Woman Sitting on a Bed
       
     
Ingres, Roger Deliverant Angelique
       
     
Andromeda
       
     
Forever!! Never!!
       
     
1.46, or The Flayed Woman
       
     
Woman with Her Throat Cut
       
     
Young Virgin Auto-Sodomized by the Horns of Her Own Chastity
       
     
La Columna Rota (The Broken Column)
       
     
Corsica and the Satyr
       
     
War
       
     
 Fuseli
       
     
Safe Travels
       
     
Tántalo (Tantalus)
       
     
Mujer maltratada con un bastón (Woman battered with a cane)
       
     
Memory
       
     
Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Awakening
       
     
La Mort de sardanapale/ Death of Sardanapalus
       
     
Sin Pursued by Death
       
     
The Supplicant
       
     
When the hour strikes (Quand l'heure sonnera)
       
     
Delusions of grandeur
       
     
Untitled
       
     
Una esclava en venta (A Slave for Sale)
       
     
Because she was susceptible
       
     
Qual la descanonan! (How they break her barrel)
       
     
The Dream
       
     
Bandolero asesinar a una mujer (Brigand Murdering a Woman)
       
     
Escena de la violación y asesinato (Scene of Rape and Murder)
       
     
John Henry Ezzelin And Meduna
       
     
Hercules (Effects of Jealousy)
       
     
The Temptation of the Idler
       
     
Dream of the sadist
       
     
The Judgement of Paris
       
     
A woman making water
       
     
The Italian Count (Ezzelin Bracciaferro, 'Iron Arm', Musing over Meduna, Destroyed by him for Disloyalty, during His Absence in the Holy Land)
       
     
Anne Boleyn
       
     
Stapled Flesh
       
     
The First Plantation
       
     
So Certain I Was a Horse
       
     
Zertretene: Leichnam und Frauenakt am Pfahl / The Downtrodden: Corpse and Nude Woman on a Stake
       
     
Desdémona
       
     
Othello and Desdemona
       
     
Desdemona's Death Song
       
     
Othello y Desdemona
       
     
Othello and Desdemona (Original Title: Foaming Sigh)
       
     
Abyssinian Slave
       
     
Fernande with a Black Mantilla ( Fernande à la mantille noire )
       
     
Head of a Peasant Woman with Dark Cap
       
     
Head of a Peasant Woman with Greenish Lace Cap
       
     
Head of a Woman
       
     
Head of a Woman
       
     
Bent Figure of a Woman Sien
       
     
Woman with Parakeet ( La femme à la perruche )
       
     
Streets of Mexico
       
     
The Smoker
       
     
Woman Sitting on a Bed
       
     
Woman Sitting on a Bed

Musee des Beaux Arts de Montreal

George Segal

New York 1924 – South Brunswick, New Jersey, 2000

1993

Plaster, wood, acrylic paint, various materials

244 x 363 x 217 cm

Purchase, Horsley and Annie Townsend Bequest, inv. 1994.1a-j

Although its earliest phases have been associated with the Pop Art movement, the work of Segal actually falls within a humanist tradition. His casts of people in everyday environments are intended as a moving commentary on the alienation experienced by human beings. In the early 1980s, Segal dropped colour and realist props from his compositions and began to paint his backgrounds black. "I am looking a lot at Rembrandt, I am looking at Old Master paintings that are really a flat canvas that magically has been painted to resemble a three-dimensional sculpture. And I am trying the reverse. I am making a three-dimensional sculpture to see what happens if I can indicate some of those strange lights and darks that are purely imaginative." First exhibited in 1993 at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York, this work presents itself simultaneously as a realist scene and as an allegory. Seated in harsh light in a world completely black, her slightly bent back turned towards the viewer, this women is shown at a mundane moment of the day - in her extreme exhaustion, she embodies the weariness of the world.

© The George and Helen Segal Foundation / SODRAC, Montréal / VAGA, New York (2020)

Ingres, Roger Deliverant Angelique
       
     
Ingres, Roger Deliverant Angelique

James McNeill Whistler, 1857, Realism, Symbolism

Andromeda
       
     
Andromeda

Rembrandt, 1631

Andromeda is Rembrandt's first full length mythological female nude history painting inspired by a story in Ovid's Metamorphoses

Forever!! Never!!
       
     
Forever!! Never!!

Pierre-Eugène-Émile Hébert, 1828 – 1893, Musé des Beaux Arts de Montréal

1.46, or The Flayed Woman
       
     
1.46, or The Flayed Woman

Musee des Beaux Arts de Montreal

Paul-Émile Borduas

Saint-Hilaire, Quebec, 1905 – Paris 1960

1941-1946

Oil on canvas

70.7 x 63.5 cm

Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Max Stern, inv. 1979.26

© Estate of Paul-Émile Borduas / SOCAN (2020)

Woman with Her Throat Cut
       
     
Woman with Her Throat Cut

Alberto Giacometti, 1932 (cast 1940), Bronze, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, 1976

DIMENSIONS: 9 1/8 x 35 1/16 x 23 5/8 inches (23.2 x 89.1 x 60 cm)

“In a group of works made between 1930 and 1933, Alberto Giacometti used the Surrealist techniques of shocking juxtaposition and the distortion and displacement of anatomical parts to express the fears and urges of the subconscious. The aggressiveness with which the human figure is treated in these fantasies of brutal erotic assault graphically conveys the content. The female, seen in horror and longing as both victim and victimizer of male sexuality, is often a crustacean or insectlike form. Woman with Her Throat Cut is a particularly vicious image: the body is splayed open, disemboweled, arched in a paroxysm of sex and death. Eros and Thanatos, seen here as a single theme, are distinguished and treated separately in two preparatory sketches.

