The Nassau County Museum of Art presents Garden Party an exhibition on view from March 8, 2014 to July 6, 2014.
The works in the exhibition portray floral images as objects of enjoyment and pure visual pleasure, the recreation of a natural paradise envisioned since antiquity and perpetually recreated in gardens, the nuances of horticulture, floral arrangements and flower motifs in fashion and decorative art. The prevalence of floral imagery in costume design is demonstrated with dresses designed by de la Renta, Mainbocher, and Traina-Norell, as well as in the motifs of exquisite Judith Leiber evening bags.
Highlights of the show include spectacular installations, beginning with Kushner’s 47-foot multi-panel piece done on gold leaf. First prominent in the 1970s, Kushner is a key artist in the pattern and decoration movement. Georgia O’ Keeffe’s Coxcomb, 1931, offers an example of how a traditional theme is interpreted in a modernist mode.
Plants and animals recall the first garden, beginning with Richard Gachot’s Adam and Eve, Hunt Slonem’s imposing sculptures of wildlife, birds and tropical plants; and Janet Fish’s Monkey Business, where a leaping monkey disrupts a splendidly arrayed outdoor table laden with flowers and fruit.
Among the many enchanting works on view in Garden Party are Rosenquist’s Sister Shreik, one of his classic representations of females and flowers; Prendergast’s The Promenade, n.d., a post-impressionist painting of a garden party with costumed women in a setting of nature; Chagall’s Le Repos, c. 1980 with its essential bouquet; and Ben Schonzeit’s spectacular photorealist still life, Fred and Ginger Rose, 1997.
The Garden Party idea pervades the selections: flowers are themselves festive in character, and uplifting to the spirit, ever attesting to the life force and nature’s generou and spontaneous beauty. Floral patterns, often used in fashion and décor, affirm our innate desire to capture such loveliness. We intuitively recognize that flowers are a universal symbol of life and well being. www.nassaumuseum.org