The Woodstock story told through paintings, photography, sculpture, and ceramics at D. Wigmore Fine Art PDF Stampa E-mail
Notizie arte e cultura - News d'arte dal mondo
NEW YORK, N.Y.- D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc. announces its current exhibition, The Woodstock Story: Told Through Paintings, Photography, Sculpture, and Ceramics, on view through January 28. Woodstock, America’s second oldest and most successful art colony, began with the founding of the Arts and Crafts colony Byrdcliffe in 1902. Examples of White Pines pottery, photography, and furniture renderings from Byrdcliffe are on view. The Art Students League in New York City expanded the colony when it began to bring 200 students each year for its summer program in 1906. The focus of the exhibition is on works created after the New York Armory Show of 1913 which caused both traditionalists and modernists in Woodstock and across America to reevaluate their approaches to artmaking. The Armory Show moved art in Woodstock beyond Impressionism and Tonalism into a period of great diversity as artists appropriated ideas from Cubism and E
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