an intimate museum that I can take everywhere with me and the treasure trove which I can find on my return home.”
    “Artists’ Jewelry: From Cubism to Pop, the Diane Venet Collection” is on view at the Norton Museum of Art, 1450 S Dixie Hwy, West Palm Beach, Florida, April 12–October 5. More

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    What Was Life Like For Ancient Greek Women? A New Exhibition Sheds Some Light

    The Venus de Milo, a celebrated ancient statue found on the Greek island of Milos and displayed at the Louvre since 1821, is one of the most famous artworks in the world. Yet relatively little is known about the many centuries of artistic output on Milos and its surrounding islands, known as the Cyclades. In bringing to light this veritable treasure trove of antiquities and artifacts, the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens is also spearheading new research into the rich historical insights these objects have to offer.
    Installation view statues of Delos-born goddess Artemis in “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    This is certainly the case of a new exhibition “Kyladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades,” currently on view until May 4, which uses art as a lens through which to learn more about the lives of the women who, over many generations, inhabited the sunny Cyclades, an archipelago of hundreds of islands including Mykonos, Thera (Santorini), and Ios. Some 180 statues and figurines dating from prehistory to the middle ages represent women in many guises, from goddesses, religious icons, mothers, entrepreneurs, and sex workers, all bonded by their resilience within a deeply patriarchal society.
    “We were disappointed,” one of the show’s curators Panagiotis Iossif said of researching for the exhibition. “Women’s positions never improved dramatically, they were never unmarginalized. Ideas like feminism and equality are very modern.” However, despite laws and social norms that severely limited women’s autonomy, “Kyladitisses” shows that they still found ways to be influential in ancient Greek society.
    Installation view statues of Delos-born goddess Artemis in “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    The idea that women were inferior to men was a widely held belief in ancient Greek society, and one that would go on to influence Western culture for many centuries thanks in large part to the musings of Aristotle, who wrote in Politics, “the male is by nature superior and the female inferior, the male ruler and the female subject.” Women were excluded from public life in ancient Greece, including all formal political positions. However, there is evidence that through their close familial ties to men in power, elite women were able to exert some influence behind the scenes.
    Despite these restrictions, women were permitted to participate in religious ceremonies and festivals. This was particularly true for those designated as priestesses within cults of female deities, like Athena, Demeter, or Artemis. These women organized and oversaw important public events, a huge civic responsibility.
    Installation view terracotta ‘korai’ statues from Kea in “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    Particularly popular in the Cyclades was the Thesmorphoria, a three-day festival celebrated by the cult of Demeter and her daughter Persephone. It was an opportunity to leave the domestic sphere, with women coming together to fill communal spaces in this celebration of fertility and renewal. At festivals dedicated to Artemis, young girls underwent rituals intended to commemorate their transition to womanhood. For example, those participating in the arkteia rite would dance around the altar and sometimes imitate bears to appease Artemis, who was thought to oversee a young woman’s journey through puberty to first childbirth.
    Outside of these ceremonies, women were principally charged with managing the home, which might include supervising household slaves and budgeting to ensure the house is well stocked. In ancient Greek, women were severely restricted from participating in the economy by law, but there is some evidence of exceptions when it comes to working-class women. While textile production was a common pastime for all women, as evidenced by depictions on vases and spindle-whorls and loom weights unearthed by archaeologists, working-class women would sometimes support their families by selling their wares. There are surviving accounts from the Cyclades that record women selling perfumes and textiles, most often in the late Hellenistic and Roman period.
    Fresco of the Women in the adyton (“Adorants”) from Xeste 3, Akrotiri of Thera, ca 1600 BCE. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    So how did life change for women living in the Cyclades over the centuries? The exhibition contains Neolithic Cycladic figurines, of which the vast majority depict the female rather than male body, often in an abstracted or stylized manner. They are generally understood as reinforcing the association between women and fertility, survival, and the cyclic nature of life. It is not known whether they are by men or women, but either or both may be possible since society at this time was less organized and stratified.
    By the Bronze Age, Cycladic marble figurines were often found buried in tombs, perhaps intended to provide protection in the afterlife. A rare glimpse into the role of women during this time is provided by the frescoes of Akrotiri, which were preserved under volcanic ash. We can make out several female figures apparently participating in a rite-of-passage ceremony in a particularly notable fresco know as “Adorants,” which is included in the show. This reflects the important role that women would continue to play in ancient Greek religious festivals.
