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This is the official Tumblr of The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. We post all sorts of museum-related goodness, plus submissions of artwork from you, our talented and magnificent followers, on Fridays.

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    Happy birthday to Henri Matisse, born 143 years ago today!
You’ve likely seen many paintings by Matisse, but have you ever looked closely at his drawings? For Henri Matisse, drawing was an intimate medium, a means of capturing the fleeting gestures and emotions of both subject and artist.  He made drawings to work out problems of structure and composition for subsequent works. Matisse viewed printmaking as an extension of drawing, and would turn to printmaking after extended periods of painting, as if to digest his experience through the use of a new medium.  Between the years of 1900 and 1954, Matisse created more than 800 prints!
Image: Henri Matisse, Fée au chapeau de clarté, Souvenir du Mallarmé (Fairy in a Luminous Hat, Souvenir of Mallarmé), as viewed through Artscope.

    Happy birthday to Henri Matisse, born 143 years ago today!

    You’ve likely seen many paintings by Matisse, but have you ever looked closely at his drawings? For Henri Matisse, drawing was an intimate medium, a means of capturing the fleeting gestures and emotions of both subject and artist.  He made drawings to work out problems of structure and composition for subsequent works. Matisse viewed printmaking as an extension of drawing, and would turn to printmaking after extended periods of painting, as if to digest his experience through the use of a new medium.  Between the years of 1900 and 1954, Matisse created more than 800 prints!

    Image: Henri Matisse, Fée au chapeau de clarté, Souvenir du Mallarmé (Fairy in a Luminous Hat, Souvenir of Mallarmé), as viewed through Artscope.

    Posted on Monday, December 31st 2012

    Happy birthday to Jean-Michel Basquiat, who would have been 52 years old today.  
A remarkable capacity for introspection and distillation made itself apparent in the graffiti work of Basquiat’s teen years, wherein he adopted the pseudonym SAMO and sprayed messages onto walls throughout NYC.  This craft of creating metaphors, and a sense of play in staging opposing dichotomies (integration and segregation, wealth and poverty, etc.) came to define his work as a painter. 
Pictured here is a detail of Untitled (Venus/The Great Circle), a work currently on view as part of the Logan Collection at SFMOMA.

    Happy birthday to Jean-Michel Basquiat, who would have been 52 years old today.  

    A remarkable capacity for introspection and distillation made itself apparent in the graffiti work of Basquiat’s teen years, wherein he adopted the pseudonym SAMO and sprayed messages onto walls throughout NYC.  This craft of creating metaphors, and a sense of play in staging opposing dichotomies (integration and segregation, wealth and poverty, etc.) came to define his work as a painter. 

    Pictured here is a detail of Untitled (Venus/The Great Circle), a work currently on view as part of the Logan Collection at SFMOMA.

    Posted on Saturday, December 22nd 2012

    cheatingdeath:

I took some pics of Victor Man’s work at SFMOMA’s Six Lines of Flight exhibition.  There’re two other big paintings that I didn’t get so you’ll just have to go there and see them.  It ends the 31st of this month.  I highly recommend you check it out.

Great reminder- Six Lines of Flight, a terrific exhibition of contemporary art from all over the world, closes on Dec. 31! 

    cheatingdeath:

    I took some pics of Victor Man’s work at SFMOMA’s Six Lines of Flight exhibition.  There’re two other big paintings that I didn’t get so you’ll just have to go there and see them.  It ends the 31st of this month.  I highly recommend you check it out.

    Great reminder- Six Lines of Flight, a terrific exhibition of contemporary art from all over the world, closes on Dec. 31

    Posted on Friday, December 21st 2012

    Reblogged from The Tastiest Way to Cheat Death

    parkavenuearmory:

Go figure… Ann Hamilton and Annie Liebovitz are old chums.
Annie photographed Ann for a feature on her work that appeared in Vogue in March 1994. The portraits are telling and beautiful, and the story (by writer/curator Neville Wakefield) is worth a read too.
See for yourself here.

We HIGHLY recommend that you all click-through and check out those photos in Vogue— they’re beautiful!
Fun fact: back in 2007, Ann Hamilton installed Indigo Blue, another hugely provocative work, here at SFMOMA. You can see a fascinating time-lapse video of the installation here.

    parkavenuearmory:

    Go figure… Ann Hamilton and Annie Liebovitz are old chums.

    Annie photographed Ann for a feature on her work that appeared in Vogue in March 1994. The portraits are telling and beautiful, and the story (by writer/curator Neville Wakefield) is worth a read too.

    See for yourself here.

    We HIGHLY recommend that you all click-through and check out those photos in Vogue— they’re beautiful!

    Fun fact: back in 2007, Ann Hamilton installed Indigo Blue, another hugely provocative work, here at SFMOMA. You can see a fascinating time-lapse video of the installation here.

    Posted on Tuesday, December 18th 2012

    Reblogged from Park Avenue Armory

    Can there be architecture without buildings? What if elements of architecture – such as a floor or a wall – extended endlessly? 
Curator Joseph Becker was motivated by these questions when organising the exhibition Field Conditions, now on view at SFMOMA. Read an interview w/ Becker on these questions and more here.
Image: Lebbeus Woods, ‘Conflict Space 2′, 2006, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. © Lebbeus Woods

    Can there be architecture without buildings? What if elements of architecture – such as a floor or a wall – extended endlessly? 

    Curator Joseph Becker was motivated by these questions when organising the exhibition Field Conditions, now on view at SFMOMA. Read an interview w/ Becker on these questions and more here.

    Image: Lebbeus Woods, ‘Conflict Space 2′, 2006, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. © Lebbeus Woods

    Posted on Thursday, December 13th 2012