Post Tagged with: "modern art"

BRACK: The creativity of Jasper Johns is mind-blowing

BRACK: The creativity of Jasper Johns is mind-blowing

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  A broad retrospective of the art of South Carolina-raised Jasper Johns is too much to absorb.  Hundreds of paintings, prints, drawings and sculptures split between museums in New York and Philadelphia, cover several periods of the career of the artist, who still lives and works in Connecticut.

by · 11/01/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
NEW for 11/1: Education race, Johns’s amazing art, DIG SOUTH’s return

NEW for 11/1: Education race, Johns’s amazing art, DIG SOUTH’s return

IN THIS EDITION
FOCUS: Battle for state’s top education job getting started now
COMMENTARY, Brack: The creativity of Jasper Johns is mind-blowing
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Charleston RiverDogs
NEWS BRIEFS: DIG SOUTH Tech Summit to return in May 2022
FEEDBACK:  Tips to avoid news indigestion helpful
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Bold building
CALENDAR:  Learn more about climate change at Nov. 10 event

Editor’s Note:  Today’s issue marks the beginning of the 14th year of publication of Charleston Currents.  Happy birthday to us!

by · 11/01/2021 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
Improvisation 28, 1912, by Vasily Kandinsky, oil on canvas

BRACK: New Gibbes exhibit offers world-class modern art

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher | Kandinsky, Picasso, Modigliani, Bauer, Chagall, Leger – these aren’t names one normally associates with Charleston’s art scene. But you can see these 20th century abstract masters’ works now at a special new show at the Gibbes Museum of Art that has ties to the Lowcountry’s past.

If you enjoy modern art, you don’t want to miss the Realm of the Spirit show. You’ll find joy looking at the flair of lines and interplay of color in Kandinsky’s works. There’s a Picasso painting of an accordionist created at the height of the artist’s embrace of Cubism. Nearby is a somber, modern Mannerist portrait by Modigliani of the lover who killed herself soon after the painter died of tuberculosis. A few steps away are works that highlight the complete break with representational art that modernists made a century ago.

by · 10/31/2016 · 1 comment · Andy Brack, Views