Archive for August, 2006

Southwest’s largest auction of classic Western art, Nov 4, SF, NM

Wednesday, August 23rd, 2006

QUICK ON THE DRAW

On November 4, 2006, Santa Fe’s Eldorado Hotel hosts the thirteenth annual Santa Fe Art Auction. Since 1994, the SFAA has established itself as the Southwest’s largest auction of classic Western art. Focusing primarily on the works of the artists of the renowned Santa Fe Art Colony and the Taos Society of Artists, as well as the historically significant painters and sculptors of the American West, the list of artists whose works have come under the gavel of the SFAA is a who’s who of western art. Frederic Remington, Charles M. Russell, Joseph Henry Sharp, Henry Farny, E. Martin Hennings, Victor Higgins and Thomas Moran were all featured in last year’s auction that drew more than 400 people to bid on the 285 lots. 2005 boasted a record-breaking total of $3.7m with the highest price of $370,000 being paid for Charles Marion Russell’s watercolor ‘Blackfeet And Shoshone.’

Among the significant pieces in this year’s auction is Birger Sandzen’s ‘Autumn Symphony.’ Painted in 1930, it was bought by Kansas Senator Henry Allen who hung it in the magnificent home he had commissioned from Frank Lloyd Wright. When Allen sold the house to Wichita oilman Ed Adair in 1947, the painting remained, hanging in the reception hall above the fireplace. ‘Autumn Symphony’ was painted in Estes Park, Colorado where the Swedish-born Sandzen was inspired to create some of his best work including this masterpiece. With an estimate of $250,000 – $350,000, ‘Autumn Symphony’ is the largest ever Sandzen work to be sold in auction and confirms his reputation as one of the most sought after Western artists.

Frank Tenney Johnson’s ‘Coming Up On The Trail’ is another of the highlights being offered in this year’s sale, along with works by Gustave Baumann, Edward Borein, Eanger Irving Couse, Gerard Curtis Delano, Maynard Dixon, Henry Farny, Leon Gaspard, Frederic Remington, Charles M. Russell, Thomas Moran and John Henry Sharp. In addition to pieces by such established names, the SFAA is also selling works of modern and contemporary art, confirming the 2006 Santa Fe Art Auction as the place to be for collectors and fans of Western art.

Santa Fe Art Auction 2006
Saturday, November 4, 2006
Eldorado Hotel, Santa Fe, New Mexico
For further information, contact the SFAA at:
P.O Box 2437
Santa Fe, NM 87504-2437

Tel: (505) 954 5858
Fax: (505) 954 5754

Email: curator@santafeartauction.com
http://www.santafeartauction.com

High Res pictures available online at http://www.ballantinesbiz.com/newmexico/SFAA.

Sarah Robarts
sarah@ballantinespr.com
310-454-3080 Tel.
310 570 7355 Cell
http://www.ballantinespr.com

Vintage Autos from UK to Travel Old Rte 66 Through New Mexico

Wednesday, August 16th, 2006

New Mexico, Land of Enchantment

Vintage Austin Sevens to Travel
Old Route 66 Through New Mexico

This September 2006, five vintage Austin Sevens from Britain – all members of the 750 Motor Club, founded in 1939 mainly for such cars – plan to pass through New Mexico as they travel Old Route 66 from Chicago to Los Angeles.

They will commence their epic journey tentatively on September 3, 2006, and plan to stop in Tucumcari on the night of September 10th, in Santa Fe on September 11-12th, Grants on the 13th and reach Santa Monica, California, by the 23rd, if all goes well.

The driver of the support vehicle and her daughter, who is co-driving one of the Austins, are making the journey in memory of their late husband and father, who had hoped to travel Route 66.

“All the cars and crews have traveled extensively in Europe in their Sevens and four of them completed a 3,500-mile journey from Buenos Aires, across the Andes to Santiago, Chile, and back in February 2005,” said Ken Cooke, an organizer of the event along with Vince Leek. “The cars date from 1929 to 1938 and are the type of car on which the ‘American Austin’ and ‘Bantam’ cars were based.”

Cooke said Jack Rittenhouse did the same Route 66 trip in a Bantam in 1946 and wrote about it in his book, “A Guide Book to Highway 66″, which is another inspiration for the return trip 60 years later.

The cars arrive in New York by sea and the crews by air on August 23. Five days later they leave for Chicago for the start of what “we anticipate will be a fascinating journey,” Cooke said. The cars and their drivers will return to the United Kingdom at the end of September.

The participants include Richard and Marlies Bishop from Exeter, Devon in a 1938 sports; Ken and Eileen Cooke from Hertfordshire in a 1930 four-seat tourer (roadster); Vince Leek from Warminster and Diana Garside from North Carolina in a 1929 tourer; George and Joy Mooney from Bournemouth in a 1934 Cambridge special; Stan Price from Carlisle in a 1932 ‘box’ saloon (sedan); and Veronica Garside from Swindon Wilts and Wendy Hider from Epsom in the support car.

