Philip Guston Small Oils 1969-1973 at MCKEE GALLERY .wmv

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • James Kalm is delighted to bring viewers along for a holiday stroll through this exhibition of small works by one of New Yorks most influential painters. Executed during a five year period while Guston was developing his Hooded Figure and Roma series, these pieces show the concentration and focus the artists was bringing to his return to figuration. Divided in to four categories, single objects, hoods, cityscapes and studio interiors, these small pictures retain their power despite their small size, and bare testament to the high regard Guston maintains among young contemporary painters.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 70

  • @jhb61249
    @jhb61249 4 роки тому +1

    Fantastic. Thanks James and Kate.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +2

    James, again my humble thanks. They didn't do a catalogue, so I didn't have any remembrance of this fantastic show. I will treasure this video. I am so grateful that you did that!

  • @casteretpollux
    @casteretpollux 3 роки тому

    Watching this in 2020 in the era of Guston' bandment. Thankyou, James and Kate.

  • @chezceleste
    @chezceleste 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you Kate

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +4

    They are actually not studies, but independent pieces in their own right. Guston always insisted on that. The piece at 3.44 is an absolute masterpiece. I must have stared at it for 15 min. without blinking!

  • @margaretholland671
    @margaretholland671 3 роки тому

    Great to see these 'idea' paintings. A look inside Philip's mind and glimps his preoccupations.

  • @skunstt
    @skunstt 4 роки тому

    Always love your video,s !!

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +2

    One thing that strikes me about these small panels, apart from their unique imagery, is that they are very painterly. When you see them in real, you feel an urge to touch the surface. There is a tremendous amount of work put into them.

  • @jpapare
    @jpapare 14 років тому

    Seeing these small works, will really enhance how I see the large works. I really love these and, if not for you, probably would never have seen them. There is so much "self" in such a small space. It makes me address how much "self" I put into my own work.

  • @arockj
    @arockj 14 років тому +4

    Thanks for sharing this one James. Loved it.
    "Oh, that's a juicy little cup."

  • @yenomerom
    @yenomerom 14 років тому

    hey thanks james. youre so lucky to get to see all these cool shows in ny. thanks for bringing them to everyone else.
    guston rocks!

  • @themaster-zz1tb
    @themaster-zz1tb 6 років тому +6

    YOU ARE A LEGEND, THANKS FOR THESE UPLOADS

    • @jameskalm
      @jameskalm  6 років тому +1

      Who am I to argue with "THE MASTER"...

  • @deborahbaca1345
    @deborahbaca1345 7 років тому +3

    Awesome show. Great narration. Thank you.

  • @LawrenceCurrie
    @LawrenceCurrie 6 років тому +1

    Great Fun Thank you James and Kate

  • @5lyone
    @5lyone 14 років тому +1

    really nice pieces

  • @ALTHEGREAT101
    @ALTHEGREAT101 13 років тому +1

    i AM A SUPER BIGTIME GUSTON FAN AND ONLY JUST DISCOVERED THIS VIDEO, WHICH I LOVE; NOW IT IS MY FAVORITE THANKS JAMES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @nathanlafontaine3258
    @nathanlafontaine3258 4 роки тому

    When someone provides a recorded experience for what deserves first-hand experience-rage! rage against the dying of the light!

  • @IDOLODORO2
    @IDOLODORO2 10 років тому +2

    fabulous show --- i appreciate yr effort to make it accessible via video

  • @raymonddumas
    @raymonddumas 6 років тому +2

    thanks for all your work - with out you, no views of whats going on up there! love you getting in close! keep going!

  • @IDOLODORO2
    @IDOLODORO2 13 років тому +2

    thanx to you i get to visit th fuller bldg in my underwear --- wonderful pictures by P GUSTON a great poet in paint

  • @chriserskineartist
    @chriserskineartist 7 років тому +1

    Great pieces, you can really see him working things out. What I find most interesting is that most of the works are developing the visual elements of his larger paintings rather than working out just the whole composition. Maybe it just the selection of works in the show, but if he is working out his future visual language then that is very interesting. Thanks James and Kate. Chris

  • @jameskalm
    @jameskalm  14 років тому +1

    Thanks for reminding me. I loved the retrospective at the Met several years ago and wish I'd have recorded some of that, but...