    Installation view religious icons featuring the Virgin Mary in “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    “To the degree that our sources allow us to catch glimpses of the life of women in the Cyclades, we observe a progressive visibility of women from the Hellenistic period onwards,” said Greek and Roman antiquities expert Sophia Zoumbaki in an essay for the exhibition’s catalogue. “Gender barriers were present throughout antiquity, but the women took advantage of every opportunity they were given in order to participate in the events of the community—mainly in the religious sphere–but also to make ends meet in financial affairs, to manage property, to cope with the unstinting daily work at home, and on the estates.”
    At the exhibition’s opening last month, Greece’s culture minister Lina Mendoni praised how it “brings together two very timely issues – one is women’s position internationally and through time and civilizations, the second is an island identity. Island identity is the one that defines – and defined from prehistoric times to our time – the progress and historical development of these specific islands.”
    Installation view of religious icons featuring the Virgin Mary and a marble votive relief of Isis Pelagia, lady of the seas, in “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4. Photo: Paris Tavitian, © Museum of Cycladic Art.
    The exhibition is the first initiative to emerge from a landmark deal signed last year by the Museum of Cycladic Art and the Ephorate of Antiquities of Cyclades, a regional office of the Greek ministry of culture, with the aim of promoting Cycladic art at home and internationally.
    Sandra Mariopoulou, museum’s president and CEO, noted to local press that it is “the first pan-Cycladic show that has ever been set up: a historic exhibition, as it is the first time it collects so many outstanding works of the Cycladic Islands in one place.”
    “Kykladitisses: Untold Stories of Women in the Cyclades” is on view at the Museum of Cycladic Art until May 4, after which it will travel to the newly renovated Archaeological Museum of Thera on Santorini for its reopening this summer. It will be followed at the Museum of Cycladic Art by “Marlene Dumas: Cycladic Blues” from June 5 until November 3, 2025.  More

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    Proust’s Love Affair With Art Gets the Spotlight in Madrid Museum Show

    Marcel Proust’s masterwork In Search of Lost Time, published in seven volumes from 1913 through 1927, is as much a rumination on the slip and slide of time as it is a time capsule. In it is bottled high society in early 20th-century France—its salons, seaside getaways, tea cakes, and of course, visual art. Proust, in fact, name-dropped some 100 artists throughout his famed tome, from Botticelli and Leonardo to Whistler and Vermeer, giving color to characters’ lives both inner and outer.
    “It is only through art,” he wrote in the book’s sixth volume, The Fugitive, “that we can escape from ourselves and know how another person sees a universe which is not the same as our own and whose landscapes would otherwise have remained as unknown as any there may be on the moon.”
    Paul César Helleu, Interior View of Reims Cathedral (c. 1892). Photo courtesy Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
    And what might the French author’s own landscapes look like? A forthcoming show at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid, Spain, is giving Proust the Proust treatment by using art to bring his aesthetic ideas and thematic obsessions to life.
    Proust’s Paris was undergoing a tremendous transformation at the turn of the century, one that reshaped its industry and urban infrastructure and gave a boost to its art and culture scenes. That ambient modernity was reflected in the author’s prose, but so was Impressionism, which guided how Proust described his scenes and sensations. He ranked Monet and Vermeer among his favorite painters, while socializing with the artists of the day, including Picasso and Jean Cocteau.
    James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Brown and Silver: Old Battersea Bridge (1859–63). Photo courtesy Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
    “Proust and the Arts” vivifies this milieu with artworks that capture Proust’s aesthetic meanderings across Europe. There’s Whistler’s rendering of London’s Battersea Bridge and Paul César Helleu’s color-spotted oil of the interior of the Reims Cathedral in Paris. Proust’s fascination with Venice, sparked by his first reading of John Ruskin around 1899, is also given play here, particularly his love for Italian gothic architecture.
    Claude Monet, Water Lilies (1916–19). Photo courtesy Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
    A number of artists who Proust referenced in his oeuvre feature as well. They include Rembrandt, Pissarro, Renoir, Fantin-Latour, and Manet; an iteration of water lilies by Monet, of course, will turn up. Vermeer, another Proust fave, will be represented by his 1653–54 work Diana and her Nymphs (alas, no View of Delft, in front of which the author staged a dramatic death scene in The Captive).
    The show also draws out Proust’s connections with the theater and fashion worlds. A Georges Clarin painting of Sarah Bernhardt will be featured, highlighting how the author based Lost Time‘s Berma on the famed actor; as will costumes created by Spanish artist Mariano Fortuny, whose designs inspired the fashions of Proust’s Duchesse de Guermantes, evoking “that Venice loaded with the gorgeous East.”
