I left the house at 6:30 AM and got to the auction house in Mount Kisco exactly at 10:30, right when they open! 15 minutes later I was back on the road, and parked in NYC by 11:35 - so I was at the Museum at 11:47
To get to the back-right American Art section, you HAVE TO GO THROUGH The Temple of Dendur:
The Museum currently has an exhibition titled "Karl Bodmer: North American Portraits". As an artist, he journeyed through the Upper Missouri area 1833-34, drawing Native Americans and the landscape. I have not like his work as much as I like Alfred Jacob Miller, but Bodmer's piece "View of the Stone Walls" caught my eye:
Also On Display are some New Art - ""Promised Gifts". The beauties include:
Sanford Robinson Gifford - "An Indian Summer Day On Claverack Creek", 1877-79 oil
Alfred Thompson Bricher - "Low Tide, Hetherington Cove, Grand Manan", 1899 oil
William Stanley Haseltine - "Rocks at Nahant", 1864 oil
In the Winslow Homer galleries, there was something new:
"Harvest Scene", c. 1873
plus an old favorite: "Moonlight, Wood Island Light", 1894:
Back in the American sections, there were 2 old favorites:
Albert Bierstadt - "Merced River, Yosemite Valley", 1866 oil:
Thomas Moran - "The Teton Range", 1897 oil:
And then it was over to Gallery 620, with its wonderful selection of paintings by Canaletto and Francesco Guardi:
Canaletto - "Piazza San Marco", late 1720s oil:
Francesco Guardi - "Piazza San Marco", late 17260s oil:
And then it was time to visit Galleries 818 and 821, with their new Monets:
"Regatta at Sainte-Adresse", 1867 oil:
"La Grenouillère", 1869 oil:
"Île aux Fleures near Vétheuil", 1880 oil:
"View of Vétheuil", 1880 oil:
Then off to see a couple of Picassos, then downstairs to Gallery 541 to see 2 wonderful pieces by "Workshop of Francesco Guardi": "Venice: The Dogana and Santa Maria della Salute" and "Venice: The Rialto". UNFORTUNATELY, Gallery 541 is "Closed Off":
I walked back out onto Fifth Avenue at 1:30, so I figured I would just walk up a few blocks and try my luck getting into the Guggenheim early:
It was there that I stopped MapMyWalk, which I had started right before going into The Met - 2.86 miles:
On my way up the big spiral staircase I saw a wonderful Picasso - "Woman Ironing", 1904 oil:
Now, how do I want to talk about Jackson Pollock? Wendy and I saw "Mural", 1943, [in the collection of the University of Iowa] at the MFA in Boston on July 23, 2019, as part of the exhibition: "Mural: Jackson Pollock | Katharina Grosse":
I left there, and made my way down to 75th and Madison - Frick Madison:
The Collection is on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors, so I tooke the elevator up and walked down. The J.M.W. Turners are on the 4th floor:
The Harbor of Dieppe, 1826 (?)
Cologne: The Arrival of a Packet-Boat: Evening, 1826
I was then told the "Photographs are not allowed", which leaves the Claude Monet ("Vétheuil in Winter", 1878-1879) and the two by Francesco Guardi ("Regatta in Venice", ca. 1770 and "View of the Cannaregio Canal in Venice", ca. 1770) un-photographed. But their images are available on-line:
Back up to my car park, and left The City at 3 PM. Traffic getting out of town, and on the Parkways in New York and Connecticut. 483 miles driving - Home at 8:01 PM - Thank You God for a Great Adventure!!
Driving music - music I have not shared on a blog before:
Pat Metheny, Dave Holland & Roy Haynes - Question And Answer, 2008
Then, becuase jazz still sounds good:
The Miles Davis Quintet - Miles, 1956
The Miles Davis Quintet - The Legendary Prestige Quintet Recordings (Disc 3) [only "Round Midnight"], 1957
Paul McCartney & Wings - Band On The Run, 1973
Paula Cole - This Fire, 1996 (only 2 songs)
Pearl Jam - Live At Benaroya Hall (22-Oct-2003), 2003
Pat Metheny Group - Offramp, 2012 debut album
Otis Redding - Live In Europe, 1967 live album
various - Warren Miller's Cold Fusion, 2001
Cold Fusion [2001] 19 songs,
Storm [2002] 9 songs,
Journey [2003] 18 songs,
Impact [2004] 22 songs,
Higher Ground [2005] 18 songs,
Off The Grid [2006] 14 songs,
Playground [2007] 2 songs,
Children Of Winter [2008] 26 songs)
I don't ever listen to them, so these drives are a good opportunity to listen to them and keep what I like. Out of today's listening, only "Silence" by Delerium (featuring Sarah McLachlan) is a keeper, but I'll see if it is a different version from the one on Delerium's Karma album.
Jackson Browne - The Next Voice You Hear: The Best Of Jackson Browne, 1997 greatest hits album
Peter, Paul & Mary - Album 1700, 1967
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