| Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals The city of Venice inspired a school of competitive view painters whose achievements are among the most brilliant in 18th-century art. The exhibition celebrates the rich variety of these Venetian views, known as vedute, with some 20 masterworks by Canaletto and more than 30 by his rivals, including Guardi, Bellotto, and Marieschi. Responding to an art market fueled largely by the Grand Tour, these gifted painters depicted the monuments and vistas of Venice in different moods and seasons. February 20–May 30 East Building
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| Gauguin: Maker of Myth Paul Gauguin's sumptuous, colorful images of Brittany and the islands of the South Seas—some of the most appealing paintings in modern art—are among more than 100 works featured in the first major Gauguin exhibition in the United States in 20 years. Organized around themes of the artist/creator, earthly paradise, the "noble savage," and exotic Eve, this exhibition examines Gauguin's use of religious and mythological motifs to tell stories, as he reinvented and appropriated myths from his European cultural heritage and Polynesian legend. February 27–June 5 East Building
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| Collections Frozen in Time: Selections from the National Gallery of Art Library As private collections grew in the 17th and 18th centuries, many collectors commissioned catalogues to document their treasures. Written by noted scholars or the collectors themselves, the catalogues were illustrated with lavish engravings depicting the assembled objects in fine detail. The National Gallery of Art Library includes a wide variety of these publications, and this special installation highlights 60 of the best examples, from such collectors as James Stanley, 10th Earl of Derby, to Leopold Wilhelm, Archduke of Austria. February 5–July 24 West Building, Ground Floor, Gallery 21
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| James Rosenquist, Spectator—Speed of Light (2001) An energetic late painting by James Rosenquist (b. 1933), Spectator—Speed of Light is the second by the artist to enter the collection after the 2008 purchase of White Bread (1964). The newly acquired work is part of a series inspired by Einstein's theory of relativity, in which Rosenquist explores the disjointed perceptions of artist and viewer, as well as the ambiguous distinction between figuration and abstraction. East Building, Upper Level
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| Gallery Talk "Man Working" by Dox Thrash Dox Thrash was an accomplished printmaker living and working in Philadelphia between the two world wars of the previous century. Gallery lecturer Wilford Scott explores how Thrash’s bold, emphatic works told the story of everyday life during that period, especially as experienced by African Americans. Although not currently on public view, this exceptional work will be shown in the print study room to those attending the lecture. Registration required; call (202) 842-6063. February 10–12, 2:00 (20 mins.) East Building
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| Concerts Each Wednesday during the month of February, the Gallery presents free lunchtime concerts. Pianist William Chapman Nyaho plays music of the African diaspora on February 16. Sunday concerts include violist Marcus Thompson on February 13 (also in honor of African American History Month) and a program of baroque Italian chamber music, played on February 20 by the Vivaldi Project in honor of Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals. February 13 and 20, 6:30 West Building, West Garden Court February 16, 12:10 East Building Auditorium
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| Teacher Workshop Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals Registration is now open for a teacher workshop relating to the exhibition Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals. Following an introductory talk on the exhibition, participants may opt to attend a studio-art activity or a lecture that explores Venice in film and literature. Fee: $10 March 19, 10:00–3:00 Education Studio, Concourse
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| Garden Cafe Italia In honor of the exhibitions Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals and Italian Master Drawings from the Wolfgang Ratjen Collection, 1525–1835, Chef Fabio Trabocchi is transforming the menu in the Garden Cafe from February 11, 2011, to March 20, 2012, with a selection of signature Italian dishes. Chef Trabocchi has returned to Washington from New York to open the highly anticipated restaurant Fiola in Penn Quarter. Monday–Saturday, 11:30–2:00 Sunday, noon–4:00 Sunday, 4:00–6:00 (concert menu only on performance days) West Building, Ground Floor
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Follow us on Facebook and Twitter (@ngadc) Captions: Canaletto, The Entrance to the Grand Canal, Looking West, with Santa Maria della Salute, c. 1729, oil on canvas, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, The Robert Lee Blaffer Memorial Collection, Gift of Sarah Campbell Blaffer. © Copyright The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Paul Gauguin, Merahi Metua no Tehamana (Tehamana Has Many Parents), 1893, oil on canvas, The Art Institute of Chicago, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deering McCormick; Frans van Stampart and Anton Joseph von Prenner, Prodromus (Vienna, 1735), engraving, National Gallery of Art Library, David K. E. Bruce Fund; James Rosenquist, Spectator—Speed of Light, 2001, oil on linen, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Collection of Robert and Jane Meyerhoff; Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, photo © 2007 Gregory Benson; Dox Thrash, Man Working (recto), early 1940s, carborundum print in black, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Ruth Fine in memory of Larry Day; Film still from Killer of Sheep, Photofest; Photo courtesy of The Vivaldi Project; Film still from Ormie, Courtesy Starz Animation; Canaletto, The Piazza San Marco and the Piazzetta, Looking Southeast, c. 1743, oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Mrs. Barbara Hutton; Chef Fabio Trabocchi; ArtXP giclee reproduction on canvas of John Singer Sargent's Street in Venice, 1882, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of the Avalon Foundation; Alma Thomas, Red Rose Cantata, 1973, acrylic on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Vincent Melzac. All art images are details.
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