    JMW Turner, Venice: The Dogana and San Giorgio Maggiore (1834). Photo courtesy Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
    These artifacts will be accompanied by a selection of the author’s books, some on loan from the Bibliothèque Nationale de France. Among them is Pleasures and Days (1896), his first published volume, its short stories reflecting his tastes in art and his regular visits to the Louvre.
    Not least, Proust stans will rightly rejoice at the inclusion of James Tissot’s The Circle of the Rue Royale (1866). The painting is one of the many Proust brings up in his celebrated tome—with a twist. With it, he reveals that his protagonist Charles Swann was based on the very real figure of Charles Haas, a man about town.
    James Tissot, The Circle of the Rue Royale (1866). Photo courtesy Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
    “If, in Tissot’s picture representing the balcony of the Rue Royale club, when you figure with Galliffet, Edmond de Polignac, and Saint-Maurice, people are always drawing attention to you, it is because they see that there are some traces of you in the character of Swann,” Proust wrote in the book’s fifth volume, The Prisoner. In Tissot’s work, you’ll find Haas on the right, looking suitably self-assured.
    “Proust and the Arts” is on view at Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, P.º del Prado, 8, Centro, Madrid, Spain, March 4–June 8. More

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    Meet Emma Ferrer, the Granddaughter of Audrey Hepburn Making Her Painting Debut

    At first sight, Emma Ferrer’s paintings are serene, if slightly melancholic, ones. Her skies are alive with shades of blues, pinks, and grays, her landscapes golden and textured with gestural brushstrokes. Closer inspection, however, reveals a sense of disquiet in these scenes. A dog runs down a village road leaving behind bloody paw prints; a mountain goat on a dirt mound gazes ruefully at a retreating figure; a younger goat lies prone on a red mat, teetering, it seems, between sleep and death.
    “I almost feel like some things are too gruesome or shocking to paint,” she told me during a walkthrough of the exhibition. “I don’t want them to have that shock factor, but I want them to have a very subtle eeriness.”
    Emma Ferrer, A Humble Return (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    Ferrer’s paintings are making their debut at New York’s Sapar Contemporary, in “The Scapegoat.” The show brings together works she recently created in her studio in Tuscany, for which she had decamped after a six-year spell in New York. In tone and tenor, the art bears out the solitude and untamed nature of her Italian outpost, woven with nods to the region’s storied art history.
    Emma Ferrer, Agnus Dei (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    While her art is making its first appearance on the scene, the artist herself is no stranger to the spotlight. Ferrer is the granddaughter of Hollywood legend Audrey Hepburn (her father is Hepburn and actor Mel Ferrer’s son, Sean)—a relationship that has kindled breathless press coverage over the years, including her outing at age 20 on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar.
    Ferrer never got to meet her celebrated grandmother, who died a year before her birth in 1994, and coming to grips with her legacy, she said, was a process.
    “I spent a lot of my life feeling like I didn’t know how to live up to that. But I have reached a place where I’m incredibly proud to be the granddaughter of Audrey Hepburn,” she reflected. “It’s a part of my identity and a lot of my life experiences. There’s no point in trying to hide it. It’s part of my journey.”
    Emma Ferrer. Photo: Filbert T. Kung.
    Ferrer’s journey so far has taken her from Switzerland, where she was born, though Los Angeles, where she spent some of her childhood, and Italy, where she attended the Florence Academy of Art. Along the way, she earned her BA at SUNY Empire in New York and her MFA at Central Saint Martins in London. In the late 2010s, she was back in New York working as a curator and art liaison (she interned at Sapar Contemporary, too), until the lockdowns hit.
    At that time, Ferrer told me, she was likewise hit with a desire to return to nature—to be “in the environment that I realize now feeds my practice.” She departed the city and set up a studio in the Apuan Alps, where she was joined by her two herding dogs, Orso and Lilla.
    “I really, really love to be alone,” she said. “I still work remotely, in design PR, but ultimately, having that space, time, and quietness is really what allowed me to just pour myself into my practice.”
    Sapar’s co-founder Nina Levent concurs, telling me of Ferrer’s resulting paintings: “There was no prelude. This work could not have happened in New York.”
    Emma Ferrer, L’abbandono (Abandonment) (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    Indeed, “The Scapegoat” is riven throughout with ancient lore and practices in ways that seem of another world. The exhibition’s title—and its centerpiece—takes its cue from the Old Testament ritual of the scapegoat, animals either slaughtered or sent out into the wilderness to expel all of humanity’s sins. But notably, it also harks back to William Holman Hunt’s masterwork, The Scapegoat (1854–55)—which Ferrer said she became “obsessed” with—and Francisco de Zurbarán’s Agnus Dei (c. 1635–40). “This whole concept crystallized around those paintings,” said Ferrer.
