Showing posts with label Screens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Screens. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2012

ASIA WEEK, A WORLD-MARKET IN NEW YORK (c) By Polly Guerin



Asian art specialists, auction houses, and 17 museums and cultural institutions celebrate the surging world-market for Asian Art, antiques and design during ASIA WEEK in New York 2012, which runs from March 16 to March 24 with museum exhibitions, lectures and special events. The nine-day celebration is filled with a non-stop schedule of simultaneous gallery open houses which will exhibit the rarest and finest treasures of Asian art and antiques. To help visitors easily navigate the week’s myriad activities, a comprehensive 88-page guide and map will be available at galleries, auction houses, and cultural institutions & www.AsiaWeekNewYork.com. It’s a rare opportunity to participate in this Asian Adventure and I mention but a few highlights to encourage your participation. Here’s the Scoop!!!
CARLO CRISTI from Daverio, Italy presents “Tibetan and Indian Arts and Central Asian Textiles, and features a superbly modeled and finely detailed 15th century Yongle bronze of Mahakala from Tibet and 7th and 8th-century silks from Central Asia. At Arader Galleries, 1016 Madison Ave.
FRANCESCA GALLOWAY joins Asia Week from London and shows “Indian miniatures & Courtly Objects,” including depictions of yalis, mythological felines seen mainly in Hindu temples in South India as well as other parts of India. At the Leslie Feely Fine Art, 33 East 68th St.
KOONEW YORK’S “Portraits & Pantheons in Korean Art” offers a rare opportunity to see extraordinary portraits of late Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910AD) civil court officials, Buddhist priests, and deities rendered in full-length scrolls, album paintings, and wooden sculptures. At Mark Murray Gallery, 39 East 72nd St.
ERIK THOMSEN presents “Japanese Paintings: Screens and Scrolls from the 17th through the 20th Centuries,” including Plovers Flying over Waves by Suzuki Kinji, on a two-panel screen referencing a poem in the famous poetry anthology Kokin Wakashu. At Eric Thomsen, 23 East 67th St.
CHAMBERS FINE ART includes a large-scale installation by Wu Jian’an, one of china’s most celebrated emerging artists. For his creation, the artist uses thousands of cut-out forms derived from Chinese mythology. At Chambers Fine Art, 522 West 19th St.
JOAN B. MIRVISS LTD. Presents “Approaching the Horizon: Important Japanese Prints from the collection of Brewster Hanson, among them some of the most coveted designs by Katsushika Hokusai, such as Amid a Waterfall on the Kisokaido and other masterworks assembled from around the world. At Joan B. Mirviss, Ltd., 39 East 78th St.
THE CHINESE PORCELAIN COMPANY exhibits “Transcending Reality: New Ink Paintings by Tai Xiangzhou,” who is well-known for his dedication to ancient papermaking and for his exclusive use of 18th-century ink and his deft command of materials evident in his landscape paintings reveal the romance between ink and paper. At The Chinese Porcelain Company, 475 Park Ave.
Ta Ta Darlings!!! This was just a small sampling of Asia Week in New York. There are auctions at Bonhams, Christie’s, Doyle and Sotheby’s, lectures and book signings at the China Institute. Gallery Talks at The Korea Society, Brooklyn Museum, Rubin Museum, the Arts of Pacific Asia Show, the Japanese Art Society of America (JASA) on Deco Japan, and symposiums and gala events. Not to be Missed! Asia Week in New York is a rare opportunity that is both educational and entertaining.

Polly Guerin http://www.pollytalk.com/ Fan Mail Welcome: pollytalk@verizon.net

Monday, March 22, 2010

ASIA WEEK: RARE TREASURES IN THE BIG APPLE (C)

By Polly Guerin














A rich opportunity awaits art enthusiasts as ASIA WEEK in New York, March 20-28, freely opens the doors to 31 prestigious Asian Art galleries and museum events. As guests of the Asian Art Dealers of New York you have the rare privilege to view museum-quality art from China, India, Nepal, Tibet, Southeast Asia, Japan and Korea. Here’s the scoop!!!

NANCY WIENER GALLERY
Ancient voices speak through centuries as this new gallery, inside New York’s landmark Ansonia Hotel, presenting a special exhibition of Indian, Southeast Asian and Himalayan works of art and precious objects. Ravishing is a spectacular 19th century silver necklace, set with rubies, intended for Nandi, the sacred bull, associate with the Hindu God Shiva. 2109 Broadway, Suite 10-18. Call for appointment: 212.360.7028.
ART OF THE PAST
Iksita-Behold: Masterworks from South and Southeast Asia include Indian sculptures 12th-13th –century pair, Chola Period of the Shiva Nataraja and his consort, Uma Parameshvari and a 12th century, tantric image of Dancing Hevajara from Cambodia. 1242 Madison Ave. 212.860.7070.
JOHN ESKENAZI, LTD
Among the ancient Asian sculptures is a remarkable terracotta head of a bearded and knotted turbaned man, dating from the 4th to 6th century from the Mermez area on the border of Afghanistan and Southern Uzbekistan, an important trading center on the Silk Road. 24 E. 80th St. 212.249.4987.
KOONNEWYORK
Extraordinary pictorial representation of The Royal Birthday Banquet of Emperor Kojong’s 51st birthday (1902) features 4 historical commemorative panels depicting the final monarch’s last official milestone birthday celebration. By appointment: 212. 317.0105. Adjacent is M.Sutherland Fine Arts. Ltd. Modern Calligraphy Masterworks. Both at 55 E. 80th St., 2nd floor. 212.249.0428.
MD FLACKS
ZITAN, features 19 Small-scale, extraordinary table top pieces and scholar’s objects of Chinese art from the Ming and early Quing dynasties. Outstanding in scale is a large Zitan and Huamu Picnic Box with craftsmanship and quality of the timbers in the mounted trays. 32 East 57th St. 212.
J.J.LALLY & CO.
Chinese ceramics in Black and White explores the art of Chinese potters creating vessels for ritual from the Neolithic period through the 18th century. Take note of the Buddhist ritual Vessel (Kiundika) from the Tang Dynasty and the “Dancing Monkey’s Flask. 41 E. 57th St. 212. 371.3380.
THE CHINESE PORCELAIN CO.
Natural forms in Chinese Ink Painting by celebrated Chinese artists includes Diu Dan’s majestic watercolor "The Dictionary." Of note a set of 15 glazed pottery figures of attendants, Mink Dynasty, 16th century holding a musical instrument or presenting tributes each with charmingly rendered faces. 475 Park Ave., 212. 838.7744.
RALPH M. CHAIT GALLERIES:
Celebrates “The Hundred Antiques-One Hundred Years Dealing in Chinese Art” with archaic bronzes, pottery, porcelain, scholar’s objects and China trade items. A stunning Bronze Bell from the Western Zhou dynasty. 475 Park Ave. 2l2.397.2818.
There are thousands of years to discover in the Asian Art Week Galleries. What a rare opportunity for New Yorkers to see museum-quality art, paintings and sculptures. For a complete list: www.asianartdealersny.com.