Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Lotte
Laserstein, Frida Kahlo, Alice Neel, Marlene Dumas, Cindy Sherman, Elizabeth
Peyton
The exhibition shows works by women artists occupying prominent
positions within the history of modern art from 1870 to the present day. It was
at the beginning of this period that women artists in Europe and America were
in a position to make their first significant incursions into the professional
world of art.
The exhibition centers around nine artists, united in their
emphasis on the depiction of the human figure: on the portrait, in widely
differing forms, and the self-portrait.
The French painter Berthe Morisot and the American Mary Cassatt,
both active in the 1870s and 1880s in Paris, the then center of contemporary
art; the German Paula Modersohn-Becker, moving in the early 1900s between
cosmopolitan Paris and the north German provincial town of Worpswede; the
German Lotte Laserstein, active from 1925 to 1933 in Berlin during the later
years of the Weimar Republic; Frida Kahlo, who worked from the early 1920s
until around 1950 in Mexico City, during the consolidation and
institutionalization of the Mexican state in the aftermath of the Revolution;
the American Alice Neel, with a practice spanning the late 1920s to the 1980s,
at first in Cuba and then in Manhattan, moving between Greenwich Village,
Spanish Harlem, and the Upper West Side; Marlene Dumas, who grew up in Cape
Town when apartheid was at its height, before relocating in 1976 to work in
Amsterdam; from the same period, the US artist Cindy Sherman, based in New
York, the Western center of contemporary art established by the new postwar
generation; and finally, the American Elizabeth Peyton, travelling back and
forth between New York and western Europe since the 1990s.
The exhibition focusses on the artists’ gaze, on their personal
vision of their surroundings that finds expression in the portraits of
themselves and others. In a synoptic perspective, it becomes possible to
experience how the artists’ view of their subject shifts between 1870 and the
present day, and what makes it significant.
#BeyelerCloseUp
https://www.fondationbeyeler.ch/en/exhibitions/close-up
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