    At the gallery are Ferrer’s haunting interpretation of these brutal, age-old rituals, some of them created on rustic jute and hand-primed linen canvases.
    Emma Ferrer, The Scapegoat (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    The Scapegoat (2024), a response to Hunt, places the wounded animal on barren ground, its sad fate made plain by roiling brushwork and doleful drops of rain. You Will Return the Evil to its Steppe (Homage to Zurbarán) (2024) references a pre-Assyrian rite of spitting into a frog’s mouth before piercing its feet with rose thorns in order to cure a sickness. Ferrer’s beautifully rendered scene depicts her wistful frog staining an otherwise bucolic field with its bloodied feet, the landscape encircled by a painted wooden frame adorned with dying flowers.
    This relationship between humans and animals also surfaces in more everyday tableaux such as A Humble Return (2024) and Lost in the Mountains (2024). They capture the sights of the Tuscan countryside, particularly its hunting culture, Ferrer noted, while hinting at more complex questions.
    Emma Ferrer, You Will Return the Evil to its Steppe (Homage to Zurbarán) (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    “The animal has trusted humans, and there’s this betrayal of trust,” she said of these sacrificial practices. “Why do people do this thing in the name of God? Where is God for that animal? Does the animal perceive God in those final moments? I am trying to give the sense of this higher power. I don’t intend to be persuasive at all with my work. I’m just raising questions that go back basically to the beginning of men.”
    Ferrer’s deft hand is also on view here. Her Newborn Scapegoat (2024) offers a disorienting perspective of the Terrazza Mascagni in Livorno, the surreal vista heightened by the presence of the titular newborn. Her rendering of physical and emotional depth, such as the placid body of water in At Sea (2024), is delicately achieved.
    “This is an unusual body of work,” said Levent, who commended Ferrer for making such an ancient narrative her own. “I think this is something authentic; an artist finds the theme or the theme finds the artist.”
    Emma Ferrer, Newborn Scapegoat (2024). Courtesy of Sapar Contemporary and the artist.
    The artist and theme having met, the show is a confident one. Ferrer’s is a keen artistic voice—one she hopes will resonate.
    “I don’t want the works to be overly obscure. I don’t want their concepts to be alienating,” she said. “If someone can just access these deeper questions that I’ve asked, if a person can find that personal connection to the work, then it’s done its job.”
    Emma Ferrer with At Sea (2024). Photo: Filbert T. Kung.
    In other ways, too, she hopes it honors her grandmother’s legacy.
    During our conversation, she detailed the research Hepburn embarked on for her roles in such films as The Nun’s Story (1959) and Wait Until Dark (1967): “It’s interesting, from an artistic point of view, to see how she poured herself into roles that aren’t Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” The artist’s own deep dives into ancient history, it appears, have an antecedent. Ferrer is also a national ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, a role that sees her continuing Hepburn’s tireless advocacy with UNICEF.
    “I would like to get to a place where I can marry those worlds and continue that legacy with my artistic practice,” Ferrer said. “As I’ve gotten older, I understand more what she meant to so many people. It’s a privilege that this has landed on me. I feel the best way to honor her is by continuing to be myself.”
    “The Scapegoat” is on view at Sapar Contemporary, 9 North Moore Street, New York, through February 15. More

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    Asian Women Artists Take Center Stage in Sprawling Seoul Exhibition

    Standing in front of the entrance to the exhibition “Connecting Bodies: Asian Women Artists” at a high-ceiling basement gallery of the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in Seoul, I felt a spark of exhilaration that jolted me. Finally, an exhibition dedicated to Asian women artists! But why has it taken so long?
    Perhaps it was worth the wait, as the historical context gives the show a lot more weight. Featuring around 130 works by some 60 Asian women artists from 11 countries and territories across East, South, and Southeast Asia—Korea, Japan, China, Singapore, Indonesia, Taiwan, the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, and India—”Connecting Bodies” surveys works from the 1960s, when women’s art began to emerge in the region, through today.
    Certainly, names such as Yayoi Kusama, Yoko Ono, Lee Bul, and Cao Fei are no strangers to the global art world today. But what about those in-between, and those who have not been receiving the same level of exposure internationally or even regionally? How are they different? Do they share a common ground?
