Tag Archives: The Morgan Library and Museum

MAKI NAMEKAWA PERFORMS GLASS

Phil has written sonatas for other instruments before, but this would be his first for the piano. I imagined how much he would pour into it given that the piano is the instrument he has spent a lifetime playing (at home and on countless tours). However, Phil is not an artist to let the potential of a “first” be tethered to what is known. His exuberance came from writing something that would far surpass what he could play, or be able to entirely hear on the instrument itself beyond imagining it as the composer. There would need to be someone who could bring the music to life and bridge the musical space between themselves, the audience and the composer.

Phil composed his Piano Sonota for Maki Namekawa and Maki collaborated on its shape and dimensionality by adding her tremendous capacity and insight as a pianist. — Kristy Edmunds

In spring of 2019, Philip Glass sent Namekawa the score for the sonata, and the following summer the two longtime collaborators premiered the work at the Klavier-Festival Ruhr. The piece made its American debut in November of that year at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City.

This weekend, UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performance (CAP UCLA)—in association with Ars Electronica in Linz—will stream a prerecorded performance by Namekawa of the piece. Also on the program: Mozart Camargo Guarnieri’s Sonatina No. 3 in G-clef (1937), Alban Berg’s Piano Sonata, Op. 1 (1907-1908), and György Ligeti’s Musica Ricercata.

See link below for details.

PIANO SONATA BY PHILIP GLASS—PERFORMED BY MAKI NAMEKAWA

UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performance

Sunday, January 10.

3 pm on the West Coast; 6 pm East Coast.

From top: Philip Glass and Maki Namekawa at the Klavier-Festival Ruhr, 2019; Namekawa, photograph by Tom Mesic; Namekawa, photograph by Verena Lafferentz; Namekawa and Glass, Klavier-Festival Ruhr, 2019. Images courtesy and © the photographers, the musicians, and UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performance.

BETYE SAAR — CALL AND RESPONSE VIRTUAL TOUR

BETYE SAAR—CALL AND RESPONSE—an exhibition curated by Carol S. Eliel at LACMA that traces the genesis between Saar’s preliminary notebook sketches and her finished work—is now on view in Manhattan.

This week, Morgan curator Rachel Federman will present a virtual guided tour of the show.

BETYE SAAR—CALL AND RESPONSE

Through January 31, by appointment.

RACHEL FEDERMAN: BETYE SAAR—CALL AND RESPONSE VIRTUAL TOUR

Friday, September 25.

Noon on the West Coast; 3 pm East Coast.

The Morgan Library and Museum

225 Madison Avenue (at 36th Street), New York City.

Betye Saar, from top: Sketchbook page from U.S.A., Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, 1988–1991, watercolor and ballpoint pen; sketchbook page for ​The Weight of Buddha​, 2013, ballpoint pen, colored pencil, and wash; installation view, Betye Saar: Call and Response, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, September 22, 2019–April 5, 2020 (closed in March 2020 after pandemic shutdown), image courtesy and © the artist and Museum Associates / LACMA; Sketchbook (1970–1972); sketchbook page from 2009–2010; sketchbook page for Eyes of the Beholder, November 6, 1994. Images courtesy and © the artist and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles.

LUC TUYMANS AND HELEN MOLESWORTH IN CONVERSATION

Celebrating the third and final volume of his Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings—edited by Eva Meyer-Hermann and published last year—join Luc Tuymans in conversation with Helen Molesworth at the Morgan Library.

The artist will present a new solo exhibition at David Zwirner, Hong Kong, in March 2020. In 2009 at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Molesworth curated the first United States retrospective of Tuymans’s work. 

LUC TUYMANS and HELEN MOLESWORTH IN CONVERSATION

Thursday, January 23, at 6:30 pm.

Morgan Library and Museum

225 Madison Avenue (at 36th Street), New York City.

From top: Luc Tuymans photograph and Catalogue Raisonné cover courtesy and © the artist, David Zwirner, and David Zwirner Books. Photograph of Helen Molesworth by Catherine Opie, courtesy and © Opie and Molesworth.

WILLIAM KENTRIDGE IN CONVERSATION

I’m interested in awkward operas; operas in which there are unsolved riddles… in which there’s a space—both musically and thematically—for a world to evolve and be imagined around the story. William Kentridge

In conjunction with the upcoming Metropolitan Opera’s new production of Alban Berg’s WOZZECK—featuring production design by Kentridge—the artist will be at the Morgan Library and Museum for a talk about his work.

WILLIAM KENTRIDGE IN CONVERSATION

Sunday, December 1, at 3 pm.

Morgan Library and Museum

225 Madison Avenue (at 36th Street), New York City.

From top: William Kentridge in his Johannesburg studio, early movement rehearsal for Wozzeck; Peter Mattei in the title role; Elza van den Heever as Marie; Kentridge charcoal drawing backdrop; Kentridge in his studio; performers and Kentridge in his studio (3). Images courtesy and © the artist, the performers, the photographers and videographers, and the Metropolitan Opera.

VINCE ALETTI ON PETER HUJAR

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Vince Aletti—collector, photography critic, and Peter Hujar’s East Village neighbor and friend—will join David Wojnarowicz biographer Cynthia Carr, author Jonathan D. Katz, and Hujar model and printing lab co-founder Gary Schneider for a conversation about Hujar, in conjunction with the Morgan exhibition of the photographer’s work.

 

PETER HUJARLIFE AND TIMES, Saturday, April 7, at 2 pm.

themorgan.org/peter-hujar-life-and-times

PETER HUJAR—SPEED OF LIFE, through May 20.

MORGAN LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, 225 Madison Avenue, at 36th Street, New York City.

themorgan.org/peter-hujar

See: anothermag.com/vince-aletti-on-peter-hujar

And: lens.blogs.nytimes.com/peter-hujar-gay-lower-east-side

Above: Peter HujarDiana Vreeland (II), 1975. © Estate of Peter Hujar, courtesy of Maureen Paley, London, and Pace/MacGill GalleryNew York

Below: Peter HujarDavid Wojnarowicz, 1981. © Estate of Peter Hujar, courtesy of Maureen Paley, London, and Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York.

David Wojnarowicz, 1981

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