Monthly Archives: December 2011

Japanese Woodcut Print Collection at Park West Gallery

Park West Gallery is excited to offer for sale an impressive collection of 19th Century Japanese Woodcut prints created by more than 25 different talented woodblock artists. Following, we present a few collection highlights along with a bit of art history behind the prints. 

"Actors" (1859), Toyokuni III, Park West Gallery, Japanese Woodcut printsThe majority of prints in the Park West Gallery Japanese Woodcut Collection were created during Edo period Japan (1615-1868). Known familiarly as ukiyo-e, or “pictures of the floating world,” these images traditionally portray “worldly pleasures and earthly delights,” a type of escape that dealt with the frustrating ancient divisions of class between Japanese nobles and warriors.

Historically, many in the warrior class had been able to accumulate vast sums of money, often much more than many of the nobles. But due to strict class definitions, this didn’t matter and they were seen as second tier. Thus, ukiyo-e, the “floating world,” was born as a place controlled by and patron to the warrior class (and those interested), an area where they could revel in their “earthly delights.” Common forms of entertainment were elaborate tea houses, the company of courtesans and geishas, and Kabuki Theater.

"Actors" (1865), Yoshitaki , Park West Gallery, Japanese Woodcut prints"Actors and Bijin" (1845), Shibakuni, Park West Gallery, Japanese woodcut printsWhile many ukiyo-e show everything from geisha and landscapes to tea houses, the most famous prints depict scenes from the Kabuki Theater. The theater acted out stories deeply engrained in Japanese history, tales that were fantastic and supernatural, mythological or the aggrandized lives of historical figures. Each story was easily recognized by their audience and the Kabuki actors went to extreme lengths to convey the most dramatic, exaggerated expressions and poses that they could.

At the height of this drama, the actor would freeze, holding this powerful facade. Each actor had his own signature trait, such as how long he would hold his pose, the comedic way his hair was worn, his family crest or the colors in his costume. Woodblock prints of this period usually depicted specific actors, recognizable by these features.

"Genre Print" (1880), Yoshitoshi, Japanese woodcut prints, Park West Gallery"Actors" (1815), Toyokuni, Japanese woodcut prints, Park West Gallery

Likewise, in Kabuki prints, not only were the actors easily recognized, but so too were stories they acted out. Artists would take the most dramatic pose from an actor’s repertoire and freeze it on a woodblock forever, making sure to include telling marks of who the character was. Having the character hold something symbolic or depicting them in the midst of their most notorious moment were common ways in which the artist clued the audience in to what was happening.

Finally, when Japan opened up their trade routes to Europe in 1868, renowned artists like Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas, Whistler, and Van Gogh became known collectors of these prints, often bringing aspects of the woodblock style into their own artwork. From the use of sharp perspective, line and color, to the study of the middle class’s entertainment, without ukiyo-e, Impressionist art would have become something else entirely.
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To learn more and inquire about the Japanese Woodcut Collection offered by Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea, please visit http://sales.parkwestgallery.com.

Park West Gallery on CBS ‘Michigan Matters’ Holiday Show

CBS Detroit Michigan Matters, Carol Cain, Tim Yanke, Park West GalleryOn a holiday edition of CBS Detroit’s Michigan Matters, host Carol Cain sat down with Saba Gebrai, Program Director of the Park West Foundation, and Tim Yanke, an artist with Park West Gallery.

The panel discussed how Park West Gallery is helping young people in Michigan, especially those in the foster care system. Watch:

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Fine artwork by Tim Yanke is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. For more information, please visit www.parkwestgallery-yanke.com.

For more information about the Park West Foundation and Park West Gallery’s other philanthropic programs, please visit www.parkwestgallery.com and click on Philanthropy.

Yaacov Agam’s World Record Hanukkah Menorah to Light Up NYC

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World's Largest Hanukkah menorah, Yaacov Agam, Park West Gallery

The lighting of a 32-foot high, gold-colored, 4,000 pound steel menorah in New York City’s Grand Army Plaza will mark the start of Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of Lights. The first candle will be lit on the evening of Tuesday, Dec. 20, with nightly lightings to follow until the menorah is fully illuminated on Tuesday, Dec. 27.

Designed by world-renowned artist Yaacov Agam, the gigantic menorah has been certified by Guinness World Records as the largest of its kind. In fact, due to the height of the menorah, it will be lit with the help of a Con Edison cherry-picker crane. Specially-designed glass chimneys will protect the lights from the Central Park winds.

Sunday evening, Dec. 25, a special celebration will take place, including live music, singing and dancing, Hanukkah gelt (candies) for children and traditional hot latkes (potato pancakes) for everyone.

