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Wikipedia

Cy Twombly

Edwin Parker "Cy" Twombly Jr. (/s ˈtwɒmbli/; April 25, 1928 – July 5, 2011)[1] was an American painter, sculptor and photographer.

Cy Twombly
Twombly in his studio
Born
Edwin Parker Twombly Jr.

(1928-04-25)April 25, 1928
DiedJuly 5, 2011(2011-07-05) (aged 83)
Education
Known forPainting, sculpture, calligraphy
Spouse
Tatiana Franchetti
(m. 1959; died 2010)
PartnerNicola Del Roscio (1964–2011)
Children1
AwardsPraemium Imperiale
Legion of Honor

Twombly influenced artists such as Anselm Kiefer, Francesco Clemente, Julian Schnabel and Jean-Michel Basquiat.[2][3] His best-known works are typically large-scale, freely-scribbled, calligraphic and graffiti-like works on solid fields of mostly gray, tan, or off-white colors. His later paintings and works on paper shifted toward "romantic symbolism", and their titles can be interpreted visually through shapes and forms and words. Twombly often quoted poets such as Stéphane Mallarmé, Rainer Maria Rilke and John Keats, as well as classical myths and allegories, in his works. Examples of this are his Apollo and The Artist and a series of eight drawings consisting solely of inscriptions of the word "VIRGIL".

Twombly's works are in the permanent collections of modern art museums globally, including the Menil Collection in Houston, the Tate Modern in London, New York's Museum of Modern Art and Munich's Museum Brandhorst. He was commissioned for a ceiling at the Musée du Louvre in Paris.[4]

In a 1994 retrospective, curator Kirk Varnedoe described Twombly's work as "influential among artists, discomfiting to many critics and truculently difficult not just for a broad public, but for sophisticated initiates of postwar art as well."[5]

Life and career edit

Twombly was born in Lexington, Virginia, on April 25, 1928. Twombly's father, also nicknamed "Cy", pitched for the Chicago White Sox.[6] They were both nicknamed after the baseball great Cy Young, who pitched for, among others, the Cardinals, Red Sox, Indians, and Braves.

At age 12, Twombly began to take private art lessons with the Catalan modern master Pierre Daura.[7] After graduating from Lexington High School in 1946, Twombly attended Darlington School in Rome, Georgia, and studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1948–49), and at Washington and Lee University (1949–50) in Lexington, Virginia. On a tuition scholarship from 1950 to 1951, he studied at the Art Students League of New York, where he met Robert Rauschenberg. [8] Rauschenberg encouraged him to attend Black Mountain College near Asheville, North Carolina. At Black Mountain in 1951 and 1952 he studied with Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell and Ben Shahn, and met John Cage. The poet and rector of the College, Charles Olson, had a great influence on him.

Motherwell arranged Twombly's first solo exhibition, which was organized by the Samuel M. Kootz Gallery in New York in 1951. At this time his work was influenced by Kline's black-and-white gestural expressionism, as well as Paul Klee's imagery. In 1952, Twombly received a grant from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts which enabled him to travel to North Africa, Spain, Italy, and France. He spent this journey in Africa and Europe with Robert Rauschenberg. In 1954, he served in the U.S. Army as a cryptographer in Washington, D.C., and would frequently travel to New York during periods of leave. From 1955 through 1956, he taught at the Southern Seminary and Junior College in Buena Vista, Virginia, currently known as Southern Virginia University; during the summer vacations, Twombly would travel to New York to paint in his Williams Street apartment.[9]

In 1957, Twombly moved to Rome and made it his primary city, where he met the Italian artist Tatiana Franchetti – sister of his patron Baron Giorgio Franchetti. They were married at New York City Hall in 1959[10] and then bought a palazzo on the Via di Monserrato in Rome. In addition, they had a 17th-century palace in Bassano in Teverina, near Viterbo. In 2023, the palace was restored and reopened to the public as an artists residence and an exhibition center. The first artist being hosted is American painter Robert Nava.[11]

Around 1961, through their mutual relationship with the artist Afro, Twombly met the American artist Joseph Glasco in Mykonos. According to Glasco, he and Twombly "saw each other every summer in Mykonos for years ... and saw a lot of each other daily".[12]

In 1964, Twombly met Nicola Del Roscio of Gaeta, who became his longtime companion.[11][13] Twombly bought a house and rented a studio in Gaeta in the early 1990s.[11] Twombly and Tatiana, who died in 2010, never divorced and remained friends.[11]

In July 2011, after suffering from cancer for several years, Twombly died in Rome after a brief hospitalization.[14] A plaque in Santa Maria in Vallicella commemorates him.[15]

Work edit

Painting edit

 
Untitled (1957)

After his return in 1953, Twombly served in the United States Army as a cryptologist, an activity that left a distinct mark on his artistic style.[16] From 1955 to 1959, he worked in New York, where he became a prominent figure among a group of artists including Robert Rauschenberg, with whom he was sharing a studio,[17] and Jasper Johns. Exposure to the emerging New York School purged figurative aspects from his work, encouraging a simplified form of abstraction. He became fascinated with tribal art, using the painterly language of the early 1950s to invoke primitivism, reversing the normal evolution of the New York School. Twombly soon developed a technique of gestural drawing characterized by thin white lines on a dark canvas that appear to be scratched onto the surface. He would apply bitumen on the canvas in a quick and coarse fashion, making the painting tactile and scarred with his energetic, gestural lines that would become his signature style.[18][19] He stopped making sculptures in 1959 and did not take up sculpting again until 1976.[20]

Twombly often inscribed on paintings the names of mythological figures during the 1960s.[21] Twombly's move to Gaeta in Southern Italy in 1957 gave him closer contact with classical sources. From 1962 he produced a cycle of works based on myths including Leda and the Swan and The Birth of Venus; myths were frequent themes of Twombly's 1960s work. Between 1960 and 1963 Twombly painted the rape of Leda by the god Zeus/Jupiter in the form of a Swan six times, once in 1960, twice in 1962 and three times in 1963.[22]

 
Dutch Interior (1962) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2022

Twombly's 1964 exhibition of the nine-panel Discourses on Commodus (1963) at the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York was panned by artist and writer Donald Judd who said "There are a few drips and splatters and an occasional pencil line," he wrote in a review. "There isn't anything to these paintings."[23] They are currently exhibited at the Guggenheim Bilbao.[24]

Erotic and corporeal symbols became more prominent, whilst a greater lyricism developed in his 'Blackboard paintings'. Between 1967 and 1971, he produced a number of works on gray grounds, the 'grey paintings'. This series features terse, colorless scrawls, reminiscent of chalk on a blackboard, that form no actual words and are examples of asemic writing. Twombly made this work using an unusual technique: he sat on the shoulders of a friend, who shuttled back and forth along the length of the canvas, thus allowing the artist to create his fluid, continuous lines.[25]

