Pat Steir: The Brueghel Series (A Vanitas of Style)
- Dates: December 6, 1984 through February 18, 1985
- Collections: Contemporary Art
-
... more
Winter 1984: The Brueghel Series (A Vanitas of Style), a series of 16 monochrome and 64 polychrome paintings by noted contempory artist Pat Steir will open at The Brooklyn Museum on December 6 and be on view in the Grand Lobby through February 18, 1985.
Using a 17th century still life painting by Jan Brueghel the Elder as her model, Steir has worked for two years to paint a monumental study of the history of pictorial styles. The paintingg itself has been done three times by Steir: the first based on a 4’ x 4’ grid in monochrome; the second on an 8’ x 8’grid in polychrome, and the third a copy of the original which hangs in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. Steir organized her study of style by enlarging the original painting and developing the original into a series of 64 separate panels each the size of the original. Each individual panel represents a particular style, and each style is determined by the spatial relationships of the particular segments. The viewer will find that the juxtapositions and comparisons of the four monochrome and eight polychrome horizontal or vertical rows read as a compedium of quotations which often show surprising art historical connections, revelations and judgements. In most cases the quotation is derived from the style on an individual artist: Chardin, Matisse, or Rembrandt for example. In other instances the canvases reflect broader movements and style such as Cubism, or Futurism.
Through quotation, Pat Steir investigates the unique qualities of paintings as well as witnessing their common historic characteristics.
“All art which endures the centuries”, Steir stated, “can be considered great art--it symbolizes to us that there is something common among us--to our condition. Art that endures allows us to speak of the human condition.”
Following its Brooklyn Museum venue, The Brueghel Series will travel to the Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska; University Art Museum, Berkeley, California; and the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, Minneapolis, Minnesota.Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1971 - 1988. 1984, 052. View Original
Press Coverage of this Exhibition ![]()
- ART VIEW; THE IMAGES OF THE BUDDHA CONINUES TO ENTHRALLDecember 2, 1984 By John Russell"Two things should be said about the Brooklyn Museum. One is that it is on the move in ways that can only delight us. The other is that there is an immediate and temporary reason to go there, in that through Feb. 10, 1985, the Brooklyn Museum has an exhibition called ''The Light of Asia'' that was previously shown with great success at the Los..."
- ART VIEW; ARE MAJOR MUSEUMS SLIGHTING TODAY'S ART?December 23, 1984 By Michael Brenson"This is a good time in the New York art world. There is a sense now that anything can happen. Unlike the 1950's and 60's, when artists were unlikely to be taken seriously if their work did not reflect Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, Minimal Art, or other currents in the artistic mainstream, artists can now work in almost any style and material and..."



Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum