Thursday, December 29, 2022

Museum Visit with Christian

 What a fun day! Christian and I went to see an exhibit at the Phillips Collection. We took the Metro from Springfield to Dupont Circle and walked a few blocks to my favorite museum in D.C.

The Exhibit 

Giuseppe De Nittis, An Italian Impressionist in Paris

Christian at the entrance to the Phillips Collection

Here are some of our favorite works in the exhibit.

Breakfast in the Garden

Promenade Hivernale

Snow Effect


When we saw that the Cafe had reopened, we decided to stop in for lunch.
 (Christian was not hungry, however, so he watched me eat!)
 
Christine in the Cafe

Then we came back to Springfield and stopped at one of Christian's favorite places in Springfield,
the Sandwich Republic. 
He ordered a sandwich for his lunch, and I ordered one for my dinner and lunch.

A brief bio of the artist (from Wikipedia)  

De Nittis was born in Barletta, in the region of Apulia, where he lived with his family in the wealthiest district of the city near the intersection of the Corso Vittorio Emanuele and the Corso Garibaldi, just around the corner from the birthplace of another famous painter and contemporary, Geremia Discanno.

Barletta at the time of the Bourbons, and in particular during the reign of Ferdinand II, nicknamed the "Bomb King" for having his own subjects cannonaded, was an extremely class-oriented city and those who could afford it gathered regularly near De Nittis' home beneath the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher with its bronze Colossus of Heraclius in front. Situated on the Adriatic coast, Barletta's port thrived as a point of embarkation for the privileged travelling to or returning from the east.

His father, Raffaele, was a wealthy landowner who could afford to send his son to study under Giovanni Battista Calò, who tutored other notable Barlettan painters including Vincenzo De Stefano, Giuseppe Gabbiani, and Raffaele Girondi. But, Raffaele was publicly outspoken in his opposition to the Bourbon monarchy and support for the unification of Italy, so was imprisoned for two years. Still, Giuseppe managed to gain admittance to the Reale Instituto di Belle Arti, a university-level art school in Naples founded by King Charles VII of Naples in 1752. Like his father, though, Giuseppe openly spoke his mind, resulting in his expulsion from the Institute in 1863 for insurbordination. After his expulsion, he launched his career with the exhibition of two paintings at the 1864 Neapolitan Promotrice. De Nittis came into contact with some of the artists known as the Macchiaioli, becoming friends with Telemaco Signorini, and exhibiting in Florence. He also renewed his acquaintance with his former neighbor, Geremia Discanno, and both De Nittis and Discanno exhibited in Turin in 1867 and sold work there.

In 1867 he moved to Paris and entered into a contract with the art dealer Adolphe Goupil which called for him to produce saleable genre works. After gaining some visibility by exhibiting at the Salon he returned to Italy where, feeling free to paint from nature, he produced several views of Vesuvius.

In 1872 De Nittis returned to Paris and, no longer under contract to Goupil, achieved a success at the Salon with his painting Che freddo! (It's So Cold!) of 1874 (Private collection). In that same year he was invited to exhibit at the first Impressionist exhibition, held at Nadar's. The invitation came from Edgar Degas, who was a friend of several Italian artists residing in Paris, including Telemaco SignoriniGiovanni Boldini and Federico Zandomeneghi. De Nittis was not accepted by all of the Impressionists, and did not participate in their subsequent exhibitions.

A trip to London resulted in a number of Impressionistic paintings. In 1875 De Nittis took up pastels, which became an important medium for him in his remaining years and which he helped popularize.[1] Back in Paris, where his home was a favorite gathering place for Parisian writers and artists, as well as expatriate Italians, he executed pastel portraits of sitters including De GoncourtZolaManet and Duranty. He preferred pastels as the medium for his largest works, such as the triptych entitled Races at Auteuil (1881).

De Nittis exhibited twelve paintings in the Exposition Universelle of 1878, and was awarded a gold medal. In that same year he received the Légion d’honneur.

In 1884, at the age of 38, De Nittis died suddenly of a stroke at Saint-Germain-en-Laye. His wife, the Parisian Léontine Lucile Gruvelle (married in 1869) donated his paintings to the town of Barletta and they are now gathered in the Pinacoteca De Nittis in the Palace of the Marra in the hometown of the painter.



Sunday, December 25, 2022

Christmas in Ashburn 2022

 I spent Christmas Eve and Christmas Day with the Ashburn Melonis.


CHRISTMAS EVE

Beautiful decorations by Michelle

Colored pebbles and floating candles and candy canes in glass vases

Three kinds of delicious Christmas cookies (homemade)

CHRISTMAS DAY

Colin, Mima, Christian

(How did Mima get so short?)

An Excited Marcello
He received special gifts related to his dream to become a policeman. 
He will undoubtedly, however, remain a wannabe cop. 
He may run for sheriff, however, in the near future (i.e. in 2023).

Christian in his Grammar Police T-Shirt
He, on the other hand, IS a Grammar Policeman.
Think twice before you speak or write anything in his beloved English language.


PREPARING APPETIZERS ON CHRISTMAS DAY

Marcello preparing the cold cuts (prosciutto e salami)

Michelle's Artistry













Wednesday, December 07, 2022

Memorable Exhibit

 Art and Ideals: President John F. Kennedy

The new exhibit at the Kennedy Center dedicated to JFK

"The life of the arts, far from being an interruption, a distraction, in the life of a nation, is very close to the center of a nation's purpose." - President John F. Kennedy

My friend Janet and I went to visit this extraordinary permanent exhibit in the heart of the J.F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the living memorial to President Kennedy.

Visitors were given the possibility of creating their own portraits, similar to Kennedy's portrait in the Smithsonian's Portrait Gallery's Presidential Portraits Gallery

KENNEDY

JANET


CHRISTINE
I was obviously not looking at the camera!




Thursday, December 01, 2022

A Great Day at the NGA

 One of my very favorite places in Washington is the National Gallery of Art. Not only does it have an extraordinary permanent collection, but it also has wonderful special exhibits with artwork from around the globe.

Today I went to the Vittorio Carpaccio exhibit, a blockbuster! It is the first ever retrospective of Carpaccio outside of Italy.

I went with four friends, Giorgio I, Giorgio II, Mike, and John. Here are some photos from this happy and interesting outing.



George, Mike, Christine, and John in front of Carpaccio's Knight

Mike, Christine, Giorgio II, and Giorgio I

Giorgio II is making comments about this painting, The 10,000 Martyrs. A very gruesome painting with these 10,000 crucified individuals. Curious juxtaposition in the lower right of a meeting involving ancient Roman soldiers and Muslim leaders.


More photos will follow as soon as I have uploaded them.