1951
1953
ação
alice
amaral
analogia
andré
aprendizagem
arensberg
armory show
arte africana
arte cinética
arte indígena
arte moderna
arte norte-americana
atenção
barr
basel
basílio
bauhaus
beaubourg
Bergamín
berlim
berman
beuys
bienal
bienal de são paulo
Brasília
broodthaers
bruggen
burroughs
caixa
caixas-catálogo
Carroll
cartagena das índias
cassady
cèzzane
chama
cidade
cladders
cognição
coleção
colômbia
cooperative mural workshops
cor
corso
crescer
crítica
curadoria
d'harnoncourt
davies
disperção
distração
dreier
duchamp
dylaby
educativo
enunciacão
espaço expositivo
estocolmo
evans
experiência
exposição
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felicidade
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ferllinghetti
ferus gallery
filliou
Filóstrato
flor
fotografia
gauguin
gehry
geração beat
ginsberg
guggenheim
holanda
hopps
houston
hultén
imagem
imaginários
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internacional style
invenção
jean
johns
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kawara
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kienholz
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klüver
kokoschka
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lágrimas
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linguagem
los angeles
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macagy
man ray
manzoni
máquina
marat
matarazzo
matisse
mcclure
menil
metropolitan museum of art
milliet
mitos
moca
moma
mönchengladbach
monitores
munch
museu
museu de belas artes de houston
museu de israel
narrativa
nova iorque
novo realismo
now gallery
oblíquo
obrist
oldenburg
onyme
oramas
pach
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paris
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Quignard
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raysse
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sade
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Société Anonyme
society of independent artists
spoerri
stedelijk museum
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tamanho
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teatro commune
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tinguely
transmissão de conhecimento
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vela
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voz
warhol
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sábado, 20 de agosto de 2011
rené d'harnoncourt
Director of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1949-1967. d'Harnoncourt was born into a wealthy Viennese family, Count Hubert and Julie Mittrowsky d'Harnoncourt. The family moved to Graz, where he initially intended on a career as a chemist, studying at the university in Graz. He moved to the Technische Hochschule in Vienna in1922, writing a thesis on creosote content in the coal of Yugoslavia, without graduating. When the family fortuned declined after World War I, d'Harnoncourt moved to Mexico in 1925 to seek employment as a chemist. His personal interest in and talent for art caught the notice of various antiques dealers. By 1927 he was assembling a collection of folk arts, which traveled to the United States. The show, which opened in at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, in 1930, rocketed d'Harnoncourt to prominence, including a radio program of his own, "Art in America" (1933-34). In 1932 he married Chicago fashion designer Sara Carr. Between 1934 and 1937 he taught at Sara Lawrence College and the New School for Social Research. In 1936 he was appointed an administrator in the Indian Arts and Crafts Board, part of the Department of the Interior. d'Harnoncourt mounted one of the first national exhibitions of native-American arts at the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco in 1939. In 1944 he was appointed to the Museum of Modern Art, NY., to help with the duties of the recently dismissed founder of MoMA, Alfred H. Barr, Jr. (q.v.). d'Harnoncourt's sensitivity to the situation (Barr was eventually reinstated as a curatorial advisor) and gentle personality allowed both men to function positively. d'Harnoncourt was an expert museum installer as well as collector. He mounted the shows "Henry Moore" (1946), "Gabo and Pevsner" (1948), in his capacity. In 1949 d'Harnoncourt was appointed Director of the Museum. Under his directorship, the Museum mounted the exhibitions "Lipschitz" (1954), "Seurat and Arp" (1958), "Picasso" (1967) and "Rodin" (1963). He nutured innovative curators such as Mildred Constantine (q.v.), the first curator of graphic arts. He reached out to many New York artists, including major abstract expressionists, who had perceived that the museum had ignored their work in favor of European artists. d'Harnoncourt also served as art advisor and to Nelson Rockefeller's personal art collection serving as vice president for Rockefeller's Museum of Primitive Art from its beginning in 1957. Like, Barr, too, d'Harnoncourt saw his mission to champion modern art to the greater public: when the American Legion magazine launched an attack against modern art in 1955, d'Harnoncourt issued an extended reply. Under his directorship, the East Wing of the museum (designed by Philip Johnson) was built in 1958. He retired in 1968 and was succeeded by Bates Lowry (q.v.). Only a year after his retirement to Long Island, he was hit by a drunk driver and killed while walking. His daughter was the Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Anne d'Harnoncourt (q.v.) and his nephew is the conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt. His photographic collection from his years in Mexico comprise part of the Benson Latin American Collection, General Libraries, University of Texas at Austin.
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