 
Untitled (Bolsena) (1969) at the National Gallery of Art in 2022

His later sculptures exhibit a similar blend of emotional expansiveness and intellectual sophistication. From 1976, Twombly again produced sculptures, lightly painted in white, suggestive of Classical forms. In an interview with critic David Sylvester, on the occasion of the large exhibition of his sculpture at Kunstmuseum Basel in 2000, Twombly revealed that, for him, the demands of making sculpture were distinctly different from those required of painting. "[Sculpture is] a whole other state. And it's a building thing. Whereas the painting is more fusing—fusing of ideas, fusing of feelings, fusing projected on atmosphere."[26]

In the mid-1970s, in paintings such as Untitled (1976), Twombly began to evoke landscape through colour (favouring brown, green and light blue), written inscriptions and collage elements.[27] In 1978 he worked on the monumental historical ensemble Fifty Days at Iliam, a ten-part cycle inspired by Homer's Iliad; since then Twombly continued to draw on literature and myth, deploying cryptic pictorial metaphors that situate individual experience within the grand narratives of Western tradition, as in the Gaeta canvases and the monumental Four Seasons concluded in 1994.

 
Fifty Days at Iliam: Shield of Achilles (1978) at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2022

In an essay in the catalogue to the 2011 Dulwich exhibition (see below), Katharina Schmidt summarizes the scope and technique of Twombly's œuvre:

Cy Twombly's work can be understood as one vast engagement with cultural memory. His paintings, drawings and sculptures on mythological subjects have come to form a significant part of that memory. Usually drawing on the most familiar gods and heroes, he restricts himself to just a few, relatively well-known episodes, as narrated by poet-historians, given visible shape by artists and repeatedly reinterpreted in the literature and visual art of later centuries ... His special medium is writing. Starting out from purely graphic marks, he developed a kind of meta-script in which abbreviated signs, hatchings, loops, numbers and the simplest of pictographs spread throughout the picture plane in a process of incessant movement, repeatedly subverted by erasures. Eventually, this metamorphosed into script itself.[28]

However, in a 1994 article Kirk Varnedoe thought it necessary to defend Twombly's seemingly random marks and splashes of paint against the criticism that "This is just scribbles – my kid could do it".

One could say that any child could make a drawing like Twombly only in the sense that any fool with a hammer could fragment sculptures as Rodin did, or any house painter could spatter paint as well as Pollock. In none of these cases would it be true. In each case the art lies not so much in the finesse of the individual mark, but in the orchestration of a previously uncodified set of personal "rules" about where to act and where not, how far to go and when to stop, in such a way as the cumulative courtship of seeming chaos defines an original, hybrid kind of order, which in turn illuminates a complex sense of human experience not voiced or left marginal in previous art.[29]

Together with Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, Twombly is regarded as the most important representative of a generation of artists who distanced themselves from abstract expressionism.[30]

Exhibitions edit

 
Bacchus – Iron curtain of the Vienna State Opera

After having an art piece being shown at Stable Gallery from 1953 to 1957, Twombly moved to Leo Castelli Gallery and later exhibited with Gagosian Gallery. Gagosian Gallery opened a new gallery in Rome, Twombly's hometown, on December 15, 2007, with the inaugural exhibition, of Twombly's work, Three Notes from Salalah.[31]

In 1993, at Matthew Marks Gallery in New York, an exhibition of Twombly's photographs offered a selection of large blurry color images of tulips, trees and ancient busts, based on the artist's Polaroids. In 2008, a specially curated selection of Twombly's photographic work was exhibited in Huis Marseille, the Museum for Photography, Amsterdam; the exhibition was opened by Sally Mann. For the season 2010/2011 in the Vienna State Opera Cy Twombly designed the large scale picture (176 sqm) Bacchus as part of the exhibition series Safety Curtain, conceived by museum in progress.[32] In 2011, the Museum Brandhorst, mounted a retrospective of Twombly's photographs from 1951 to 2010. It later was passed over to the Museum für Gegenwartskunst at Siegen[33] and the Palais des Beaux Arts, Brussels.

Twombly's work went on display as part of Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters at the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London from June 29, 2011, less than a week before Twombly's death. The show was built on a quote by Twombly stating that "I would've liked to have been Poussin, if I'd had a choice, in another time" and is the first time that his work was put in an exhibition with Poussin.[34] Opening in conjunction with the museum's Modern Wing, Twombly's solo exhibition—Cy Twombly: The Natural World, Selected Works 2000–2007—was on display at the Art Institute of Chicago in 2009. The Last Paintings, Twombly's most recent solo exhibition, began in Los Angeles in early 2012. Following the Hong Kong exhibition, it traveled to Gagosian Gallery locations in London and New York throughout 2012. The eight untitled paintings are closely related to the Camino Real group that inaugurated Gagosian Paris in 2010.

Retrospectives edit

In 1968, the Milwaukee Art Museum mounted the first retrospective of his art. Twombly had his next retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1979, curated by David Whitney. The artist was later honored by retrospectives at the Kunsthaus Zürich in 1987 (curated by Harald Szeemann), the Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris, in 1988, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1994, with additional venues in Houston, Los Angeles, and Berlin.[35] In 2001, the Menil Collection, the Kunstmuseum Basel, and the National Gallery of Art presented the first exhibition devoted entirely to Twombly's sculpture, assembling sixty-six works created from 1946 to 1998.[36] The European retrospective Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons opened at the Tate Modern, London, in June 2008, with subsequent versions at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna in Rome in 2009. At the Tate Modern retrospective, a text read:

This was his first solo retrospective in fifteen years, and provides an overview of his work from the 1950s to now. ... At the heart of the exhibition is Twombly's work exploring the cycles associated with seasons, nature and the passing of time. Several key groups are brought together for the first time, such as Tate's Four Seasons (1993–94) with those from the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The exhibition also explores how Twombly is influenced by antiquity, myth and the Mediterranean, for example the violent red swirls in the Bacchus 2005 paintings which bring to mind the drunken god of wine. The exhibition provides a unique opportunity to see the full range of Twombly's long and influential career from a fresh perspective.[37]

Some of his work was also shown in an exhibition named Turner Monet Twombly: Later Paintings which ran from 22 June to 28 October 2012 at Tate Liverpool.[38]

Collections edit

In 1989, the Philadelphia Museum of Art opened permanent rooms dedicated to his monumental 10-painting cycle, Fifty Days at Iliam (1978), based on Alexander Pope's translation of The Iliad.[23]

The Cy Twombly Pavilion of the Menil Collection in Houston, which was designed by Renzo Piano and opened in 1995, houses more than thirty of Twombly's paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, dating from 1953 to 1994. The holds 170 works including the Lepanto series. The newly opened Broad Collection in Los Angeles holds 22 works.