  • @timeanagain
    @timeanagain 14 років тому

    Thanks James. Saw a big exhibit at the National Gallery in DC of Guston's works. He was his own man it seems and dealt with the rejection apparently pretty well.

  • @henrygrove100
    @henrygrove100 7 років тому +2

    Thank you!

  • @candeaguilar
    @candeaguilar 14 років тому

    location location, thats the name of the game for artists,,this work is a good example of that

  • @artedebuenosaires
    @artedebuenosaires 14 років тому

    Oh Christmas in NY. That's fantastic!! I would like to be there... thank you again James, I feel like I would be there :) a strong hug from springtime in Buenos Aires

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    Guston also stressed that the hooded figure was a kind of self-portrait, a way for him to try to know what it was to be evil, what it was to be plotting evil. He turned away from abstraction saying: "I am sick of all this purity". That was in 1968-69...

  • @ajemazi
    @ajemazi 9 років тому +2

    Thank you! made me grab paper and draw!

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    Yes she does. The book is called Night Studio, and it is great reading.

  • @egg8dogtoo
    @egg8dogtoo 14 років тому

    Thank you so much for this.

  • @ArtSFBlog
    @ArtSFBlog 8 років тому +3

    so good

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +3

    Answer to your question: if you had the money, if Guston's art had changed your life the first time you saw his work and had enriched it ever since, if you thought those small works were like a new alphabet that taught you a new way to read life...then you would spend the $300 000...and you would even find it cheap...

  • @plywood75
    @plywood75 14 років тому +1

    300,000. i really wish i had it.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    There was a lot of of pressure on Guston. The critics panned him, calling him "a mandarin pretending to be a stumblebum" (Hilton Kramer in the NYT). It is hard to imagine the ostracism Guston lived in at the time. This is why he left for Woodstock.

  • @candeaguilar
    @candeaguilar 14 років тому +1

    I do respect and even like his unique work, but yes, I think that his geographic lacation has allowed his work to fit into history. Julian Schnable and Ray Smith lived here in Brownsville but made it into art history in New York, where there is real interest, collectors, gallerists etc.....

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    I've watched this video some 20 times...

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    Yes. It is currently on the artnet site. He has an interesting theory on the influence of those green shades (a fixture of NYC apartments in the 60's) on Rothko signature dissolving rectangular planes.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    Interesting take by Charlie Finch on the green shade...

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +2

    It is not any gallery: McKee was one of the very few who understood Guston's shift to figuration after his show at Marlborough's. He's been his dealer for 35 years. Also, he's handling the estate.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +2

    Most of these panels belong to Guston's daughter and some to private collectors. No one wants to sell them at ANY price.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +2

    I have an info: The "Jo" of the dedication on the piece at 7.31 was Guston's sister-in-law, Jo Chalmers, his wife's sister.

  • @slaytonj5
    @slaytonj5 14 років тому

    great one james. good spot on the shoes/death reference. Guston showed me that one as well. //j

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 3 роки тому

      Hanging lightbulb, fraid to say, makes me think of him as a boy finding his father dead.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    It is true that they remind Morandi by their size and sometimes imagery, but I don't think it goes beyond that. The one Italian who really influenced Guston all his life was De Chirico. He kept a Chirico book next to his bed...

  • @jameskalm
    @jameskalm  14 років тому +1

    Hey jahuyser,
    as I understand it, Guston went to Rome (perhaps on a Prix de Rome) and became infatuated with Morandi, as well as some other lesser known Italian painters from the Metaphysical movement.. I think it was Morandi's tonal style that most influenced him.

  • @jameskalm
    @jameskalm  14 років тому +1

    And I think De Chirico's brother Alberto Savinio, who is much lesser known but was important to many of the "TransAvant-Garde" painters.

  • @jameskalm
    @jameskalm  14 років тому

    Please explain. Are you saying that Guston is only considered good because he was located in a specific geographic area, or that his work fits into a unique area in art history?

  • @melissacarterTS
    @melissacarterTS 14 років тому +1

    @claureic Actually Guston was profoundly influenced by Piero della Francesca moreso than De Chirico or Morandi. It is more literal in his early social works of the 30's and 40's but has its place in all three phases of Guston's career.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    @ar4216 Thanks for the tip. As far as I know, the only critic who understood Guston's shift immediately was Harold Rosenberg. As for his peers, De Kooning was very supportive ("your paintimgs are about freedom"). Hilton Kramer, Robert Hughes, etc, all the NY establishment, they simply didn't get it...