New Mexico, Land of Enchantment

For more information contact:
Ken Cooke, ken.cooke@ntlworld.com, or
Vince Leek, leek@austin7engineering.freeserve.co.uk

Mike Stauffer,
Communications Director, New Mexico Tourism Department
505-827-7379, mike.stauffer@state.nm.us

Sarah Robarts
sarah@ballantinespr.com
310-454-3080 Tel.
310 570 7355 Cell

http://www.ballantinespr.com

Dali, Picasso, and Kandinsky at Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe

Friday, August 11th, 2006
New Mexico, Land of Enchantment

MUSEUM OF Fine Arts

News


Dali, Picasso, and Kandinsky at
Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe

No. 7
Piet Mondrian, Dutch (1872-1944)
1937-42
oil on canvas
31 1/2 x 24 7/16 in.
Museum purchase

Santa Fe, NM-Collecting Modernism: European Modernism from the Munson- Williams-Proctor Art Museum is a stunning exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts that features 26 notable works by Wassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian, Henry Moore, Pablo Picasso, Georges Rouault, and other key modernist figures. The show runs Friday, September 29, 2006, through Sunday, January 7, 2007, with a free, public reception from 5:30-7:30 pm on September 29. A companion exhibit, European Modern from the Museum of Fine Arts Permanent Collection, runs Friday, October 6, 2006, through Sunday, November 26, 2006. There will be no public reception for the companion exhibit.

In line with the Museum of Fine Arts’ mission to “bring the art of the world to New Mexico and the art of New Mexico to the world,” the two exhibitions opening this fall will showcase a select group of European paintings that represent the most important stylistic developments of the twentieth century.

“To have the finest work of Mondrian, Picasso, Kandinsky, Duchamp-Villon, and Dali, among others, on display at the Museum of Fine Arts is a dream come true,” says curator Tim Rodgers. “I could not be more excited about opening the doors of the museum this fall so our audience can enjoy the work of these masters.”

Improvisation No 23 (Troika),
Wassily Kandinsky, Russian (1866-1944)
Improvisation No 23 (Troika), 1911
oil on canvas
43 1/4 x 43 3/16 in.
Museum purchase

Collecting Modernism will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts from the Munson-Williams-Proctor Art Institute in Utica, New York-a museum that holds a noteworthy collection of European modernist art. The Museum’s professional staff began building its holdings in 1944 and, by the early 1950s, began to assemble a small collection of early 20th-century European art to put into context the efforts of American artists represented in the Museum.

The resulting collection of works represents significant examples of major European modernist movements, such as Cubism, Futurism, De Stijl, Surrealism, and abstraction. During the past fifty years, other important works have been added to the European modernist holdings. The quality and beauty of the works are evidence of the thoughtfulness with which the collection was formed.

“I consider the art in this exhibition to be of the highest caliber,” said Rodgers. “This is an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to view some of the most important European works of art produced during the first half of the twentieth century. One of Wassily Kandinsky’s earliest abstract paintings is included in the show as well as one of Pablo Picasso’s seminal, early cubist paintings. Seldom has New Mexico enjoyed the privilege to view these remarkable works in our home state. This opportunity may not happen again.”

Collecting Modernism will enable visitors to draw connections between the art produced in New Mexico and that done by European artists. For example, Andrew Dasburg looked closely at the paintings of Picasso and the stylistic relationship between the two artists is apparent. Seldom does the Museum of Fine Arts have the opportunity to draw this visual parallel because of the rarity of Picasso’s work in the western part of the United States.

A companion exhibition, European Modern from the Museum of Fine Arts Permanent Collection, will open in the Director’s Gallery shortly after Collecting Modernism. Predominantly works on paper, it will highlight European modernist work from the museum’s collections. Included in this exhibit are works by Cézanne and a painting by Dali.

A lecture series, “New Art, New World, New Mexico,” will be held in conjunction with the exhibitions. Curator Tim Rodgers will present five talks on the influence of modernist art, the European artists who came to America, and the diffusion of modernist ideas to New Mexico on Wednesdays October 4, 11, and 18 and November 1 and 8. Admission is $10. For more information, contact Martha Landry at 505-476-5068.


For high-resolution images, please contact Shay Cannedy at shay.cannedy@state.nm.us or 505-476-1144.

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The Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1917 as the Art Gallery of the Museum of New Mexico. Housed in a spectacular Pueblo Revival building designed by I. H. and William M. Rapp, it was based on their New Mexico building at the Panama-California Exposition (1915). The museum’s architecture inaugurated what has come to be known as “Santa Fe Style.” For more than 85 years the Museum has collected and exhibited work by leading artists from New Mexico and elsewhere. This tradition continues today with a wide array of exhibitions with work from the world’s leading artists.

The Museum of Fine Arts is a division of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs.

INFORMATION FOR THE PUBLIC

The Museum of Fine Arts is located on the Plaza in Santa Fe at 107 W. Palace Avenue. Call 505-476-5072 for more information, or visit http://www.mfasantafe.org.

**Please note: New Summer Hours Memorial Day through Labor Day:
Monday through Sunday, 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
During all other seasons, the museum is closed on Mondays.

Admission:
School groups free. Children 11 and under free. New Mexico residents with I.D. free on Sundays. New Mexico resident Senior Citizens (age 60+) with I.D. free Wednesdays. Museum Foundation members free. Students with I.D. $1 discount. Single visit to one museum: $8.00 for non-state residents, $6.00 for New Mexico residents. Four day pass to five museums including state-run museums in Santa Fe plus The Museum of Spanish Colonial Art $18.00. One day pass for two museums (Museum of International Folk Art and Museum of Indian Arts and Culture OR Museum of Fine Arts and Palace of the Governors) $12.00. Group rate for ten or more people: single visit $6.00, four day pass $16.00.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Tim Rodgers, Curator
505-476-5058
tim.rodgers@state.nm.us

Shay Cannedy, PR Manager
505-476-1144
shay.cannedy@state.nm.us

Sarah Robarts
sarah@ballantinespr.com
310-454-3080 Tel.
310 570 7355 Cell
http://www.ballantinespr.com