In 1995, The Four Seasons entered the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art as a gift from the artist. A recent (1998–1999) Twombly work, Three Studies from the Temeraire, a triptych, was purchased by the Art Gallery of New South Wales for A$4.5 million in 2004. In 2010, Twombly's permanent site-specific painting, Ceiling was unveiled in the Salle des Bronzes at the Musée du Louvre. He was only the third artist to be invited to contribute in such a way (the other two were Georges Braque in the 1950s and François Morellet in 2010).[39] In 2011, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, made a large acquisition of nine works worth about $75 million.[20] The Bacchus series and five bronze sculptures were given by Twombly's estate to Tate Modern in 2014.[40]

The Art Institute of Chicago hosted a two-year exhibition, "Cy Twombly: Sculpture Selections, 1948–1995". The exhibition featured examples of Twombly's sculptures made between 1948 and 1995, composed primarily of rough elements of wood coated in plaster and white paint.[41] The Institute also holds prints, drawings, and paintings by the artist in its permanent collection.[42]

Recognition edit

Twombly was a recipient of numerous awards. In 1984 he was awarded the "Internationaler Preis für bildende Kunst des Landes Baden-Württemberg" and in 1987 the "Rubenspreis der Stadt Siegen" [de]. Most notably, he was awarded the Praemium Imperiale in 1996.

Twombly was invited to exhibit his work at the Venice Biennale in 1964, in 1989 and in 2001 when he was awarded the Golden Lion at the 49th Venice Biennale. In 2010 he was made Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur by the French government. During fall 2010 Tacita Dean produced a film on Twombly, entitled Edwin Parker.[43]

Cy Twombly Foundation edit

 
The Ceiling – site-specific painting installed in the Salle des Bronzes at the Louvre (2010)

Twombly's will, written under U.S. law, allocated the bulk of the artist's art and cash to the Cy Twombly Foundation. The foundation now controls much of Twombly's work. It has reported $70 million in assets in 2011, and $1.5 billion in the following two years.[44][45] In 2012 it purchased a 25-foot-wide Beaux Arts mansion on 19 E 82nd St, Upper East Side Manhattan, planning to open an education center and a small museum.[46][47] There is an additional foundation office on the Gaeta property.[11] The four board members were divided in a lawsuit, settled in March 2014.[48]

In 2021, the Cy Twombly Foundation and the Louvre settled a dispute over an unauthorized renovation of Twombly's The Ceiling, the site-specific mural created for the Salle des Bronzes, and announced that the foundation had dropped the lawsuit in exchange for a plan to restore the gallery to the artist's original design.[49]

Art market edit

In 1990, a Christie's auction set a record for Twombly, with his 1971 untitled blackboard painting fetching $5.5 million. In 2011, a Twombly work from 1967, Untitled, sold for $15.2 million at Christie's in New York.[50] A new record was made in May 2012 for the 1970 painting Untitled (New York) at Sotheby's, selling for $17.4 million (€13.4 million).[51] In November 2013 a record price of $21.7 million for Poems to the Sea (1959), an abstract, 24-part multimedium work on paper, was achieved at Sotheby's Contemporary Art Sale.[52]

A new price record was set at Christie's Contemporary Art Sale on November 12, 2014, an untitled 1970 painting from his Blackboard series with "lasso-like scribbles" fetched far beyond the $35 million to $55 million estimate, selling at $69.6 million (£44.3m).[53]

In November, 2015, New York City (1968) set another new price record for Twombly at $70.5 million. Per Artnet News, "Covered with his trademark looping white scribbles on a slate-gray background, the work recalls his experience as a cryptologist at the Pentagon."[54]

Phaedrus incident edit

In 2007, an exhibition of Twombly's paintings, Blooming, a Scattering of Blossoms and Other Things, and other works on paper from gallerist Yvon Lambert's collection, was displayed from June to September at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Avignon. On July 19, 2007, police arrested Cambodian-French artist Rindy Sam after she kissed one panel of Twombly's triptych Phaedrus. The panel, an all-white canvas, was smudged by Sam's red lipstick and she was tried in a court in Avignon for "voluntary degradation of a work of art".

Sam defended her gesture to the court: "J'ai fait juste un bisou. C'est un geste d'amour, quand je l'ai embrassé, je n'ai pas réfléchi, je pensais que l'artiste, il aurait compris ... Ce geste était un acte artistique provoqué par le pouvoir de l'art" ("It was just a kiss, a loving gesture. I kissed it without thinking; I thought the artist would understand .... It was an artistic act provoked by the power of art").

The prosecution described the act as a "sort of cannibalism, or parasitism", but admitted that Sam was "visibly not conscious of what she has done", asking that she be fined €4,500 and compelled to attend a citizenship class. The art work was worth an estimated $2 million.[55][56][57] In November 2007, Sam was convicted and ordered to pay €1,000 to the painting's owner, €500 to the Avignon gallery where it was exhibited, and €1 to the painter.[58]

