Hand, Lisette Model. © Keitelman Gallery
Expositions du 20/11/2015 au 6/2/2016 Terminé
Keitelman Gallery 44 rue Van Eyck 1000 Bruxelles France
The Keitelman Gallery presents a joint exhibition of two modern artists whose estates are represented by: Lisette Model et Evsa Model. The exhibition has an emotional resonance because the two artists were also a couple. But it is equally an aesthetically stunning exhibition as it reveals the extent to which the work of each artist so perfectly complements the other.Keitelman Gallery 44 rue Van Eyck 1000 Bruxelles France
Evsa Model, born in Russia in 1899, emigrated to Paris in 1922, where he set up the gallery-bookshop L’Esthétique in 1926. The gallery became a meeting place for the Parisian avant-garde, from Michel Seuphor to André Kertész. He mounted an exhibition of works by Mondrian in 1927. He began to paint himself, though none of his canvases from that period are known to remain in existence. He met Lisette Seybert in Paris, whom he married in September 1937. The couple moved the following year to New York. Evsa Model started to paint again, inspired by this great modern, tentacular city, in the 1940s. His work began to be noticed in the mid forties, as a result of high profile exhibitions, such as at the Rose Fried Gallery in 1945 or at Sidney Janis’ gallery in 1948. The latter, who had already included Model in his influential 1944 book Abstract & Surrealist Art in America, brought Evsa significant critical recognition. The MoMA purchased one of his work in 1943 and he was shown at the prestigious Arts Club de Chicago.
Skinny Ret, Lisette Model. © Keitelman Gallery
Lisette Model was born in 1901 in Vienna. Originally destined for a musical career, she studied with Arnold Schönberg and later with Marya Freund in Paris. For health reasons, she was forced to abandon music and took up photography,for which she evinced both passion and talent. After she moved to New York with her husband, Lisette Model began publishing her work in the press. She began a long collaboration with Harper’s Bazaar that lasted from 1941 to 1955. In 1940 MoMA began purchasing her work and she was included in all photographic shows till 1964; she exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1943, and five years later the MoMA held a solo exhibition of her work. Between 1951 and 1982, she taught at the New School for Social Research. She was a major influence on a generation of photographers,notably Diane Arbus, who studied with her in 1957, Larry Fink, Lynn Davis Eva Rubinstein, etc.