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Exhibition expedition

A road trip to sample great art is worth the gas money
By GREG COOK  |  June 14, 2006

You’re a New Englander, you’re suspicious of heat and clear skies; as far as you can remember, tans come from bottles. Admit it, you’re more comfortable staying indoors. You just need an acceptable excuse. How about . . . art. Yes, that’s it, art! Here are 10 exhibits across New England that will keep you happily inside all summer. They feature Georgia O’Keeffe, faux-war photography, Anselm Kiefer, cryptozoology, master 19th-century American-landscape painting, and Surrealism, so they’re colorful and compelling enough to sucker some outdoor types into joining you.

“Painting Summer in New England,” Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA, through September 4
A family straps a rowboat on top of their car and drives to the lake shore in Norman Rockwell’s August 1947 Saturday Evening Post cover, Going and Coming.
The kids and their dog hang out the windows, smirking and laughing, blowing bubblegum bubbles, all jazzed-up for adventure. In the next scene, they motor home in the evening, slumped over and exhausted. Only the gray-haired granny in the back seat retains her stoic pose from the morning.

Here in New England, Rockwell, a native New Yorker, said he found a calm place in which to paint and “exactly the models needed for my purpose — the sincere, honest, homespun types that I love to paint.” His purpose was to charm us with visions of the goodhearted America we imagine ourselves to be, but as “Painting Summer in New England” demonstrates, the region has satisfied a multitude of aesthetic needs.

The show’s lineup — Edward Hopper, John Singer Sargent, Andrew Wyeth, George Grosz, Tom Wesselmann, Winslow Homer, Marsden Hartley, Maxfield Parrish, N.C. Wyeth, Neil Welliver, Alex Katz, Rockwell, and more — is reason enough to stop in. These 100 paintings by American masters from the past 150 years depict sunny vacations, the great outdoors, and lounging by the sea.

It’s easy on the eyes. But former–Boston Museum of Fine Arts curator Trevor Fairbrother has also assembled a smart show that reminds us how important the New England landscape (as painted by summer visitors) was to the development of 20th-century American art.


FROZEN IN HER FASCINATION: Georgia O’Keeffe’s From the Lake No.1 (1924) at Vermont’s Shelburne Museum.
“Simple Beauty: Paintings by Georgia O’Keeffe,” Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, VT, June 24 through October 31
Georgia O’Keeffe was so attracted to the powerful tastes and textures of the world that they sometimes froze her in fascination. She once said, “The first alligator pear I became acquainted with, I didn’t eat. I kept it so long that it turned a sort of light brown and was so hard that I could shake it and hear the seed rattle. I kept it for years — a dry thing, a wonderful shape.”

In these 25 paintings, O’Keeffe strips down sunburned New Mexico mountains, smoke-churning New York factories, emerald-alligator pears, and voluptuous folds of petunias and hibiscuses to jolt you with the voltage of their essential shapes and sultry colors — just as she was jolted. Her work is so familiar and beguiling that it’s easy to overlook how skillful and insistently sexy it is.

Also check out the Shelburne’s temporary exhibits: sleek furniture by Frank Gehry, Isamu Noguchi and Eero Saarinen; 19th-century New England weathervanes; and 19th- and 20th-century kaleidoscope quilts.

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Related: The great outdoors, Looking directly, To the lighthouse, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Culture and Lifestyle, Painting, Visual Arts,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
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  •   WIZARDS AND MASTERPIECES  |  November 06, 2009
    At “Harry Potter: The Exhibition” at the Museum of Science, when a robed attendant places the sorting hat on a visitor’s head and soon after a door whooshes open to reveal the Hogwarts Express, you find yourself filled with the kind of giddy expectation you feel when getting your hands on a Potter book the day it’s released.
  •   GANG OF FOUR  |  November 03, 2009
    The elegantly simple shapes of Providence artist Lisa Perez’s shallow wooden wall sculptures at 5 Traverse Gallery take on charming, wobbly, bubbly forms with uneven edges, as if they were worn away by rivers.
  •   HARVARD ‘ACT UP’ SHOW GETS RISE FROM RIGHT-WINGERS  |  November 02, 2009
    Taking a detour from directly bashing President Obama, right-wingers are now hot and bothered by a Harvard art exhibit. And they have an Obama administration foil toward whom they can channel their bile.
  •   IN FOCUS  |  October 29, 2009
    Photography has been New England’s greatest contribution to art of the past century.
  •   CASTING SPELLS  |  October 21, 2009
    In 1915, Harvard University and Museum of Fine Arts archæologists digging in a rocky cliff at Deir el-Bersha unearthed the 4000-year-old tomb of the Djehutynakhts, an ancient Egyptian governor and his wife.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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