My wife and I visited the Alex Katz Prints exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. The MFA and curators arranged a remarkable show where visitors are immediately captivated by the bold colors, evocative landscapes and images of his wife Ada. The love to his wife and family is eminent in his prints. One of the many exhibition highlights are the 37 cut-out paintings of friends, family, and colleagues portrait heads. The portraits inspire the portrait photographer in us and provides new views and compositions to be incorporated within our photography. If you are in the Boston area, rush to see this exhibit which ends 29 July 2012.
From the MFA website: Enter the world of glowing light and vibrant color of “Alex Katz
Prints.” Bold portraits, idyllic landscapes, scenes of sophisticated
leisure—they’re all here in the works of the renowned contemporary
artist. With arresting simplicity of line, color, and form, Katz
distills his subjects down to their essence, with a powerful graphic
punch. Alex Katz (b. 1927), known for his bold, hard-edged figurative
paintings and prints, is one of the most celebrated artists of his
generation. The MFA’s exhibition "Alex Katz Prints," based on an
exhibition organized by the Albertina Graphic Collection, Vienna,
surveys his career from the sixties to the present with 125 works:
prints, unique and editioned cutouts on aluminum, and illustrated books.
Katz depicts family members, art-world friends, and Maine landscapes
with a cool detachment and a seductive elegance, while walking a
tightrope between traditional figuration and pure abstraction. His
portraits are among the most recognizable images in contemporary
art. The artist’s model and muse for half a century has been his wife,
Ada. Images of her in various guises will be on view along with
portraits of prominent figures from New York’s art, dance, and poetry
worlds. A focal point of the exhibition will be the unique series of
painted life-size cutout heads on aluminum, Rush, a 2011 gift
from the artist to the MFA. This will be an inaugural showing at the
Museum of this exciting piece, which will be installed frieze-like in
its own space. Comprising 37 silhouetted painted portrait heads, the
series depicts members of the New York cultural scene of the 1960s and
’70s. The exhibition celebrates the promised gift from the artist to the
MFA of an archive of his editioned prints.
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