Art events, galleries museums, and artist profiles for New York
the #1 contemporary art network
Red_dot_banner_ad

Brooklyn Museum of Art

EVENT
Exhibition Detail
Harriet Hosmer, Lost and Found
Curated by: Lauren Ross
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, NY 11238-6052
Main-recommend2 1 person has recommended this exhibit


June 5th - January 24th, 2010
 
The Sleeping Faun, 1865,Patricia CroninPatricia Cronin, The Sleeping Faun, 1865,
2006, Watercolor on paper
© Courtesy of the artist & Brooklyn Museum of Art
> QUICK FACTS
WEBSITE:  
http://www.brooklynmuseum.org
NEIGHBORHOOD:  
brooklyn
EMAIL:  
information@brooklynmuseum.org
PHONE:  
718-638-5000
OPEN HOURS:  
Wed - Fri 10-5; Sat & Sun 11-6; First Sat each month 11-11
TAGS:  
watercolors
> DESCRIPTION

In this solo exhibition in the Herstory Gallery of the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center, Brooklyn-based artist Patricia Cronin presents watercolors illustrating the work of the nineteenth-century American expatriate sculptor Harriet Hosmer.

Hosmer defied expected roles for female artists of her day and yet achieved an uncommon level of success. However, today she is remembered only by a relatively small group of specialists. Inspired by the dearth of thorough scholarship on Hosmer, Cronin has compiled the definitive Hosmer catalogue raisonné (the publication that comprehensively lists an artist’s complete works). In the book, each of Hosmer’s works is represented by a watercolor painted by Cronin. A selection of these watercolors comprises the exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum.

Hosmer’s neoclassical works depict such historical, mythological, and literary figures as Zenobia, Medusa, and Puck. Cronin’s watercolors capture Hosmer’s noble and playful subjects, as well as the luminosity of the marble carvings. In her research, Cronin has found written references to a handful of Hosmer sculptures that do not appear to have ever been photographed. To represent these pieces, Cronin has made watercolors of what she calls “ghosts”—vague, formless, and ethereal images of sculptures that exist undocumented somewhere in the world, but are lost to art history.


Copyright © 2006-2009 by ArtSlant, Inc. All images and content remain the © of their rightful owners.