Studiolo
Commonly painted on vellum, metal, or enamel, cabinet paintings are small works placed in modest rooms known in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as cabinets. Dutch and Flemish painters, already known for their artistic excellence, would strive for even greater refinement in cabinet paintings, which they understood to be under much closer scrutiny due to their size and the intimacy of the rooms. Whether through portraits, landscapes, or still lifes, cabinet paintings showed a painstaking attention to detail and highlighted the skill of the artist. In the later nineteenth century, a number of French artists working in the same tradition eschewed highly rendered subjects for paintings that emphasized the spirit or atmosphere of a subject.
Across modalities, small paintings allowed artists to experiment more readily and visitors to experience more intimately. Taking its name from the Italian term for a room for study and the display of collections, Studiolo brings together contemporary artists alongside works by modern masters in a cabinet-style exhibition at Adler Beatty, and like the cabinet paintings of the 18th and 19th centuries, these small works span genres, techniques, and mediums.
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Commonly painted on vellum, metal, or enamel, cabinet paintings are small works placed in modest rooms known in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as cabinets. Dutch and Flemish painters, already known for their artistic excellence, would strive for even greater refinement in cabinet paintings, which they understood to be under much closer scrutiny due to their size and the intimacy of the rooms. Whether through portraits, landscapes, or still lifes, cabinet paintings showed a painstaking attention to detail and highlighted the skill of the artist. In the later nineteenth century, a number of French artists working in the same tradition eschewed highly rendered subjects for paintings that emphasized the spirit or atmosphere of a subject.
Across modalities, small paintings allowed artists to experiment more readily and visitors to experience more intimately. Taking its name from the Italian term for a room for study and the display of collections, Studiolo brings together contemporary artists alongside works by modern masters in a cabinet-style exhibition at Adler Beatty, and like the cabinet paintings of the 18th and 19th centuries, these small works span genres, techniques, and mediums.
Artists on show
- Anna Park
- Bartholomeus Spranger
- Bob Thompson
- Bony Ramirez
- Dominique Fung
- Dotty Attie
- Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes
- Friedrich Kunath
- Hiba Schahbaz
- Jan van Kessel I
- John Hyen Lee
- Kathia St. Hilaire
- Keita Morimoto
- Lenz Geerk
- Leyla Faye
- Mahesh Baliga
- Max Ernst
- Michaël Borremans
- Milano Chow
- Nina Molloy
- Shahzia Sikander
- Stanley Whitney
- Stella Zhong
- Timothy Lai
- Wayne Thiebaud
- Will Cotton
- Yves Tanguy
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