    Kim Insoon, Begging for a Job as a Woman Student (1995). Photo: Vivienne Chow
    An ambitious and expansive exhibition like this offers a great opportunity to examine these artists and their practices while reflecting on the transformation experienced over the past six decades. This period, coincidentally, corresponds to the sexagenary cycle that forms the foundation of the lunisolar calendar that is still widely used in many parts of Asia. In a way, the opening of this exhibition signifies the return to the starting point of this 60-year cycle, an appropriate time to review and contextualize the rich materials from the past to present.
    Going through the exhibition occupying two galleries located on the museum’s basement level, it was not hard to notice the theme of “bodies” on display, quite literally. From the image of Korean artist Jung Kangja’s iconic performance The Transparent Balloons and Nude (1968), the country’s first known female nude performance that saw the artist covering her naked body with transparent balloons, to Philippine artist Agnes Arellano’s surrealist sculpture Carcass Cornucopia (1987), which depicts the body of a woman with horse feet hung upside down, with her torso ripped apart revealing a baby sitting inside, and the charming video work Dance with Farm Workers (2001) by Chinese artist Wen Hui, bodies are not just part of a work, but also a conduit and a point of convergence.
    Chung Chanseung, Jung Kangja, and Kang Kukjin, The Transparent Balloons and Nude (1968). Photo: Vivienne Chow.
    Works selected for this project live up to the expectations outlined by Bae Myungji, MMCA’s curator who also curated this ambitious show, which “focuses on the values of communication, connection, and solidarity associated with the body.” It explores works “through the lens of corporeality,” the curator said. “The body is a place where various ideologies and situations intersect, and it also represents a locus where one can explore the existential possibilities of difference and diversity.”
    Rather than organizing works in chronological order and categorizing works and artists by region, the show is made up of six thematic sections, with each featuring a selection of works to echo the respective theme, each punctuated by bold works and rarely seen pieces.
    Atsuko Tanaka, Gate of Hell (1965-1969). Photo: Vivienne Chow
    Section one, titled “Choreograph Life,” highlights works responding to socio-political conditions through women’s bodily experiences, addressing the changing roles of women. Included in the section are Japanese artist Mako Idemitsu’s video works Woman’s House (1972) and Another Day of Housewife (1977), Korean artist Ryu Jun Hwa’s politically-charged paintings Red Flesh (1992) and The Fall of America (1992), and the late Filipino artist Brenda Fajardo’s whimsical commentaries on migrant workers from her country depicted in Tarot Card Series, her works on paper comprised of Pilipina, Entertainer in Japan (1993), Pilipina, Domestic Helper in Hong Kong (1993), and Pilipina, Not Documented in Taiwan (1993).
    “Flexible Territories of Sexuality,” which the museum says is not suitable for those aged under 19, is filled with provocative works that challenge the social norms of sexuality, a topic traditionally considered as a taboo across many parts of Asia. Women’s body plays a key role in many pieces on show, such as Japanese artist Shigeko Kubota’s 1965 performance Vagina Painting, where the artist is seen crouching on the floor, painting with a brush held between her legs, depicted in a black and white photograph. Quirky narrative video pieces Love Condition and Love Condition II by Mai Endo x Aya Momose exploring sex, love, and more were delightful to watch. Kusama’s 1967 avant-garde video piece Self Obliteration can also be found here.
    Wen Hui, 100 Verbs (1994). Photo: Vivienne Chow.
    Chinese artist Guo Fengyi’s drawings from late 1990s to 2000s referencing the intersections between humans and beings of a higher realm set the tone for “Bodies · God(desse)s · Cosmology.” Paintings by artists such as Pacita Abad from the Philippines, Kim Insoon from Korea, and Fitriani Dwi Kurniasih from Indonesia explore femininity borrowing images from folklores and mythologies.
    “Street Performances” is a collage of rare documentation of important performances by women artists from past to present. The show concludes with “Bodies as Becoming–Connecting Bodies,” dedicated to works that transcend the rigid boundaries and hierarchies that have long marginalized women. Among the highlights are Thai artist Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s video work The Class (2005) and Korean artist Kim Nahee’s newly commissioned illustration and video installation piece Gossip Girl Protocol (2024).
    Agnes Arellano, Carcass Cornucorpia (1987). Photo: Vivienne Chow
    Does this presentation structure work? It is without a doubt a mountainous effort to sift through the materials and to identify overarching narrative threads to connect all the dots. After all, besides the fact that these are all women artists and their art emerged throughout the chaotic post-colonial eras and struggle with various degrees of democratization, they are all rooted in places with vastly different cultural, historical, and geopolitical contexts. Generalizing them as one will simply be factually incorrect.
