Ellie at MoMA |
All good art, of course, can be seen from many different points of view. What I came away with from the Robert Gober show was a profound sense of the pain and confusion that we humans carry around inside, and the compassion to make it bearable.
Lunch at the bustling MoMA cafeteria. Long lines, thankfully fast-moving. And an excellent menu. Ellie had a variety of bruschetta, I a cauliflower quiche, and we shared a bowl of butternut squash soup. Quite nice...
Then up the series of connecting escalators to the Matisse cut-out show on the seventh floor...
No pictures allow inside... Sorry! |
This time, Ellie and I both found ourselves attracted by the more abstract of the cut-outs, small, simple, elegant works that seemed to foreshadow the geometric work of many of Matisse's artistic heirs in the 20th century--not to mention Ellie's own paintings in her Laguna Beach studio!
Leaving MoMA, we took a long, delicious walk up Fifth Avenue and into Central Park, heading up the east side of the park towards the Met. To our surprise--we had been expecting rain and cold--the weather was quite wonderful, sunny, with drifting white clouds...
A well-deserved rest! |
We took the path that cuts through the zoo, and paused to watch a pool filled with seal lions at play. They seemed to be channeling their inner porpoise, leaping joyfully out of the water as they swam, one of them even hoisting itself out of the water at the edge of the pool, as though posing for the cameras of a family standing by to watch. A lovely scene. Then on, past numerous grandparents with their grandchildren--we're specially attentive to these right now, and thought often of our little Luka...
After our unhurried walk, we arrived only late afternoon at the Met, where we were panning to see the current exhibition of Cubist works from the Lauder collection.
With only an hour left before closing time, we decided on a quick preliminary visit, to be followed up later in the week. Though I recognize its historical importance and admire the work of Picasso and Braque, I have never felt that attuned to Cubist painting, and was surprised to hear Ellie say the same. Their innovative compositional intricacies are endlessly fascinating, but they lack, for me, the kind of simplicity and there-ness I have come to love in works of art. Their busy-ness has far greater appeal for the eye than for the heart. No matter, the Lauder collection is an amazing revelation, a wealth of art history that commands respect. Tired though the eyes were by this time, and still swamped by the colors of Matisse, I did find a lot to look at in our brief time there. We will go back.
A walk across to Madison Avenue and a turn to the south, heading back towards our hotel. Though it was still early evening, we were ready for food, and found it at a restaurant called, simply, EAT. Shared a salad and a chicken dish. Okay food, indifferent, offhand service. But good artwork by Ellie...
Ellie Blankfort, 2014, Untitled, gravy on white plate, cutlery |
We were left, then, with the long walk down Madison Avenue--from the mid-70s to our hotel at the corner of 47th and Lexington. Plenty to look at in the storefront windows, ranging from uptown extravagance (Cartier, Ralph Lauren) to the more modest shops in the midtown area. And of course the tall buildings and the city lights...
Very tired on our return to the hotel, and myself not a little irritable, trying to locate these images on the computer...
1 comment:
New York rain or shine is always a fun adventure. The guards and the photos is mystery I understand no flash photography. who knows maybe there is a catalogue they wish to sell.
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