Tag: Modern Turkish Art

  • “Turkey Now” festival to introduce Turkish art and culture

    “Turkey Now” festival to introduce Turkish art and culture

    Netherlands: “Turkey Now” festival to introduce Turkish art and culture

    The 4th “Turkey Now” festival will begin in the Netherlands on February 23. The festival aims to introduce Turkish art and culture to Dutch people.

    turkeynow

  • Istanbul Show an Introduction to Modern Turkish Art

    Istanbul Show an Introduction to Modern Turkish Art

    By SUSANNE FOWLER

    The 1961 oil painting Santralistanbul The 1961 oil painting “Farewell Warsaw” by the Turkish painter Nejad Devrim.
    The 1961 oil painting Santralistanbul The 1961 oil painting “Farewell Warsaw” by the Turkish painter Nejad Devrim.

    Santralistanbul, an art, music and education space at the tip of the Golden Horn, is currently home to an exhibition that’s akin to an immersion course in modern Turkish painting. “20 Modern Turkish Artists of the 20th Century,” showing through June 19, features more than 400 works from the huge collection of the textile magnate Oner Kocabeyoglu, selected and arranged in collaboration with the writer and art critic Ferit Edgu.

    In curating the show, Mr. Edgu divided the works into three sections: figurative and abstract paintings by artists like Fikret Mualla and Abidin Dino; pieces from the “Paris School” of abstract Turkish painters like Fahrelnissa Zeid (the lone woman in the exhibition), Nejad Devrim and Mübin Orhon; and works by artists including Ferruh Basaga and Burhan Dogancay, under the heading of “Geometry, Light, Music and Walls.’’

    The editing process was a challenging one. “First I went to see the whole collection, approximately 900 pieces by 40 to 50 artists,” he said. After he whittled down his choice, “the collector went out and bought some more paintings, so about 40 new pieces were then added to the show.’’

    The Paris School grouping covers a particularly interesting period for Turkish painting, he said, in that it shows how the Turkish artists, from a Western perspective, “caught up” to what was being done by the Europeans. (They did so, he added, by actually moving to Paris.)

    But before today’s visitors lay eyes on any of these paintings at the museum (Kazım Karabekir Cad. No. 2; 212-311-78-09), the first thing they see upon entering the main gallery space is portraits of the artists themselves, taken over the years by the renowned Turkish-Armenian photographer Ara Guler.

    “I was in Paris between 1950 and 1960,’’ Mr. Edgu said, “and all of the painters in this exposition were my friends, so I have a deep affinity for them and their work. Ara Guler was also a friend of mine from those days. And he has always been passionate about taking pictures of artists, Turkish or foreign, even Picasso and Dalí. Knowing this, I figured he had portraits of all these people in his archives. I was right. Of the 20, only 1 was missing, and luckily he was still alive, so Ara was able to shoot him, too.”

    via Istanbul Show an Introduction to Modern Turkish Art – NYTimes.com.