Citations edit

  1. ^ The Sunday Times Magazine, The Sunday Times, December 18, 2011, page 64
  2. ^ Matt Schudel (July 6, 2011), Cy Twombly, influential Va.-born abstract artist, dies at 83 The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Leonhard Emmerling, Basquiat, Cologne, Taschen, 2003
  4. ^ "The Cieling [sic] by Cy Twombly at Musée du Louvre". HYPEBEAST. March 25, 2010. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  5. ^ Kennedy, Randy (July 5, 2011). "Cy Twombly, Idiosyncratic Painter, Dies at 83". The New York Times. Retrieved July 6, 2011.
  6. ^ Alastair Sooke (February 9, 2009), Cy Twombly: late flowering for Mr Scribbles The Telegraph
  7. ^ Cy Twombly Gallery February 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Menil Collection.
  8. ^ Jones, Jonathan (May 15, 2008). "The trashcan laureate". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved July 6, 2011.
  9. ^ Varnedoe, Kirk (1994). Cy Twombly: A Retrospective. New York: The Museum of Modern Art. pp. 20–23.
  10. ^ Jonathan Jones (April 10, 2004), The last American hurrah The Guardian.
  11. ^ a b c d e Exhibart (September 2023), Archived (Date missing) at exibart.com (Error: unknown archive URL) T: Exhibart Magazine.
  12. ^ Raeburn, Michael (2015). Joseph Glasco: The Fifteenth American. London: Cacklegoose Press. p. 191. ISBN 9781611688542.
  13. ^ Kennedy, Randy (July 6, 2011). "CY TWOMBLY, 1928-2011". The New York Times. Retrieved March 14, 2013.
  14. ^ "US artist Cy Twombly dies in Rome: French gallery". Agence France-Presse. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  15. ^ Commemorative plaque in Santa Maria in Vallicella
  16. ^ Cy Twombly Biography . Archived from the original on October 28, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  17. ^ Holland Cotter (February 4, 2005), A Sensualist's Odd Ascetic Aesthetic The New York Times.
  18. ^ Molesworth, H.A.; Erickson, R. (2015). Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College. United Kingdom: Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston. p. 740. ISBN 9780300211917.
  19. ^ Collischan, J. (2010). Made in the U.S.A.: Modern/Contemporary Art in America. United States: iUniverse. p. 560. ISBN 9781440198540.
  20. ^ a b Carol Vogel (March 11, 2011), MoMA to Acquire Cy Twombly Works The New York Times.
  21. ^ Graig G. Staff, "A Poetics of Becoming: The Mythography of Cy Twombly". In: Hirsh, Jennie, and Wallace, Isabelle D., eds. Contemporary Art and Classical Myth. Farnham: Ashgate, 2011.
  22. ^ Cy Twombly, Leda and the Swan (1963), Sale 2355 Christie's New York, Post-War and Contemporary Evening Sale, November 10, 2010.
  23. ^ a b Randy Kennedy (July 5, 2011), American Artist Who Scribbled a Unique Path The New York Times.
  24. ^ Cy Twombly Nine Discourses on Commodus (1963) Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
  25. ^ Cy Twombly Untitled (1970) MoMA Collection
  26. ^ Sherwood Pundyk, Anne (September 2011). "Cy Twombly: Sculpture". The Brooklyn Rail.
  27. ^ Cy Twombly Untitled (1976) MoMA Collection.
  28. ^ Katherina Schmidt, "Immortal and Eternally Young. Figures from classical mythology in the work of Nicolas Poussin and Cy Twombly", in Nicholas Cullinan (ed) Twombly and Poussin – Arcadian Painters. London: Dulwich Picture Gallery/Paul Holberton Publishing, 2011.
  29. ^ Kirk Varnedoe (Autumn–Winter 1994). . MoMa No.18. pp. 18–23. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013.
  30. ^ Cy Twombly July 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Museum Brandhorst, Munich.
  31. ^ "Cy Twombly - December 15, 2007 - March 15, 2008 - Gagosian Gallery". April 12, 2018.
  32. ^ "Safety Curtain 2010/2011", museum in progress, Vienna.
  33. ^ "Startseite - Museum für Gegenwartkunst Siegen".
  34. ^ Hamilton, Adrian (July 5, 2011). "Twombly and Poussin: Every picture tells a story". The Independent. UK. Retrieved July 6, 2011.
  35. ^ Collection: Cy Twombly February 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Guggenheim Collection.
  36. ^ Cy Twombly: The Sculpture, May 6, – July 29, 2001 September 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
  37. ^ Cy Twombly Cycles and Seasons August 28, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (June 19 – September 14, 2008). Tate Modern, London.
  38. ^ "Turner Monet Twombly: Later Paintings - Tate".
  39. ^ Nicole Winfield (July 6, 2011), American master painter Cy Twombly Philly Press.
  40. ^ "Tate gallery gifted Cy Twombly works worth £50m - BBC News". BBC. June 12, 2014. Retrieved April 6, 2015.
  41. ^ "Cy Twombly: Sculpture Selections, 1948–1995". December 12, 2012.
  42. ^ "Twombly, Cy". The Art Institute of Chicago.
  43. ^ Dean, Tacita (July 6, 2011). "Cy Twombly: a close encounter". The Guardian.
  44. ^ "NCCS Organization Profile – Cy Twombly Foundation". National Center for Charitable Statistics. Archived from the original on April 6, 2015. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  45. ^ "CY TWOMBLY FOUNDATION :: CitizenAudit.org". Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  46. ^ Josh Barbanel (May 30, 2012), Twombly Gets N.Y. Home The Wall Street Journal.
  47. ^ Carol Vogel (May 31, 2012). "Cy Twombly Foundation to Open Museum and Education Center in New York". ArtsBeat / The New York Times. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  48. ^ Randy Kennedy (March 14, 2014). "Settlement Reached in Cy Twombly Foundation Lawsuit". ArtsBeat / The New York Times. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  49. ^ Tessa Solomon (10 December 2021), Louvre to Reverse Renovation of Gallery Adorned With Cy Twombly Mural, Ending Legal Dispute ARTnews.
  50. ^ Carol Vogel (May 11, 2011), Bidding War for a Warhol Breaks Out at Christie's The New York Times.
  51. ^ Contemporary Art Evening Auction at Sotheby's on 9 May, 2012 September 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
  52. ^ "Sotheby's Rings Up $380.6 Million at Contemporary Art Sale, Sets Warhol Auction Record - News - Art in America". November 14, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  53. ^ Kelly Crow (November 13, 2014). "Christie's Makes History With $853 Million Sale of Contemporary Art". WSJ.
  54. ^ "Record $70 Million Twombly Canvas Leads Sotheby's Solid $295 Million Contemporary Sale". ArtNet News. November 11, 2015.
  55. ^ "BBC News, Painting meets its femme fatale". July 21, 2007.
  56. ^ lefigaro.fr. "Le Figaro - Actualité en direct et informations en continu". Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  57. ^ One is art, one is vandalism – but which is which?, The Scotsman, October 10, 2007
  58. ^ "Woman Who Kissed Painting With Red Lipstick Gets Community Service". Fox News. March 25, 2015.

General sources edit

  • The Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved May 7, 2015
  • Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons. Edited by Nicholas Serota. London: Tate Publishing and Distributed Art Publishers, 2008.
  • Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters Dulwich Picture Gallery June 29 – September 25, 2011.

