NEW YORK

Diamond and Turquoise Ring by Cartier Paris, circa 1800-1900, listed on Incollect by Pat Saling, who will be exhibiting at the New York Jewelry & Watch Show this weekend.

New York City Jewelry & Watch Show

October 28-31, 2016

Friday, Saturday & Sunday: 11:00am - 7:00pm; Monday: 11:00am - 4:00pm

Metropolitan Pavillion, 125 West 18th St, New York, NY

With the holiday season just around the corner, it’s the perfect time for the second annual New York City Jewelry & Watch show to return to the Metropolitan Pavilion this weekend. Last year’s debut show had such an incredible turnout that this year, a fourth day has been added – that’s 30% more time to see the show! Incredible pieces will be exhibited by world-class dealers like Alexander Gallery, Donna Vock Designs, DeYoung Collection, Benchmark of Palm Beach, Camilla Dietz BergeronJ.S. Fearnley, Jacob’s Diamond & Estate Jewelry, Pat Saling, and Vivid Diamonds. From antique and estate jewelry, to collectible watches, and contemporary pieces, the quality and scope of the inventory being exhibited at the New York City Jewelry & Watch Show is second to none.

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Guido Cagnacci (1601–1663), The Repentant Magdalene, ca. 1660−63, oil on canvas, 90 1/4 x 104 3/4 inches, Norton Simon Art Foundation, Pasadena, California.

Cagnacci’s “Repentant Magdalene”: An Italian Baroque Masterpiece from the Norton Simon Museum

The Frick Collection, 1 East 70th Street, New York, NY

October 25, 2016 - January 22, 2017

Guido Cagnacci, one of the most eccentric painters of seventeenth-century Italy, was infamous for his unconventional art and lifestyle. His works, mostly religious in subject, are known for their unabashed eroticism and defiantly sensual attitudes. The Repentant Magdalene, one of Cagnacci’s greatest masterpieces, has not been seen outside California since its acquisition by the Norton Simon Museum in 1982. Introduced to New York audiences for the very first time, this work of art is a testament to Cagnacci’s forgotten genius, and showcases his immediately recognizable artistic language.

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Hito Steyerl (b. 1966), Factory of the Sun, 2015. High-definition video, color, sound; 22:56 min., looped; with environment, dimensions variable. Installation view: Invisible Adversaries, Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, 2016. Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Marieluise Hessel Collection. Image courtesy of the artist and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York. Photograph by Sarah Wilmer.

Dreamlands: Immersive Cinema and Art, 1905-2016

The Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY

October 28, 2016 - February 5, 2017

For its landmark exhibition, the Whitney Museum of American Art will present a series of film screenings and expanded cinema events in Dreamlands: Immersive Cinema and Art: 1905-2016. The Dreamlands film program focuses on the ways in which artists have dismantled and reassembled the conventions of cinema to create new experiences of the moving image. The exhibition will be presented in fourteen parts, and feature artists and filmmakers from the earliest days of cinema to the most cutting-edge artists working with virtual reality and digital space. Dreamlands spans more than a century of works by American artists and filmmakers, as well as some German cinema works that have a strong relationship to, and influence on, American art and film. Dreamlands will incorporate works in installation, drawing, 3D environments, sculpture, performance, painting, and online space.

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SAN FRANSICSO

An exquisite Louis Philippe period polychrome decorated two door cabinet by “Chifflot,” French. Signed and dated: Chifflot 1846-47. Of polychrome lacquer on black ground, the carcass of oak and poplar. In original, unrestored condition. Offered by Carlton Hobbs, LLC.

San Fransico Fall Art & Antiques Show

October 27-30, 2016; Opening Night Preview Gala: October 26, 2016

Festival Pavilion, Fort Mason Center, San Francisco, CA

www.sffas.org; 415.989.9019

The thirty-fifth San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show opens this week. The longest running international art and antiques fair on the West Coast, the Show will feature sixty dealers from around the world, offering for sale an extraordinary range of fine and decorative arts from antiquity to the present day. Attendees will find American, English, Continental, and Asian furniture and decorative objects, paintings, prints, photographs, books, gold, silver and precious metals, jewelry, rugs, textiles, and ceramics. The celebrated interior designer Suzanne Tucker, who has been selected to serve as the Chair of the Show this year, has chosen the theme “Animalia—Animals in Art & Antiques.”  Exhibitors will present collections that explore the beauty and mystery of the animal kingdom, as well as its symbolism throughout the ages. As always, the SFFA Show will feature an array of the country’s finest dealers, including Arader GalleriesCarlton Hobbs, LLCClinton Howell Antiques, epoca, Foster-Gwin Gallery, Inc., Jeff R. Bridgman American Antiques, and Yew Tree House Antiques. The San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show will kick off on Wednesday, October 26, with an opening night Preview Gala at the Fort Mason Center’s Festival Pavilion in the city’s posh Marina District and will run through Sunday, October 30. 100% of net proceeds benefit Enterprise for High School Students, the San Francisco nonprofit that offers training, career counseling, and internships to a diverse group of Bay Area youth to pursue life after school with passion and purpose.

 

PHILADELPHIA

Self-Portrait on the Border Line Between Mexico and the United States, 1932, Frida Kahlo, Oil on metal, 12-1/2 x 13-3/4 inches (31.8 x 34.9 cm), (Colección Maria y Manuel Reyero, New York) © Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Paint The Revolution: Mexican Modernism, 1910–1950

Philadelphia Museum Of Art, 2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA

October 25, 2016 - January 8, 2017

Paint the Revolution will be the most comprehensive exhibition of Mexican modernism to be seen in the United States in more than 70 years and will feature an extraordinary range of images, from portable murals and paintings, to photographs, books and broadsheets. It will only be seen in Philadelphia before traveling to Mexico City early next year. Paint the Revolution spans four decades, through times of revolution and beyond, and interprets these events through artists’ translations. Visitors will behold a spectacular range of work by artists who are well known in Mexico but who will become fresh discoveries to most Americans. Work by great talents such as Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and Rufina Tamayo will be incorporated into the historical context of Mexican art during these forty years.

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VIRGINIA

Newell Convers Wyeth (American, 1882–1945), “At the Same Time Hahn Pulled His Gun and Shot Him through the Middle,” 1906. Oil on canvas, 37⅛ × 23⅞ in. Stark Museum of Art, Orange, Texas, 31.2.1
Victor Higgins (American 1884–1949), Apaches, ca. 1918. Oil on canvas, 40¼ × 43 in. Stark Museum of Art, Orange, Texas, 31.17.14

Branding the American West: Paintings and Films, 1900-1950

Chrysler Museum of Art, 1 Memorial Place, Norfolk, VA

Members’ Preview Party, 6:00 - 10:00pm Friday, October 28, 2016

October 29, 2016 - February 5, 2017

Hollywood’s mythic portrayal of the Wild West as a world of violence, danger and action has seeped into our nation’s collective psyche and played a role in forming our American identity. This exhibition explores the changing brands of the American West during a complicated time of modernization, war, and racial unrest, and challenges the popularly believed myths about the West. Paintings and sculptures are juxtaposed with film clips of how the West was branded by Hollywood, featuring 100 works by artists including Frederic Remington, Charles Marion Russell, N.C. Wyeth, members of the New Mexican Taos Society of Artists, and Maynard Dixon. The Chrysler Museum invites visitors to stand before works where artists raced to capture a moment before it was gone forever, and to walk the line between the myth and history the American Southwest.

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