Claire Falkenstein @ the Guggenheim-Venice Opening January 23, 2016

[122a] Falkenstein Necklace copyIMG_0528VENICE.- A new record has been made at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, which closed 2015 by exceeding 400,000 visitors for the first time since the opening of the museum in 1980. 400,741 people, averaging 1,266 a day over the course of 316 open days, included 8,350 participants in exhibition openings, special visits, private and institutional events.

2016 will center on postwar art: three exhibitions, each of them curated by Luca Massimo Barbero, Associate Curator of the Venice museum, with some of the great names that have left their mark on the national and international artistic stage in the second half of the 20th century, will shine light on three aspects of Italian, European and American art beginning after the end of World War II up to the 1970s, with a focus on developments in Italy in the 1960s. Three exhibitions that also traverse the enlightened career of patron and collector Peggy Guggenheim.

The season opens with the imminent inauguration, 23 January (through 3 April), of Postwar Era: A Recent History. Homages to Jack Tworkov and Claire Falkenstein. Drawn from the collection of Peggy Guggenheim as well as acquisitions by the Foundation after Peggy Guggenheim’s death, almost a hundred works—some of which are infrequently exhibited—will be grouped and matched based on theme, style, affinity and a less-than-usual attention to chronology. The exhibition draws on a sensibility that goes beyond canonical art movements and trends, comparable to the refined approach that Peggy Guggenheim learned and cultivated through her activity as a collector. The exhibition offers a fresh perspective on American and European art in the period between two critical dates—the end of World War II and 1979, the year that Peggy Guggenheim passed away. Drawn from the collection of Peggy Guggenheim as well as from acquisitions by the Guggenheim Foundation after her death, the works—some of which are infrequently exhibited—will be grouped and matched based on theme, style, affinity and an unorthodox chronology. The exhibition draws on a sensibility that goes beyond canonical art movements and trends, comparable to the refined approach that Peggy Guggenheim learned and cultivated through her activity as a collector, both far-sighted and vanguard. This context also offers insight into the work of two artists in the Foundation’s collections: Jack Tworkov (1900–1982) and Claire Falkenstein (1909–1997). The former, a Polish-born American, was an exponent of Abstract Expressionism; the latter is celebrated for her entrance gates to Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, commissioned by Peggy Guggenheim for her former home, Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, now the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, in 1960, and which will undergo conservation in time for this exhibition. A further component of the exhibition is a room dedicated to the late Carlo Ciussi (1930-2012), Italian painter of geometric abstraction.

From 23 April (through 19 September), the Peggy Guggenheim Collection presents Imagine. New Figuration in Italian Art 1960-1969. This exhibition explores for the first time an ideal mapping of artistic research in Italy in the 1960s, along an axis between Rome and Turin, that deployed new ideas of figuration and of the image. Approximately 50 works of art will document this prolific and inventive decade, including that of Franco Angeli, Mario Ceroli, Domenico Gnoli, Giosetta Fioroni, Tano Festa, Jannis Kounellis, Fabio Mauri, Francesco lo Savio, Giulio Paolini, Michelangelo Pistoletto, and Mario Schifano. This exhibition offers examples, trends, insights and peculiarities, and sheds light on the bond and continuity between tradition and contemporaneity defining this generation of artists, representing Italy’s contribution to the international avant-garde of the time.

Opening 12 November, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection pays homage to Tancredi Parmeggiani (1927–1964), a painter of huge talent discovered by Peggy Guggenheim in the richly creative postwar period of the 1950s in Venice. Tancredi made an instant impact as one Italy’s most original painters of his time in Italian contemporary art. He was the only artist after Jackson Pollock to be placed under contract by Peggy Guggenheim, who energetically promoted his work, gave him studio space, and organized exhibitions, including a memorable solo show in Palazzo Venier dei Leoni in 1954. With approximately 50 works, the show surveys his Venetian beginnings and his dense production in the 1950s.

Worth noting are two other exhibitions which the Peggy Guggenheim Collection is helping to organize and promote in the course of the year: from 19 March (through 24 July), the much-awaited exhibition From Kandinsky to Pollock. The Art of the Guggenheim Collection will be held in Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, in collaboration with the Fondazione Strozzi. This major event brings to Florence more than one hundred works, many of them masterpieces, of European and American art, in a narrative that reconstructs relationships and ties across two sides of the Atlantic through two leading American collectors and their museums, Peggy Guggenheim and Solomon Guggenheim. Secondly, from 10 June to 9 October, the exhibition Art of This Century. Peggy Guggenheim in Photographs at the Ikona Gallery, the historic gallery of a Živa Kraus in the Campo del Ghetto Nuovo, Venice, will mark the 500th anniversary of the Jewish Ghetto. A selection of approximately 20 images, mainly from the archives of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, will render homage to this great patroness, a key figure in 20th century western art. Among the well-known photographers whose photographs will be in the exhibition are Berenice Abbott, Man Ray, Roloff Beny, Gianni Berengo Gardin, and Gisèle Freund.

From Monday 11 January for approximately a month, the Museum Shop, on the Fondamenta Venier dai Leoni, 710 Dorsoduro, will be closed for improvements.

With more than 120,000 followers, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection confirms its position among the most “social” museums in Italy. Almost 90,000 fans on Faceboook, more than 8,000 followers on Twitter, 24,000 followers on Instagram. In this way the museum tells its story on social networks and engages with its audience. Let these numbers will continue to increase, and we trust our followers will continue to grow a, and to find us at Palazzo Venier dei Leoni. To share together the art and beauty with which Peggy loved to surround herself.