Further reading edit

  • Jacobus, Mary. 2016, Reading Cy Twombly: Poetry in Paint/Princeton University Press
  • Tyson, John A. "Cy Twombly's Cardboard Prints: Impressions, Inversions and Decomposition", Print Quarterly, Vol. XXXV No. 1 March 2018, pp. 27–38

External links edit

  • 125 images of his art, on Wikiart
  • Panorama: The World of Cy Twombly. Comprehensive online gathering of News, Books, Timeline, Links, Bio, Images and more.
  • From VOGUE to NEST: 032c activates the secret history of CY TWOMBLY by HORST P. HORST in 032, Issue No. 19, Summer 2010.
  • Roland Barthes, Cy Twombly: Works on Paper and The Wisdom of Art in The Responsibility of Forms University of California Press, 1991.
  • John Squire speaking about four paintings by Cy Twombly at Tate Modern (video) on YouTube
  • Irene Gras Cruz, "Twomblyan Spirit: poeticity language" Magazine Disturbis nº 8 2010. ISSN 1887-2786.
  • Irene Gras Cruz, "Cy Twombly y el Mediterráneo. Pervivencia del mundo clásico" Ars Longa, Cuadernos de Arte, nº25, 2016, p. 369-382.

twombly, father, baseball, edwin, parker, twombly, april, 1928, july, 2011, american, painter, sculptor, photographer, twombly, studiobornedwin, parker, twombly, 1928, april, 1928lexington, virginia, diedjuly, 2011, 2011, aged, rome, italyeducationschool, muse. For his father see Cy Twombly baseball Edwin Parker Cy Twombly Jr s aɪ ˈ t w ɒ m b l i April 25 1928 July 5 2011 1 was an American painter sculptor and photographer Cy TwomblyTwombly in his studioBornEdwin Parker Twombly Jr 1928 04 25 April 25 1928Lexington Virginia U S DiedJuly 5 2011 2011 07 05 aged 83 Rome ItalyEducationSchool of the Museum of Fine ArtsWashington and Lee UniversityArt Students LeagueBlack Mountain CollegeKnown forPainting sculpture calligraphySpouseTatiana Franchetti m 1959 died 2010 wbr PartnerNicola Del Roscio 1964 2011 Children1AwardsPraemium ImperialeLegion of Honor Twombly influenced artists such as Anselm Kiefer Francesco Clemente Julian Schnabel and Jean Michel Basquiat 2 3 His best known works are typically large scale freely scribbled calligraphic and graffiti like works on solid fields of mostly gray tan or off white colors His later paintings and works on paper shifted toward romantic symbolism and their titles can be interpreted visually through shapes and forms and words Twombly often quoted poets such as Stephane Mallarme Rainer Maria Rilke and John Keats as well as classical myths and allegories in his works Examples of this are his Apollo and The Artist and a series of eight drawings consisting solely of inscriptions of the word VIRGIL Twombly s works are in the permanent collections of modern art museums globally including the Menil Collection in Houston the Tate Modern in London New York s Museum of Modern Art and Munich s Museum Brandhorst He was commissioned for a ceiling at the Musee du Louvre in Paris 4 In a 1994 retrospective curator Kirk Varnedoe described Twombly s work as influential among artists discomfiting to many critics and truculently difficult not just for a broad public but for sophisticated initiates of postwar art as well 5 Contents 1 Life and career 2 Work 2 1 Painting 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Retrospectives 4 Collections 5 Recognition 6 Cy Twombly Foundation 7 Art market 8 Phaedrus incident 9 Citations 10 General sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksLife and career editTwombly was born in Lexington Virginia on April 25 1928 Twombly s father also nicknamed Cy pitched for the Chicago White Sox 6 They were both nicknamed after the baseball great Cy Young who pitched for among others the Cardinals Red Sox Indians and Braves At age 12 Twombly began to take private art lessons with the Catalan modern master Pierre Daura 7 After graduating from Lexington High School in 1946 Twombly attended Darlington School in Rome Georgia and studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston 1948 49 and at Washington and Lee University 1949 50 in Lexington Virginia On a tuition scholarship from 1950 to 1951 he studied at the Art Students League of New York where he met Robert Rauschenberg 8 Rauschenberg encouraged him to attend Black Mountain College near Asheville North Carolina At Black Mountain in 1951 and 1952 he studied with Franz Kline Robert Motherwell and Ben Shahn and met John Cage The poet and rector of the College Charles Olson had a great influence on him Motherwell arranged Twombly s first solo exhibition which was organized by the Samuel M Kootz Gallery in New York in 1951 At this time his work was influenced by Kline s black and white gestural expressionism as well as Paul Klee s imagery In 1952 Twombly received a grant from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts which enabled him to travel to North Africa Spain Italy and France He spent this journey in Africa and Europe with Robert Rauschenberg In 1954 he served in the U S Army as a cryptographer in Washington D C and would frequently travel to New York during periods of leave From 1955 through 1956 he taught at the Southern Seminary and Junior College in Buena Vista Virginia currently known as Southern Virginia University during the summer vacations Twombly would travel to New York to paint in his Williams Street apartment 9 In 1957 Twombly moved to Rome and made it his primary city where he met the Italian artist Tatiana Franchetti sister of his patron Baron Giorgio Franchetti They were married at New York City Hall in 1959 10 and then bought a palazzo on the Via di Monserrato in Rome In addition they had a 17th century palace in Bassano in Teverina near Viterbo In 2023 the palace was restored and reopened to the public as an artists residence and an exhibition center The first artist being hosted is American painter Robert Nava 11 Around 1961 through their mutual relationship with the artist Afro Twombly met the American artist Joseph Glasco in Mykonos According to Glasco he and Twombly saw each other every summer in Mykonos for years and saw a lot of each other daily 12 In 1964 Twombly met Nicola Del Roscio of Gaeta who became his longtime companion 11 13 Twombly bought a house and rented a studio in Gaeta in the early 1990s 11 Twombly and Tatiana who died in 2010 never divorced and remained friends 11 In July 2011 after suffering from cancer for several years Twombly died in Rome after a brief hospitalization 14 A plaque in Santa Maria in Vallicella commemorates him 15 Work editPainting edit nbsp Untitled 1957 After his return in 1953 Twombly served in the United States Army as a cryptologist an activity that left a distinct mark on his artistic style 16 From 1955 to 1959 he worked in New York where he became a prominent figure among a group of artists including Robert Rauschenberg with whom he was sharing a studio 17 and Jasper Johns Exposure to the emerging New York School purged figurative aspects from his work encouraging a simplified form of abstraction He became fascinated with tribal art using the painterly language of the early 1950s to invoke primitivism reversing the normal evolution of the New York School Twombly soon developed a technique of gestural drawing characterized by thin white lines on a dark canvas that appear to be scratched onto the surface He would apply bitumen on the canvas in a quick and coarse