Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Visit to the deYoung, San Francisco

I recently took a trip to the deYoung museum in San Francisco.


I went, initially, to see the Sargent on display. She was gorgeous:

John Singer Sergent, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, 1892, oil on canvas
The highlights from the permanent collection were some Wayne Thiebaud:

Wayne Thiebaud, Three Machines, 1963, Oil on canvas

He was one of the first artists to get me really excited about landscape painting. They have a whimsical exaggeration to them that I find really appealing. I'm also really attracted to his super saturated blue shadows. I could stare at them all day. 

Wayne Thiebaud, Diagonal Freeway, 1993, Acrylic on canvas


Elmer Bischoff, Girl with Towel, 1960, Oil on canvas


Elmer Bischoff, Yellow Lampshade, 1969, Oil on canvas

I had only been to the deYoung once before this trip, before I was an art major so I didn't have the same eye looking at the pieces I now have. I remembered this piece, however, from my last visit because it was so impactful. It was nice to return with a more seasoned gaze and to find it was just as impressive, if not more so, than the first time. These are the remains of a Southern Black Baptist Church that was destroyed by arsonists. It is at once quiet and loud, sad and angry. The scale of this piece makes you feel as if you are right in the midst of it, surrounded and swallowed by it.

Cornelia Parker, Anti-Mass, 2005, wood charcoal, nails, and wire



And, finally, these beautiful pieces were tucked away by the elevator to the tower. They are donated works by Ruth Asawa. More than the pieces themselves, the shadows they cast are what inspire me the most about these works. They are seemingly simple in their construction yet very intricate. I am glad I didn't miss these on this visit to the deYoung.



1 comment:

  1. I haven't heard from Cornelia Parker in a long time. I used to include her in the contemporary course, and the De Young sculpture is a wonderful sculpture. Impressive example of the signifying power of materials and space in abstract sculpture.Your blog entry made me wonder what Parker's been up to lately.

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