Looking In: Portraits and Their Stories
Looking In: Portraits and Their Stories features a curated selection of significant 20th and 21st Century works from regional museums and private collections. The selected portraits express stories of both the artists and their subjects, reflecting movements in modern and contemporary art history.
Beginning in the 20th century, wider access to photography made portraiture more available to artists as well as everyday hobbyists. As a result, painters and printmakers were free to explore outside of the boundaries of realism while depicting the human figure. Often these artists sought to express personality and emotion with symbolic distortions, non-realistic colors, and narrative settings. Using those tools, they were more equipped to express and explore the unique identities of their subjects. The thirty-three artists in this exhibition apply their observational skills to represent not only what a person looks like, but who they are as a multifaceted individual. This process is collaborative, creating a single story that includes the likeness of the sitter and the presence of the artist.
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Looking In: Portraits and Their Stories features a curated selection of significant 20th and 21st Century works from regional museums and private collections. The selected portraits express stories of both the artists and their subjects, reflecting movements in modern and contemporary art history.
Beginning in the 20th century, wider access to photography made portraiture more available to artists as well as everyday hobbyists. As a result, painters and printmakers were free to explore outside of the boundaries of realism while depicting the human figure. Often these artists sought to express personality and emotion with symbolic distortions, non-realistic colors, and narrative settings. Using those tools, they were more equipped to express and explore the unique identities of their subjects. The thirty-three artists in this exhibition apply their observational skills to represent not only what a person looks like, but who they are as a multifaceted individual. This process is collaborative, creating a single story that includes the likeness of the sitter and the presence of the artist.
Artists on show
- Albert Jean Adolphe
- Alfred Maurer
- Alice Neel
- Andy Warhol
- Beverly McIver
- Catherine Prescott
- Charles Alston
- Charles Joffe
- David Clyde Driskell
- Dawoud Bey
- Faith Ringgold
- Francisco Zuñiga
- Henry Woodbridge Parton
- Larry Clark
- Lee Friedlander
- Lucian Freud
- Lucien Clergue
- Manuel Álvarez Bravo
- Marta Sánchez
- Marvin Lowe
- Max Beckmann
- Odilon Redon
- Philip Pearlstein
- Robert Armetta
- Robert Crumb
- Robert Mapplethorpe
- Rudolf Bauer
- Salvador Dalí
- Scott Lifshutz
- Shauna Frischkorn
- Sheila Pree Bright
- William J. Ferguson
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