fashion making the painting tactile and scarred with his energetic gestural lines that would become his signature style 18 19 He stopped making sculptures in 1959 and did not take up sculpting again until 1976 20 Twombly often inscribed on paintings the names of mythological figures during the 1960s 21 Twombly s move to Gaeta in Southern Italy in 1957 gave him closer contact with classical sources From 1962 he produced a cycle of works based on myths including Leda and the Swan and The Birth of Venus myths were frequent themes of Twombly s 1960s work Between 1960 and 1963 Twombly painted the rape of Leda by the god Zeus Jupiter in the form of a Swan six times once in 1960 twice in 1962 and three times in 1963 22 nbsp Dutch Interior 1962 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2022 Twombly s 1964 exhibition of the nine panel Discourses on Commodus 1963 at the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York was panned by artist and writer Donald Judd who said There are a few drips and splatters and an occasional pencil line he wrote in a review There isn t anything to these paintings 23 They are currently exhibited at the Guggenheim Bilbao 24 Erotic and corporeal symbols became more prominent whilst a greater lyricism developed in his Blackboard paintings Between 1967 and 1971 he produced a number of works on gray grounds the grey paintings This series features terse colorless scrawls reminiscent of chalk on a blackboard that form no actual words and are examples of asemic writing Twombly made this work using an unusual technique he sat on the shoulders of a friend who shuttled back and forth along the length of the canvas thus allowing the artist to create his fluid continuous lines 25 nbsp Untitled Bolsena 1969 at the National Gallery of Art in 2022 His later sculptures exhibit a similar blend of emotional expansiveness and intellectual sophistication From 1976 Twombly again produced sculptures lightly painted in white suggestive of Classical forms In an interview with critic David Sylvester on the occasion of the large exhibition of his sculpture at Kunstmuseum Basel in 2000 Twombly revealed that for him the demands of making sculpture were distinctly different from those required of painting Sculpture is a whole other state And it s a building thing Whereas the painting is more fusing fusing of ideas fusing of feelings fusing projected on atmosphere 26 In the mid 1970s in paintings such as Untitled 1976 Twombly began to evoke landscape through colour favouring brown green and light blue written inscriptions and collage elements 27 In 1978 he worked on the monumental historical ensemble Fifty Days at Iliam a ten part cycle inspired by Homer s Iliad since then Twombly continued to draw on literature and myth deploying cryptic pictorial metaphors that situate individual experience within the grand narratives of Western tradition as in the Gaeta canvases and the monumental Four Seasons concluded in 1994 nbsp Fifty Days at Iliam Shield of Achilles 1978 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2022 In an essay in the catalogue to the 2011 Dulwich exhibition see below Katharina Schmidt summarizes the scope and technique of Twombly s œuvre Cy Twombly s work can be understood as one vast engagement with cultural memory His paintings drawings and sculptures on mythological subjects have come to form a significant part of that memory Usually drawing on the most familiar gods and heroes he restricts himself to just a few relatively well known episodes as narrated by poet historians given visible shape by artists and repeatedly reinterpreted in the literature and visual art of later centuries His special medium is writing Starting out from purely graphic marks he developed a kind of meta script in which abbreviated signs hatchings loops numbers and the simplest of pictographs spread throughout the picture plane in a process of incessant movement repeatedly subverted by erasures Eventually this metamorphosed into script itself 28 However in a 1994 article Kirk Varnedoe thought it necessary to defend Twombly s seemingly random marks and splashes of paint against the criticism that This is just scribbles my kid could do it One could say that any child could make a drawing like Twombly only in the sense that any fool with a hammer could fragment sculptures as Rodin did or any house painter could spatter paint as well as Pollock In none of these cases would it be true In each case the art lies not so much in the finesse of the individual mark but in the orchestration of a previously uncodified set of personal rules about where to act and where not how far to go and when to stop in such a way as the cumulative courtship of seeming chaos defines an original hybrid kind of order which in turn illuminates a complex sense of human experience not voiced or left marginal in previous art 29 Together with Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns Twombly is regarded as the most important representative of a generation of artists who distanced themselves from abstract expressionism 30 Exhibitions edit nbsp Bacchus Iron curtain of the Vienna State Opera After having an art piece being shown at Stable Gallery from 1953 to 1957 Twombly moved to Leo Castelli Gallery and later exhibited with Gagosian Gallery Gagosian Gallery opened a new gallery in Rome Twombly s hometown on December 15 2007 with the inaugural exhibition of Twombly s work Three Notes from Salalah 31 In 1993 at Matthew Marks Gallery in New York an exhibition of Twombly s photographs offered a selection of large blurry color images of tulips trees and ancient busts based on the artist s Polaroids In 2008 a specially curated selection of Twombly s photographic work was exhibited in Huis Marseille the Museum for Photography Amsterdam the exhibition was opened by Sally Mann For the season 2010 2011 in the Vienna State Opera Cy Twombly designed the large scale picture 176 sqm Bacchus as part of the exhibition series Safety Curtain conceived by museum in progress 32 In 2011 the Museum Brandhorst mounted a retrospective of Twombly s photographs from 1951 to 2010 It later was passed over to the Museum fur Gegenwartskunst at Siegen 33 and the Palais des Beaux Arts Brussels Twombly s work went on display as part of Twombly and Poussin Arcadian Painters at the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London from June 29 2011 less than a week before Twombly s death The show was built on a quote by Twombly stating that I would ve liked to have been Poussin if I d had a choice in another time and is the first time that his work was put in an exhibition with Poussin 34 Opening in conjunction with the museum s Modern Wing Twombly s solo exhibition Cy Twombly The Natural World Selected Works 2000 2007 was on display at the Art Institute of Chicago in 2009 The Last Paintings Twombly s most recent solo exhibition began in Los Angeles in early 2012 Following the Hong Kong exhibition it traveled to Gagosian Gallery locations in London and New York throughout 2012 The eight untitled paintings are closely related to the Camino Real group that inaugurated Gagosian Paris in 2010 Retrospectives edit In 1968 the Milwaukee Art Museum mounted the first retrospective of his art Twombly had his next retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1979 curated by David Whitney The artist was later honored by retrospectives at the Kunsthaus Zurich in 1987 curated by Harald Szeemann the Musee National d Art Moderne Paris in 1988 and the Museum of Modern Art New York in 1994 with additional venues in Houston Los Angeles and Berlin 35 In 2001 the Menil Collection the Kunstmuseum Basel and the National Gallery of Art presented the first exhibition devoted entirely to Twombly s sculpture assembling sixty six works created from 1946 to 1998 36 The European retrospective Cy Twombly Cycles and Seasons opened at the Tate Modern London in June 2008 with subsequent versions at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and the Galleria Nazionale d Arte Moderna in Rome in 2009 At the Tate Modern retrospective a text read This was his first solo retrospective in fifteen years and provides an overview of his work from the 1950s to now At the heart of the exhibition is Twombly s work exploring the cycles associated with seasons nature and the passing of time Several key groups are brought together for the first time such as Tate s Four Seasons 1993 94 with those from the Museum of Modern Art New York The exhibition also explores how Twombly is influenced by antiquity myth and the Mediterranean for example the violent red swirls in the Bacchus 2005 paintings which bring to mind the drunken god of wine The exhibition provides a unique opportunity to see the full range of Twombly s long and influential career from a fresh perspective 37 Some of his work was also shown in an exhibition named Turner Monet Twombly Later Paintings which ran from 22 June to 28 October 2012 at Tate Liverpool 38 Collections editIn 1989 the Philadelphia Museum of Art opened permanent rooms dedicated to his monumental 10 painting cycle Fifty Days at Iliam 1978 based on Alexander Pope s translation of The Iliad 23 The Cy Twombly Pavilion of the Menil Collection in Houston which was designed by Renzo Piano and opened in 1995 houses more than thirty of Twombly s paintings sculptures and works on paper dating from 1953 to 1994 The Museum Brandhorst in Munich holds 170 works including the Lepanto series The newly opened Broad Collection in Los Angeles holds 22 works In 1995 The Four Seasons entered the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art as a gift from the artist A recent 1998 1999 Twombly work Three Studies from the Temeraire a triptych was purchased by the Art Gallery of New South Wales for A 4 5 million in 2004 In 2010 Twombly s permanent site specific painting Ceiling was unveiled in the Salle des Bronzes at the Musee du Louvre He was only the third artist to be invited to contribute in such a way the other two were Georges Braque in the 1950s and Francois Morellet in 2010 39 In 2011 the Museum of Modern Art New York made a large acquisition of nine works worth about 75 million 20 The Bacchus series and five bronze sculptures were given by Twombly s estate to Tate Modern in 2014 40 The Art Institute of Chicago hosted a two year exhibition Cy Twombly Sculpture Selections 1948 1995 The exhibition featured examples of Twombly s sculptures made between 1948 and 1995 composed primarily of rough elements of wood coated in plaster and white paint 41 The Institute also holds prints drawings and paintings by the artist in its permanent collection 42 Recognition editTwombly was a recipient of numerous awards In 1984 he was awarded the Internationaler Preis fur bildende Kunst des Landes Baden Wurttemberg and in 1987 the Rubenspreis der Stadt Siegen de Most notably he was awarded the Praemium Imperiale in 1996 Twombly was invited to exhibit his work at the Venice Biennale in 1964 in 1989 and in 2001 when he was awarded the Golden Lion at the 49th Venice Biennale In 2010 he was made Chevalier of the Legion d Honneur by the French government During fall 2010 Tacita Dean produced a film on Twombly entitled Edwin Parker 43 Cy Twombly Foundation edit nbsp The Ceiling site specific painting installed in the Salle des Bronzes at the Louvre 2010 Twombly s will written under U S law allocated the bulk of the artist s art and cash to the Cy Twombly Foundation The foundation now controls much of Twombly s work It has reported 70 million in assets in 2011 and 1 5 billion in the following two years 44 45 In 2012 it purchased a 25 foot wide Beaux Arts mansion on 19 E 82nd St Upper East Side Manhattan planning to open an education center and a small museum 46 47 There is an additional foundation office on the Gaeta property 11 The four board members were divided in a lawsuit settled in March 2014 48 In 2021 the Cy Twombly Foundation and the Louvre settled a dispute over an unauthorized renovation of Twombly s The Ceiling the site specific mural created for the Salle des Bronzes and announced that the foundation had dropped the lawsuit in exchange for a plan to restore the gallery to the artist s original design 49 Art market editIn 1990 a Christie s auction set a record for Twombly with his 1971 untitled blackboard painting fetching 5 5 million In 2011 a Twombly work from 1967 Untitled sold for 15 2 million at Christie s in New York 50 A new record was made in May 2012 for the 1970 painting Untitled New York at Sotheby s selling for 17 4 million 13 4 million 51 In November 2013 a record price of 21 7 million for Poems to the Sea 1959 an abstract 24 part multimedium work on paper was achieved at Sotheby s Contemporary Art Sale 52 A new price record was set at Christie s Contemporary Art Sale on November 12 2014 an untitled 1970 painting from his Blackboard series with lasso like scribbles fetched far beyond the 35 million to 55 million estimate selling at 69 6 million 44 3m 53 In November 2015 New York City 1968 set another new price record for Twombly at 70 5 million Per Artnet News Covered with his trademark looping white scribbles on a slate gray background the work recalls his experience as a cryptologist at the Pentagon 54 Phaedrus incident editIn 2007 an exhibition of Twombly s paintings Blooming a Scattering of Blossoms and Other Things and other works on paper from gallerist Yvon Lambert s collection was displayed from June to September at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Avignon On July 19 2007 police arrested Cambodian French artist Rindy Sam after she kissed one panel of Twombly s triptych Phaedrus The panel an all white canvas was smudged by Sam s red lipstick and she was tried in a court in Avignon for voluntary degradation of a work of art Sam defended her gesture to the court J ai fait juste un bisou C est un geste d amour quand je l ai embrasse je n ai pas reflechi je pensais que l artiste il aurait compris Ce geste etait un acte artistique provoque par le pouvoir de l art It was just a kiss a loving gesture I kissed it without thinking I thought the artist would understand It was an artistic act provoked by the power of art The prosecution described the act as a sort of cannibalism or parasitism but admitted that Sam was visibly not conscious of what she has done asking that she be fined 4 500 and compelled to attend a citizenship class The art work was worth an estimated 2 million 55 56 57 In November 2007 Sam was convicted and ordered to pay 1 000 to the painting s owner 500 to the Avignon gallery