    While the categorization may be arbitrary at times, it was a worthwhile experiment as it creates solidarity among the artists on view, though it may be confusing to those who are not well-versed in the region’s contexts and aesthetics.
    Bharti Kher, And All the while the Benevolent Slept (2008). Photo: Vivienne Chow.
    The configuration of space was problematic in some instances. For example, in the section “Flexible Territories of Sexuality,” there was an impression of an uneven allocation of space where some works that needed more space were cramped in a room while others were left surrounded with slightly too much emptiness. Nevertheless, confining Taiwanese artist Joyce Ho’s mesmerizing five-channel video installation Vera x Diary (2023) in one room as part of section five’s “Repeating Gestures–Bodies · Objects · Language” was an interesting move. Watching the performer trying to hide herself some weird corners of an apartment made it very difficult to walk away from that room.
    “Connecting Bodies” is nonetheless an important show, despite its flaws, and I carried the 400-page exhibition catalog all the way from Seoul to London knowing that it is a reference I want to keep on my book shelf. Perhaps this show is merely the beginning of a new chapter.
    In November, Taipei Fine Arts Museum also opened a show focusing on female artists titled “Enclave: An Autobiography.” I sincerely hope that exhibitions showcasing and contextualizing works by women artists from Asia and their diaspora are not just fashion that comes and goes. The show “presents works that have attempted to encourage a reconfiguration of power through women’s language,” Bae noted. Indeed we need more shows and platforms to give Asian women artists their long overdue recognition and tell the stories they did not have the chance to tell.
    “Connecting Bodies: Asian Women Artists” runs through March 3, 2025 at National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, South Korea. More

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    Aminah Robinson Left Her Art to an Ohio Museum. Now It’s Going on a Grand Tour

    If you are not already familiar with the work of Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson—a prolific, influential, and largely self-taught artist from Ohio who died in 2015 at the age of 75—you may be in for a revelation this year.
    An eye-opening show, “Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson: Character Studies,” is on view now at the Fort Gansevoort gallery in New York’s Meatpacking District. The gallery, run by dealer Adam Shopkorn, represents Robinson in the U.S., and is working to draw attention to her, along with the Columbus Museum of Art, to which the artist bequeathed all of her work and personal effects, including her home-studio in that Ohio city. The CMA will also be sending a touring exhibition, “Aminah Robinson: Journeys Home, a Visual Memoir,” to three U.S. museums this year, with more stops to follow. Both shows present deep dives into various aspects of her multi-faceted seven-decade career.
    “Character Studies” includes drawings, paintings, sculpture, puppetry, music boxes, handmade books, textile-based pieces, and poetry, in which Robinson reflects on themes of family and ancestry, often through the lens of ordinary, found objects and everyday tasks. The art blends her personal experiences—including characters from her childhood home in Poindexter Village in Columbus, one of the country’s first federally funded public housing developments—with broader narratives of the African American experience throughout history, including her great-aunt Cornelia Johnson’s tales of slavery.
    Installation view of “Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson: Character Studies”  at Fort Gansevoort, New York. © Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust. Courtesy of the Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust, Columbus Museum of Art, and Fort Gansevoort, New York.
    Shopkorn said that he first came across her work—two monumental quilted pieces that she worked on for long stretches—on the website of the Underground Railroad Museum in Cincinnati, several years ago. “The work never really ended,” he said. “She worked on them for decades at a time and they were still never really complete and could always be added to. I was enamored with what I saw… I just kind of got the Aminah bug.”
    He was referring to RagGonNon (completed in 2004), which is comprised of two tapestries, Journey I and Journey II, that tell the story of the artist’s ancestors and their forced relocation from West Africa across the Atlantic Ocean to the U.S. “Once freedom came to enslaved people, Aminah’s journey takes you to her birthplace—Columbus, Ohio,” according to the museum website. The RagGonNon shows images of Robinson’s childhood and the games she played, following her all the way into her adulthood. The title refers to the artist’s philosophy, to “rag on and on and on,” no matter what, and also alludes to her view that complex artworks continue to evolve by way of viewers’ contemplation.
    The figurative sculptures at Fort Gansevoort feature heads fashioned from “hogmawg,” a term (picked up from her father) that she used to describe the clay-like material she wielded in her sculptures, made primarily from a mix of mud, sticks, pig grease, lime, and glue. The figures are decorated with human hair, button eyes, and outfits that consist of repurposed clothing and other handcrafted decorations. One tabletop sculpture, Brownyskin Man (1997), was based on a local street vendor who was a fixture in the artist’s childhood. The Columbus Museum loaned it to the show.