When: Dec. 20 – 27, 2011 at 5:30 pm (during Sabbath, lightings will be at 3:30 pm on Dec. 23 and at 8:30 pm on Dec. 24)
Where: Grand Army Plaza in Manhattan, Fifth Avenue at 59th Street near Central Park (map)
Admission: Free

SOURCE: Jewish News Agency
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Fine artwork by Yaacov Agam is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. For more information, please visit http://sales.parkwestgallery.com.

It’s a Norman Rockwell Kind of Holiday

It’s that time of year again when fluffy white flakes and yuletide carols fill the sights and sounds of suburban Michigan. And just down the street from Park West Gallery’s Southfield location lies the historic little town of Franklin, twinkling with holiday spirit.

Jolly Postman by Norman Rockwell, Park West GalleryFranklin Village, Michigan, Park West Gallery

Like it was yanked from a Christmas snow globe, downtown Franklin lights up with cheer, perfect for antiquing or site-seeing, looking for gifts or stopping for tea. Visitors to the town will definitely feel like they’re in a Norman Rockwell painting, nostalgic for the era of “The Saturday Evening Post.”

Painting what he knew, Rockwell studied his friends and neighbors for more than fifty years for his famous magazine covers. With an ongoing theme of childlike naivety, gentle teasing, and family values, more than 300 covers were painted throughout his career.

In the mood to experience even more holiday merriment? Works by Norman Rockwell are currently on display at Park West Gallery in Southfield – just minutes from charming downtown Franklin.

And don’t forget: the Park West Gallery Holiday Sale doesn’t end until December 26, so if there’s still someone special on your Holiday to-do list, gift them something they’re guaranteed not to have!
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Through association with the Norman Rockwell Licensing Company (the estate of the artist) and Curtis Publishing (owner of the copyrights of The Saturday Evening Post artwork), Park West Gallery has been able in recent years to bring new and exceptional collecting opportunities for Norman Rockwell artworks to enthusiastic collectors. For more information, please call 800-521-9654 x 4 or email sales@parkwestgallery.com

For more information about Park West Gallery’s land and cruise ship auctions, visit our website at www.parkwestgallery.com.

Around Town: Rembrandt at the DIA, Cranbrook’s Grand Reopening, U of M’s ‘Face of Our Time’

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Need a break from stressful holiday shopping? Here are a few local art exhibits worth checking out this weekend…

cranbrook art museum, park west galleryNO OBJECT IS AN ISLAND: NEW DIALOGUES WITH THE CRANBROOK COLLECTION
The first exhibition in the Cranbrook Art Museum’s newly redesigned building highlights works once forgotten in closed storage. Pieces by 50 leading contemporary artists and designers are juxtaposed in challenging ways, providing insightful pairings to depict their similarities. Museum director and co-curator, Gregory Wittkopp, notes that some of these pieces have never been on display before, making this an exhibition you don’t want to miss.

When: Nov. 11, 2011 – March 25, 2012
Where: Cranbrook Art Museum
Website: www.cranbrookart.edu/museum

Face of Our Time, University of Michigan, Park West GalleryFACE OF OUR TIME
Five photographers – Jacob Aue Sobol, Jim Goldberg, Zanele Muholi, Daniel Schwartz, and Richard Misrach – document five different perspectives on contemporary culture. From Sobol’s interpretations of life in the Arctic to Misrach’s photographs in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, each artist sheds light in a discerning, provoking way, commenting on the development of pop culture today.

When: Nov. 12, 2011 – Feb. 5, 2012
Where: University of Michigan Museum of Art
Website: www.umma.umich.edu

Detroit Institute of Arts, Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus, Park West GalleryREMBRANDT AND THE FACE OF JESUS
For the first time ever, 64 of Rembrandt’s paintings, prints, and drawings come together in a study of the artist’s unique style as he depicts the face of Jesus. Against the grain for his time, Rembrandt humanized Christ in the mode of popular 17th century culture, rather than representing him in the popular, glorified manner, as a chiseled Greek god. In this series, guests will have the ability to follow Rembrandt’s progress through the years, beginning with a heroic, godlike representation then shifting to his break with tradition.

When: Nov. 20, 2011 – Feb. 12, 2012
Where: The Detroit Institute of Arts
Website: www.dia.org

To learn even more about the artist and his work, visit the Park West Gallery Rembrandt Collection at http://rembrandt.parkwestgallery.com.

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And if you’re in the neighborhood this weekend, stop by for a visit! Park West Gallery will be open Friday, 9am – 6pm and Saturday, 11 am – 6 pm [map].