where it was exhibited and 1 to the painter 58 Citations edit The Sunday Times Magazine The Sunday Times December 18 2011 page 64 Matt Schudel July 6 2011 Cy Twombly influential Va born abstract artist dies at 83 The Washington Post Leonhard Emmerling Basquiat Cologne Taschen 2003 The Cieling sic by Cy Twombly at Musee du Louvre HYPEBEAST March 25 2010 Retrieved March 1 2019 Kennedy Randy July 5 2011 Cy Twombly Idiosyncratic Painter Dies at 83 The New York Times Retrieved July 6 2011 Alastair Sooke February 9 2009 Cy Twombly late flowering for Mr Scribbles The Telegraph Cy Twombly Gallery Archived February 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine Menil Collection Jones Jonathan May 15 2008 The trashcan laureate The Guardian UK Retrieved July 6 2011 Varnedoe Kirk 1994 Cy Twombly A Retrospective New York The Museum of Modern Art pp 20 23 Jonathan Jones April 10 2004 The last American hurrah The Guardian a b c d e Exhibart September 2023 Archived Date missing at exibart com Error unknown archive URL T Exhibart Magazine Raeburn Michael 2015 Joseph Glasco The Fifteenth American London Cacklegoose Press p 191 ISBN 9781611688542 Kennedy Randy July 6 2011 CY TWOMBLY 1928 2011 The New York Times Retrieved March 14 2013 US artist Cy Twombly dies in Rome French gallery Agence France Presse Retrieved July 5 2011 Commemorative plaque in Santa Maria in Vallicella Cy Twombly Biography Cy Twombly Biography Archived from the original on October 28 2010 Retrieved January 27 2014 Holland Cotter February 4 2005 A Sensualist s Odd Ascetic Aesthetic The New York Times Molesworth H A Erickson R 2015 Leap Before You Look Black Mountain College United Kingdom Institute of Contemporary Art Boston p 740 ISBN 9780300211917 Collischan J 2010 Made in the U S A Modern Contemporary Art in America United States iUniverse p 560 ISBN 9781440198540 a b Carol Vogel March 11 2011 MoMA to Acquire Cy Twombly Works The New York Times Graig G Staff A Poetics of Becoming The Mythography of Cy Twombly In Hirsh Jennie and Wallace Isabelle D eds Contemporary Art and Classical Myth Farnham Ashgate 2011 Cy Twombly Leda and the Swan 1963 Sale 2355 Christie s New York Post War and Contemporary Evening Sale November 10 2010 a b Randy Kennedy July 5 2011 American Artist Who Scribbled a Unique Path The New York Times Cy Twombly Nine Discourses on Commodus 1963 Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Cy Twombly Untitled 1970 MoMA Collection Sherwood Pundyk Anne September 2011 Cy Twombly Sculpture The Brooklyn Rail Cy Twombly Untitled 1976 MoMA Collection Katherina Schmidt Immortal and Eternally Young Figures from classical mythology in the work of Nicolas Poussin and Cy Twombly in Nicholas Cullinan ed Twombly and Poussin Arcadian Painters London Dulwich Picture Gallery Paul Holberton Publishing 2011 Kirk Varnedoe Autumn Winter 1994 Your Kid Could Not Do This and Other Reflections on Cy Twombly MoMa No 18 pp 18 23 Archived from the original on December 2 2013 Cy Twombly Archived July 14 2014 at the Wayback Machine Museum Brandhorst Munich Cy Twombly December 15 2007 March 15 2008 Gagosian Gallery April 12 2018 Safety Curtain 2010 2011 museum in progress Vienna Startseite Museum fur Gegenwartkunst Siegen Hamilton Adrian July 5 2011 Twombly and Poussin Every picture tells a story The Independent UK Retrieved July 6 2011 Collection Cy Twombly Archived February 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Guggenheim Collection Cy Twombly The Sculpture May 6 July 29 2001 Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine National Gallery of Art Washington D C Cy Twombly Cycles and Seasons Archived August 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine June 19 September 14 2008 Tate Modern London Turner Monet Twombly Later Paintings Tate Nicole Winfield July 6 2011 American master painter Cy Twombly Philly Press Tate gallery gifted Cy Twombly works worth 50m BBC News BBC June 12 2014 Retrieved April 6 2015 Cy Twombly Sculpture Selections 1948 1995 December 12 2012 Twombly Cy The Art Institute of Chicago Dean Tacita July 6 2011 Cy Twombly a close encounter The Guardian NCCS Organization Profile Cy Twombly Foundation National Center for Charitable Statistics Archived from the original on April 6 2015 Retrieved March 29 2015 CY TWOMBLY FOUNDATION CitizenAudit org Retrieved March 31 2015 Josh Barbanel May 30 2012 Twombly Gets N Y Home The Wall Street Journal Carol Vogel May 31 2012 Cy Twombly Foundation to Open Museum and Education Center in New York ArtsBeat The New York Times Retrieved March 29 2015 Randy Kennedy March 14 2014 Settlement Reached in Cy Twombly Foundation Lawsuit ArtsBeat The New York Times Retrieved March 31 2015 Tessa Solomon 10 December 2021 Louvre to Reverse Renovation of Gallery Adorned With Cy Twombly Mural Ending Legal Dispute ARTnews Carol Vogel May 11 2011 Bidding War for a Warhol Breaks Out at Christie s The New York Times Contemporary Art Evening Auction at Sotheby s on 9 May 2012 Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Sotheby s Rings Up 380 6 Million at Contemporary Art Sale Sets Warhol Auction Record News Art in America November 14 2013 Retrieved March 22 2017 Kelly Crow November 13 2014 Christie s Makes History With 853 Million Sale of Contemporary Art WSJ Record 70 Million Twombly Canvas Leads Sotheby s Solid 295 Million Contemporary Sale ArtNet News November 11 2015 BBC News Painting meets its femme fatale July 21 2007 lefigaro fr Le Figaro Actualite en direct et informations en continu Retrieved March 22 2017 One is art one is vandalism but which is which The Scotsman October 10 2007 Woman Who Kissed Painting With Red Lipstick Gets Community Service Fox News March 25 2015 General sources editThe Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved May 7 2015 Cy Twombly Cycles and Seasons Edited by Nicholas Serota London Tate Publishing and Distributed Art Publishers 2008 Twombly and Poussin Arcadian Painters Dulwich Picture Gallery June 29 September 25 2011 Further reading editJacobus Mary 2016 Reading Cy Twombly Poetry in Paint Princeton University Press Tyson John A Cy Twombly s Cardboard Prints Impressions Inversions and Decomposition Print Quarterly Vol XXXV No 1 March 2018 pp 27 38External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Cy Twombly nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cy Twombly 125 images of his art on Wikiart Panorama The World of Cy Twombly Comprehensive online gathering of News Books Timeline Links Bio Images and more From VOGUE to NEST 032c activates the secret history of CY TWOMBLY by HORST P HORST in 032 Issue No 19 Summer 2010 Gagosian Gallery Cy Twombly The Menil Collection Cy Twombly Roland Barthes Cy Twombly Works on Paper and The Wisdom of Art in The Responsibility of Forms University of California Press 1991 John Squire speaking about four paintings by Cy Twombly at Tate Modern video on YouTube Irene Gras Cruz Twomblyan Spirit poeticity language Magazine Disturbis nº 8 2010 ISSN 1887 2786 Irene Gras Cruz Cy Twombly y el Mediterraneo Pervivencia del mundo clasico Ars Longa Cuadernos de Arte nº25 2016 p 369 382 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cy Twombly amp oldid 1220951263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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