    Brownyskin Man sports a checkered-print cap and matching coat, sewn to fit his small frame. Multicolored cloth sacks hangs from his figure, representing the vessels in which the vendor carried his pork rinds for sale, also known as brown skins.
    Installation view of “Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson: Character Studies” at Fort Gansevoort in New York. © Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust. Courtesy of the Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust, Columbus Museum of Art, and Fort Gansevoort, New York.
    Though Robinson may not be a household name, she never labored in obscurity. A traveling retrospective of her work made stops at the Brooklyn Museum, the CMA, and other institutions between 2002 and 2007, and she won a MacArthur “genius” grant in 2004.
    “It’s a wonderful history that has sort of evolved over the years,” Deirdre Hamler, the director of the Aminah Robinson Legacy Project at the CMA, said of the artist’s career. “It started with her being enamored with the museum as a child. She was a visionary early on, and always aspired to be at the museum. As a young Black girl from the 1940s who lived in the neighborhood, she was able to go into the museum to see art and also took classes.”
    By the time Robinson was in her teens, one of her art pieces was featured in Seventeen magazine, Hamler said. She also exhibited her works at the Ohio State Fair.
    Hamler said that the last few years have involved “a long process of determining how to manage this trove,” and that the museum’s working relationship with Fort Gansevoort has helped.
    Shopkorn painted his gallery’s walls a brilliant deep shade of red, Robinson’s favorite color, for the exhibition and said that museums have been expressing interest in acquiring works from the show.
    Prices have been set somewhat conservatively. Shopkorn said that drawings from the 1960s and ’70s start at $4,500 and run up to $11,000, while some paintings on paper (some of which are eight feet tall), run up to $35,000. The most important sculptures in the show run up to about $50,000. (There are no records of her work selling at auction in the Artnet Price Database.)
    Proceeds from the exhibition will support the Legacy Project, as well as a residency program for African American artists and writers that she developed at her former home and studio in Columbus, conservation of her work and workplace, and related museum exhibitions and educational programming.
    Installation view of “Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson: Character Studies,” at Fort Gansevoort, New York. © Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust. Courtesy of the Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Trust, Columbus Museum of Art, and Fort Gansevoort, New York.
    “Having this opportunity to steward her legacy is really special,” the CMA’s director, Brooke Minto, said in a phone interview. “Her legacy is really special. It also allowed us to delve deeply into the history of Columbus and the region, and the way in which the city has evolved.” Minto noted that many artists in the area counted Robinson as a teacher and a mentor.
    “In some ways the museum had its marching orders,” Minto said. “Robinson was really clear about the work continuing to be available in the market for the purpose of supporting younger artists. It was the museum’s charge to figure out how to make that happen.”
    “Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson: Character Studies” is on view at Fort Gansevoort in New York, through January 25. “Aminah Robinson: Journeys Home, a Visual Memoir” will be on view at the Springfield Museum of Art in Ohio from February 1 to July 13, before traveling to the Newark Museum of Art in New Jersey from October 16 to March 1, 2026, and the Mobile Museum of Art in Alabama from March 26, 2026 to January 9, 2027. Two remaining venues will be announced later in the year; the full tour will run through 2028. More

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    There’s More to Versailles Than Gilded Opulence. A New Show Reveals Its Secret Role in Shaping Science

    When we think of Versailles, we think of Marie Antoinette, opulence, and the last hurrah of the aristocratic high life before the French Revolution put an end to such folly in 1789. We may also think of philosophers like Voltaire and the age of the enlightenment, but less well-known is the palace’s crucial role in supporting the sciences.
    As a new exhibition, “Versailles: Science and Splendour” at the Science Museum in London until April 21, 2025, shows, the French court was motivated to sponsor scientific research as a means of consolidating power and expanding colonial rule. In 1666, Louis XIV established the Royal Academy of Sciences in Paris, which, unlike peer institutions in Italy or Britain, paid members a salary and covered their lodgings and equipment, meaning their endeavors were all done in the king’s service.
    Subsequent kings Louis XV and Louis XVI were so keen on science that they even carried out experiments themselves. At court, they were routinely presented with the latest inventions or discoveries, sometimes even watching live demonstrations, and to receive this opportunity was the greatest mark of distinction for an ambitious scientist in France. Unsurprisingly, the Crown tended to favor advantageous developments, such as chemistry for artillery, astronomy for navigation, cartography for the mapping of French territories, and medicine for public heath.
