Alice Neel (1900–1984) painted portraits of people she knew—her friends and family, her lovers, the artists, poets, and musicians she spent time with. Sometimes, too, she painted strangers—someone who ...
Since 2012, Spring Break Art Show has been known as a burgeoning source of emerging art, a place to encounter up-and-coming creatives for the first time. That’s still true, but at the fair’s fourth ...
Alice Neel, "Hartley with Cat" (1969), oil on canvas, 40 x 30 inches (© The Estate of Alice Neel; image courtesy The Estate of Alice Neel, Victoria Miro, and David Zwirner) For six decades, Alice Neel ...
Alice Neel was a painter who lived in Harlem. Her entire life, she created portraits of (mostly) New Yorkers, seated in their kitchens, at bars, among loved ones, gazing out their windows. As Neel ...
David Zwirner Gallery recently gave the late figurative painter Alice Neel prime real estate in its prominent Chelsea locale, also releasing an accompanying exhibition catalogue by Radius Books. Alice ...
Painter Alice Neel's first retrospective in 20 years is both timely and ambitious. And people are flocking to see her portraits, a chronicle of... Alice Neel's Paintings Meet The Moment At The Met ...
The show is too big, the catalogue and labels are too woke, but it’s great to see museumgoers viewing art in the flesh, again. There are three problems with Alice Neel: People Come First, which opened ...
Alice Neel, "Self‐Portrait" 1980, oil on canvas, 53 1/4 × 39 3/4 inches (all images courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art; © The Estate of Alice Neel) At 80 ...
The lines were packed at 10 a.m. on the last day of Alice Neel’s exhibit at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Just the day before, The New York Times indicated the inclusive exhibit places Neel solidly ...
Alice Neel made it to the Met! At last. Born in 1900, she painted all her life, often in obscurity. In the 1970s, feminists discovered and lauded her. She got attention. Right now visitors are ...