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MILTON AVERY'S VERMONT
Bennington Museum of
Art, Bennington, VT
Through November 6,
2016
★★★
Avery Self-Portrait |
The best way to enjoy the Bennington Museum of Art's current
exhibition of Milton Avery is to lower your expectations a bit. Avery
(1885-1965) was a major figure in American Modernism. Like many of his
generation, he broke with the idea that a painting had to have perspective.
Unlike most, a lot of his art remained representational–not literally, but in
the sense that one usually knows what his subject was, even when he reduces
them to shape and color. Those shapes and colors were seldom those with which
nature endowed said subject. A really good Milton Avery looks like a collage or
quilt pattern on canvas. His use of shape was so striking that Mark Rothko was
among his biggest fans. A good Avery also has the quality of telling you all
you need to know through just a few semi-abstract figures, lines, and
well-placed objects.
Best in Show? |
So the first thing you need to know about the Bennington
exhibit is that most of what is on display falls into the "minor
works" category–the kind that sell at auction for around 10 grand, not the
ones museums shell out over a half a million to boastfully hang on their walls.
The good news? The exhibit lives up to its claim–these 60 works were executed
between the years 1931 and 1943, a time in which Avery and his family often
summered in the Jamaica/Rawsonville area of southern Vermont. (The Averys lived
in New York City, but were lured to Vermont by a friend, Meyer Shapiro.) As one
does during a Vermont summer, Avery often worked en plein air and represented nature. A few of these outdoors
Less certain are Avery's paintings in which people appear. A
whimsical self-portrait works but most of the rest do not. It must be
Not working for me! |
Lautrec-like quality? More successful? |
This exhibit is certainly worth attending but, as I said,
lower your expectations. It's also worth seeing because (through October 2) you
can take in a delightful corridor exhibit titled "Something About
Summer" by Mark Barry. I know little about Barry, other than the fact that
he is from North Bennington and has a wickedly offbeat sense of humor. A girl
with a hamburger, for instance, has such skewed perspectives that her unhinged
mouth leaves us uncertain as to whether she will that burger or vice versa. A bicyclist
strains uphill, or is he falling backward over an abyss? One critic calls his
style "faux naïve" and that's a pretty good descriptor. But whatever
you call it, his art is the sort that makes you smile, chuckle, and grin. This is
a small exhibit as well, but I wish the corridor had been longer.
Rob Weir (Apologies: Images throw off the font and the fix-code eludes me.)
Interesting take on the Avery show. The reviewers at the Wall Street Journal and Boston Globe had a rather more positive view
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