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 3 роки тому

      Or they got it very well, and were hostile. He made a powerful critique of abstraction and in favour of social/psychological/political engagement of the painter.

  • @michaelmcclure3383
    @michaelmcclure3383 Рік тому

    I bet he started back into figuration with these little studies before going onto the larger canvases.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    Guston's klansmen, they are De Chirico's faceless mannequins. Also his cityscapes, his studio paintings (with the easel in the center), all those come from De Chirico.

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 3 роки тому

      Interesting and like most of his generation he went through a phase of surrealism, but klansmen were a real thing in his life went they attacked a strike he was involved in as a young man and ripped his paintings from a wall. Check out The Inquisition (Struggle Against Fascism and War), Guston and Kadish.

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    @melissacarterTS You're perfectly right. I know a photograph of Guston's studio that shows works by Piero pinned on the wall...

  • @headyBC
    @headyBC 9 років тому +1

    a lot of these look like they were also in the New Alphabet show that was up at Yale, then Harvard, in 2000... but, my memory is a bit foggy. i could be mistaken.

  • @JeffersonDinedAlone
    @JeffersonDinedAlone 13 років тому

    @claureic You stood in awe looking at that? Why?

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому

    Savino as a playwright, thinker and musician maybe; but as far as painting goes, Savino's work is more or less a copy of his brother's. Or is it the other way around? As far as I know, Guston always mentioned De Chirico.

  • @PaintingCourse
    @PaintingCourse 3 роки тому +1

    How were you able to view a Guston exhibition without a Museum telling you how you're supposed to interpret them!!!!?? (sorry...being sarcastic)

    • @jameskalm
      @jameskalm  3 роки тому

      Yes, the museums have been failing for the last 400 years (gosh, they only started 350 years ago...)

  • @claureic
    @claureic 14 років тому +1

    You know, these paintings were a hard sell during the seventies. Guston had to move from NYC to Woodsctock, because the NY artworld completely rejected him. Location , at least during his lifetime, was not that good an asset for him...

  • @bryandibucci583
    @bryandibucci583 3 роки тому

    Cherries llll, is viscous. 🍒guston
    Loren you should teach.your
    Paintings remind me of ad reinhardt drawings-in his 1 of 2
    Books.but in color.

    • @jameskalm
      @jameskalm  3 роки тому

      Thanks @Bryan DiBucci , but there's not a single educational institution in America that would risk having me in a classroom on a regular basis. Also, Ad Reinhardt is, and has always been, one of my greatest inspirations...JK

    • @bryandibucci583
      @bryandibucci583 3 роки тому

      @@jameskalm appreciate the
      Gallery go round. Thanks, good
      Job.

    • @bryandibucci583
      @bryandibucci583 3 роки тому

      Happy holidays 🎄🎁
      Liked what you said in
      your studio. "The deskilling
      Of painting today."🛢

    • @jameskalm
      @jameskalm  3 роки тому

      @@bryandibucci583 If you have time, and like Reinhardt, check this out...ua-cam.com/video/aBhNjg3qCEk/v-deo.html

  • @arockj
    @arockj 14 років тому

    To Oigres,
    What do you mean by "this?" Does your "this" mean the "filming style" is a joke? or the "paintings" in you mind are horrible and how can any one take this serious? or do you mean these particular "Guston" paintings are a joke? Because a lot of them are meant to be funny. What do you mean by "this?"

  • @Cre8iveSignWorks
    @Cre8iveSignWorks 14 років тому

    fantastic video....loved it!
    but can someone tell me why i would want to spend $300000 on a very small painting that was painted on a bit of wood in about 5 mins and probably by a brush sticking out of his arse?
    that would take me years to earn that sort of money. life sucks!
    but i tell you what, he wouldnt get a job in my sign shop painting outlines like that!
    (im not really bitter. im just trying to justify the turgid miasma of existance) lol
    thanx 4 the vid james!

  • @Seercho
    @Seercho 14 років тому

    this is a joke right?