Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Moroccan Craftsmen Visit the Big Apple for First Time

Future News in the world of galleries . . .



Abderrazak Bahij and other craftsmen from Morocco at work on the arches in a courtyard being created at the heart of the Islamic art galleries of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

In the spring of 2009, in a dust-covered basement workshop in Fez, Morocco, a young curator in the museum’s Islamic department sat among a group of artisans — workers in traditional North African tile, plaster and wood ornament whose roots stretched back seven generations in the trade — and asked the company’s chief executive yet again why the museum should enlist them for an unusual mission.
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The executive, a boyish-looking man named Adil Naji, reached over and took hold of the wrist of one of his younger brothers, Hisham. He hoisted the brother’s rough, callused fingers in front of the curator, Navina Haidar, and, with a climactic intensity that wouldn’t have been out of place in “Lawrence of Arabia,” exclaimed, “Look, this is my brother’s hand!”
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As Ms. Haidar recalled recently, back in the much less cinematic confines of a museum construction site: “It was a very powerful moment. It made up our minds because we could see how close he was to the tradition. And we wanted to see that hand on our walls.”
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At the heart of those galleries, which will open in the fall after being closed six years, it dreamed of showcasing the defining feature of Moroccan and southern Spanish Islamic architecture: a medieval Maghrebi-Andalusian-style courtyard, which would function in much the same way such courtyards still do in the traditional houses and mosques of Marrakesh or Casablanca, as their physical and spiritual center.
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. . .Which is how a group of highly regarded Moroccan craftsmen, many of whom had never set foot in New York, came essentially to take up residence at the Met beginning last December, working some days in their jabador tunics and crimson fezzes (known as tarbooshes in Morocco), to build a 14th-century Islamic fantasia in seclusion high above the Greek and Roman galleries as unknowing museum goers passed below.
[This article appeared in the New York Times Sunday edition March 20th.] For the entire article, see:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/20/arts/design/metropolitan-museums-moroccan-courtyard-takes-shape.html

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Modigliani Biography: A Book Review




Modigliani

A Life

By Meryle Secrest

(Alfred A. Knopf; 387 pages; $35)

You can't get more mythical than Amedeo Modigliani.

Modigliani (1884-1920), a pal of Picasso and the bohemian crowd in Paris, was a dazzlingly handsome Italian from a once-wealthy Jewish family in Livorno who recited Dante when drunk, which was much of the time, and paid for his meals and drinks with sketches when he was broke, which was all of the time.

Determined to be a sculptor, Modigliani surrendered to a weak constitution and painted portraits - now instantly recognizable, mostly artists, dealers and winsome swan-necked women. The work was taking off commercially after World War I when. . .

[read the entire article below.] This first appeared in the Sunday SF Chronicle Examiner in the book review section.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/03/11/RVRF1I4F98.DTL#ixzz1GVW1iARu

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Happy Birthday Lisa !



Lisa Cooperman, our beloved Curator of Education was surprised by her Docent Art Training Class on Thursday, March 3rd 2011.

The class also sang the traditional "Happy Birthday" song.

Thanks to Kathy Fong for carrying the birthday cake idea to completion. The inscription on the cake read,

"For all you do, this cake's for you !
Happy Birthday Lisa !"

She also received a vase of yellow daisys and a helium balloon. Comments anyone?

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Dance--They Make It Look Easy




S.F. Ballet's Maria Kochetkova in the premiere of Helgi Tomasson's "Trio," which mined the flow and richness of Tchaikovsky. Photo by Alex Washburn of the San Francisco Chronicle.

Museum Sale--Unbelievable Prices














There are sales, and there are epic shopping events.

The 52nd annual White Elephant Sale, organized by the Oakland Museum Women's Board to benefit the Oakland Museum of California, no question, falls into the latter class.

The admission-free rummage sale, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 5-6, is held in a 96,000-square-foot warehouse arranged into 17 departments with millions of items from vintage clothing to sporting goods, jewelry, art, furniture, books, music and children's clothing and toys. Prices are seriously low. (Think $3 for a pair of almost-perfect-condition Frye boots that sell on eBay for around $300. Jimmy Choos run about $40.)

"There's so much love and care that goes into everything that's donated before it goes out for resale," says Kelly Koski, communications manager for the[museum].


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/02/25/HOVV1HRUFO.DTL#ixzz1FOlMSEgO