Gustav Klimt, Salome (Judith II),
1909 – oil on canvas
Diana Vreelend After Diana Vreeland exhibition at Palazzo Fortuny
“Nothing is more marvelous than sitting at a little table in the gathering of dusk in the Piazza san Marco, the guest of six golden-bronze horses prancing away to paradise”. -Diana Vreeland
It is the first major exhibition
to be dedicated to the extraordinary and complex Diana Vreeland (Paris 1903-
New York 1989). It explores the many sides of her work and seeks to offer a
fresh approach with which to interpret the elements of her style and thinking. The aim being to restore the sense of the
"magnificent gait" with which the "High Priestess of
Fashion", as she was also known, processed through fashion of the
twentieth century, initially during her years at Harper's Bazaar and Vogue, and
then in her role as Special Consultant for the Costume Institute at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
“I don’t think anybody has been in a better place at a better time than
I was when I was editor of Vogue. Vogue
always did stand for people’s lives. I
mean, a new dress doesn’t get you anywhere: it’s the life you’re living in the
dress, and the sort of life you had lived before, and what you will do in it
later. Like all great times, the sixties
were about personalities. It was the
first time when mannequins became personalities. It was a time of great goals, an inventive
time… and these girls invented themselves.
Naturally, as an editor I was there to help them along.” -Diana
Vreeland
“I want to die young—at seventy. I want to die young—at eighty. I want
to die young—at ninety.” – Diana Vreeland
1909-1939 or The 10s, The 20s and
The 30s. Her a quintessential glamor and luxury. Chanel, Fortuny, and
Schiaparelli. Her past and her preferences permeate all her exhibitions.
What Becomes a Legend Most?
Gustav Klimt in the Sign of Hoffmann and the Secession exhibition at the Correr Museum
A century after his acclaimed
participation in the Venice Biennale (1910), Gustav Klimt returns to the lagoon
as the protagonist of a remarkable exhibition in the rooms of the Correr Museum.
It is the perfect occasion to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the artist’s
birth (1862-2012). Gustav Klimt in the Sign of Hoffmann and the Secession was
curated by Alfred Weidinger and features an exceptional series of paintings,
rare and precious drawings, furniture and elegant jewelry, but also elaborate
reconstructions and interesting historical documents. The aim is to introduce
the visitor to the genesis and evolution, in both architecture and painting, of
Klimt’s work and that of the other protagonists of the Viennese Secession. The
movement was one of the highest peaks in European Modernism and counted among
its key players such artists as George Minne, Jan Toorop, Fernand Khnopff, Koloman
Moser, and above all Klimt’s companion on many intellectual ventures and
projects, Josef Hoffmann.
Gustav Klimt: Portrait of Marie
Henneberg, 1901-02 - oil on canvas.
Gustav Klimt’s spectacular Beethoven Frieze triptych, 1901-02.
1 comment:
Lovely, wish I was there too. Alice is, look her up.
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