O'Sullivan on Neel
Michael O'Sullivan delivers a really good review of Alice Neel's current exhibition at the NMWA.
Read it here.
One of the paintings in the exhibition is of our own Lida Moser, who posed for Neel four times (one of the portraits is at the Met in NYC), and who traded Neel paintings for slides of Neel's work so that she could send them to NYC galleries as Neel seeked a place to show her work. Apparently Neel was on welfare and traded Moser paintings for the documentation of her work.
Two of the paintings discussed by O'Sullivan are shown in the portrait of Neel by Moser displayed to the left.
Alice Neel and Lida Moser were apparently really close friends and Lida has a million stories about Alice, especially the tremendous resentment that Neel faced once she began to gather some recognition. The resentment came from the then popular male abstract painters who were in vogue, and who resented Alice's success because she was a woman and a representational painter.
Several photographic portraits of Neel by Moser are in the permanent collection of the National Portrait Gallery.
Friday, November 04, 2005
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