    Henri Testelin, Etablissement de l’Académie des sciences et fondation de l’Observatoire (1666). Image: © château de Versailles, Dist. RMN © JM Manaï.
    As such, Versailles became a hub of knowledge-sharing that attracted many different kinds of scientists, then known as “savants” or “natural philosophers.” Even Benjamin Franklin shared his theories about electricity and the lightning conductor with French scientists during a diplomatic visit to the palace in 1778.
    But how to get the message out about this impressive bustle of learned activity, and promote France’s role in the advancement of scientific research? The answer, of course, was to commission paintings that would document these developments and emphasize the Crown’s role in them.
    One example was Henri Testelin’s Establissement de l’Académie des sciences et fondation de l’Observatoire, 1666 (1673-1681), represented in the exhibition by a reproduction. It is an imagined scene in which Louis XIV, in all his finery, meets with members of the Royal Academy of Sciences, among them are Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens and Italian astronomer Giovanni Domenico Cassini. The men are surrounded by the accessories of serious study, including books, papers, celestial and terrestrial globes, a pendulum clock, an armillary sphere, and animal skeletons.
    Gabrielle-Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, Marquise du Châtelet, from the private collection of Marquis de Breteuil. Photo: © Château de Breteuil.
    From Testelin’s painting, you’d be forgiven for believing only men practiced science at Versailles, but there were a few remarkable women scientists who also made important contributions. The most notable of these was Emilie du Châtelet, a mathematician who, in writing the standard French translation of Isaac Newton’s basic law of physics from 1687, added her own commentary, including important contributions to our understanding of kinetic energy.
    Du Châtelet’s intellectual collaborator and romantic partner Voltaire once described her as “a great man whose only fault was being a woman.” A painting of her by an unknown artist reveals something of her attempts to balance her ambitions with societal expectations of her gender. Though she is dolled up in a ladylike manner with elaborate dress and a gentle, pensive expression, she holds in her right hand a mathematical instrument for measuring distances known as a divider. A hefty copy of Newton’s Principa Mathematica (1687) lies open on her desk and an armillary sphere, used to map celestial constellations, can be seen in the background.
    Jean-Baptiste Oudry, Pineapple in a pot (1733). Photo: © Château de Versailles, Dist. RMN © Christophe Fouin.
    As France expanded its imperial reach, budding French naturalists and botanists received new specimens to study from across the world. One fruit that never failed to impress European colonialists was the pineapple, which they “discovered” in South American and the Caribbean in the late fifteenth century and brought back home. These spiky, oval fruits soon became highly fashionable objects coveted by royals who wanted to grow them in their own gardens. In order to pull this off in less than optimal weather conditions, horticulturists in the Netherlands invented the greenhouse and were soon being imitated by their neighbors.
    The first homegrown pineapples reached maturity in France in 1733, and were presented to the king on Christmas Day. The momentous feat was recorded by Jean-Baptiste Oudry, a French painter renowned for his still lifes. By the 1750s, hundreds of pineapples were being cultivated and their distinctive form continued to intrigue artists of all kind, becoming a popular subject for paintings or a common design for textiles and decorative arts.
    Pierre-Denis Martin, View of the Marly machine and of the Louveciennes castle (1722-23). Photo: © Château de Versailles, Dist. RMN, © Jean-Marc Manaï.
    In order to convert Versailles from a mere hunting lodge for the king’s leisure and sports into France’s principal seat of power in the late 17th century, Louis XIV wanted his gardens to be filled with magnificent fountains and waterworks. This was a big ask, given the lack of adequate water source nearby, but engineers managed it by building the largest mechanical device of their time, known as the Marly Machine. This hydraulic system could miraculously raise water in the opposite direction of gravity, over 500 feet up from the Seine to a reservoir, where it would eventually be transported to Versailles.
    Though the Marly Machine no longer exists, it survives via various modes of documentation, most notably a painting by the artist Pierre-Denis Martin, who produced many sweeping landscape paintings recording battlefields or architectural arrangements. The  composition gives a sense of the machine’s scale and impressive presence within the natural topography, and we can just make out various paddle wheels and a rod system leading up the hill behind.
    As with so many other sophisticated technological achievements at Versailles, the Marly Machine’s invention was ultimately co-opted for political purposes, becoming a proud expression of the king’s extravagant wealth and power.
    “Versailles: Science and Splendour” is on view at the Science Museum in London until April 21, 2025. More