‘Rembrandt in America’ at the North Carolina Museum of Art

On loan from Park West Gallery, Rembrandt’s “Millennium” etching, “Self Portrait Drawing at a Window,” is now on view at the “Rembrandt in America” exhibition at the North Carolina Museum of Art

Rembrandt in America, North Carolina Museum of Art, Park West Gallery, Millennium etchings In June of 2009, Park West Gallery and the family of its founder and CEO, Albert Scaglione, placed on loan eight original Rembrandt copper plates along with a set of the etchings printed from them (known as the “Millennium” editions), to the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh. NCMA was chosen for this loan as these eight copper plates and 70 other surviving Rembrandt copper plates had been deposited on loan there years ago after they were purchased by Dr. Robert Lee Humber in 1938.

The “Self Portrait Drawing at a Window” etching from the Park West loan is now on display and featured in the current exhibition, “Rembrandt in America” which runs until January 22, 2012 in the East Building Meymandi Exhibition Gallery. The eight original copper plates have been installed since 2009 in the Circle of Rembrandt Gallery in the West Building and are regularly there on display. NCMA and its fellow organizers, the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, according to its exhibition announcement, “Have assembled a diverse yet representative group of pictures highlighting issues associated with the collecting and connoisseurship… of Rembrandt paintings in America.”

“Park West was delighted to bring the ‘Millennium’ copper plates back to Raleigh and the museum was delighted to receive the loan,” said Morris Shapiro, Park West Gallery Director and the individual who hand-carried the plates from the printer’s studio in New York to the museum in 2009. “It was one of the highlights of my career to bring these historical treasures from the hands of the master printer who had printed the ‘Millennium’ edition, and place them back into the hands of the museum from where they had rested for so many decades. It’s wonderful that so many people have had the opportunity to view the original copper plates and now to see this important etching in this exhibition.”

› For more information on the “Rembrandt in America” exhibition, visit http://ncartmuseum.org/exhibitions/rembrandt, or to download the exhibition gallery guide [pdf] click here.

› For more information on the “Millennium Edition” etchings and the Park West Gallery Rembrandt Collection, visit http://rembrandt.parkwestgallery.com.

The Michigan Chronicle Profiles ‘Flat Life’ Artist Marcus Glenn

The Michigan Chronicle logo, Park West GalleryArtist Marcus Glenn Making His Mark

Marcus Glenn, Park West GalleryDec. 8, 2011 — Southfield-based Marcus Glenn is an artist on the move. He is a featured artist at Park West Gallery, and the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History has acquired one of his works to be part of its permanent collection.

Glenn, 43, said his mother, herself a landscape artist, was the primary inspiration for his becoming an artist. Other inspirations include Picasso, Romare Bearden, and Jacob Lawrence.

He also said his mother always knew he was interested in art, because one of his favorite pastimes was doodling. She encouraged that by keeping pencils and paper in his hands.

A few years ago, Glenn was one of the featured artists at a Park West Gallery Event curated by the [Charles H. Wright] museum. Officials there subsequently decided it would be a good idea to have one of his pieces in their collection.

Despite Michigan’s uncertain economy, Glenn said he tries to keep a positive outlook. He added that being with Park West Gallery, which sets up venues in different states and cities, and also has a presence on cruise ships, has helped…

Continue reading the full article [pdf]
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Exclusive artwork by Marcus Glenn is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea.

Visit the Park West Gallery/Marcus Glenn Fine Art Collection →

Park West Foundation in The Michigan Citizen

the michigan citizen, park west gallery, park west foundationLocal child rights activist lauds Michigan adoption law

Nov. 27, 2011 — Ethiopian-born child rights advocate Saba Gebrai has lauded state legislature for the new law extending care to Michigan foster youth.

The law, signed Nov. 22, encourages adoption, foster care, mentoring, tutoring and respite care.

Saba Gebrai is the director for the Blue Babies Park West Foundation, an organization in Detroit committed to supporting and uplifting youth in the social welfare system eager to improve themselves, as well as those who are in foster care.

Blue Babies is made up of former and current foster care youth who believe in themselves and in service of their peers and communities, daily transforming lives through youth-led, creative solutions.

Blue Babies Park West Foundation is involved with Child Welfare, working to create families for children and young adults who do not have families. The foundation also serves as a resource center for Child Welfare issues and does referrals in cases that require special needs.

Thousands of children all over Michigan and the world are growing up without a parent or family. This has inspired the Be1andBlue campaign that helps youth to formally connect to caring people, families, organizations, businesses and faith communities everywhere…

Continue reading the full article [pdf]

For more information about the Park West Foundation and Park West Gallery’s other philanthropic programs, please visit www.parkwestgallery.com and click on Philanthropy.