Body parts are translated into schematic abstract forms like those in Cage of 1930–31, which includes the spoon shape of the female torso, the rib and backbone motif, and the pod shape of the phallus. Here a vegetal form resembling the pelvic bone terminates one arm, and a phalluslike spindle, the only movable part, gruesomely anchors the other; the woman’s backbone pins one leg by fusing with it; her slit carotid immobilizes her head. The memory of violence is frozen in the rigidity of rigor mortis. The psychological torment and the sadistic misogyny projected by this sculpture are in startling contrast to the serenity of other contemporaneous pieces by Giacometti, such as Woman Walking.” — Lucy Flint

Young Virgin Auto-Sodomized by the Horns of Her Own Chastity
       
     
Young Virgin Auto-Sodomized by the Horns of Her Own Chastity

Salvador Dali

1954

La Columna Rota (The Broken Column)
       
     
La Columna Rota (The Broken Column)

Frida Kahlo, 1944, Naïve Art (Primitivism): Dolores Olmedo Collection, Mexico City, Mexico

Corsica and the Satyr
       
     
Corsica and the Satyr

Artemisia Gentileschi, 1630-1635

War
       
     
War

Arnold Böcklin, 1896, Symbolism: Kunsthaus Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

 Fuseli
       
     

Fuseli

Safe Travels
       
     
Safe Travels

Nate Lowman, 2013, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Purchased with funds contributed by David Shuman, 2013

Laced with sardonic humor, Nate Lowman’s paintings, photographs, sculptures, and installations use strategies of aggregation and subtle transformation to unearth narratives buried in our collective psyche. Safe Travels (2013) re-creates nine images from airplane safety guides. Enlarged and stripped of context, the panels are unmoored from their instructional purpose. Images that are meant to do the sober work of preparing passengers for emergencies suddenly appear suffused with unintended humor and suggestions of sexuality and violence. The dishonesty of these calm, idealized images is revealed, as is their ambiguous meaning; Lowman’s arrangement emphasizes the absurdity inherent in sanitized mass visual culture, where real danger or stark reality is often cheerily replaced by more palatable images and stories. Much of Lowman’s work, which includes paintings of smiley faces, bumper stickers, and air fresheners, similarly troubles the seemingly stable and simple meanings of ubiquitous visual signifiers. Lowman is not only interested in cultural semantics, however; he also subtly explores notions of craft. Although even tones and sharp lines give Safe Travels the look of silk screens, they are painstakingly painted by hand. By faithfully re-executing these images in a vaunted artistic medium, Lowman draws attention to the creative work of anonymous graphic artists and the ever-hazy distinction between design and high art.

Tántalo (Tantalus)
       
     
Tántalo (Tantalus)

Goya, 1799, Los Caprichos

Mujer maltratada con un bastón (Woman battered with a cane)
       
     
Mujer maltratada con un bastón (Woman battered with a cane)

Goya, c.1796 - c.1797

Memory
       
     
Memory

Rene Magritte, 1948; Brussels, Belgium, Surrealism

Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Awakening
       
     
Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Awakening

Salvador Dali

1944

Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid, Spain

La Mort de sardanapale/ Death of Sardanapalus
       
     
La Mort de sardanapale/ Death of Sardanapalus

Eugene Delacroix, 1827, Romanticism, Louvre, Paris, France; Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA, US

Inspired by Lord Byron’s tale of Sardanapalus, the Assyrian king, Delacroix created this massive 12 by 16 foot masterpiece. As the tale goes, once, Sardanapalus learned he was facing military defeat, he ordered all his possessions destroyed, including his many concubines, servants and animals, before he committed suicide. This painting beautifully exemplifies the Romantic themes of bold colors, tragic imagery, and exotic decor. Delacroix used many literary sources as inspiration, including Shakespeare, Goethe and Byron, whom Delacroix largely admired. The Sardanapalus theme also inspired a cantata by Hector Berlioz and an opera by Franz Liszt.

Sin Pursued by Death
       
     
Sin Pursued by Death

Fuseli

The Supplicant
       
     
The Supplicant

Oskar Kokoschka, 1914, Expressionism

When the hour strikes (Quand l'heure sonnera)
       
     
When the hour strikes (Quand l'heure sonnera)

Rene Magritte, 1965, Surrealism

Delusions of grandeur
       
     
Delusions of grandeur

Rene Magritte, 1948; Brussels, Belgium, Surrealism

Untitled
       
     
Untitled

Pablo Picasso, 1970, Expressionism

Una esclava en venta (A Slave for Sale)
       
     
Una esclava en venta (A Slave for Sale)

José Jiménez Aranda (1837–1903): Museo del Prado

A young, completely nude slave sits on a carpet. The sign hanging from her neck bears a Greek inscription (Rose, 18 years old, on sale for 800 coins) that offers her as merchandise at a market

Because she was susceptible
       
     
Because she was susceptible

Goya, 1799

Qual la descanonan! (How they break her barrel)
       
     
Qual la descanonan! (How they break her barrel)

Goya, 1799, Los caprichos

The Dream
       
     
The Dream

Henri Rousseau, 1910, Naïve Art (Primitivism): Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York City, NY, US

Bandolero asesinar a una mujer (Brigand Murdering a Woman)
       
     
Bandolero asesinar a una mujer (Brigand Murdering a Woman)

Goya, 1798-1800

Escena de la violación y asesinato (Scene of Rape and Murder)
       
     
Escena de la violación y asesinato (Scene of Rape and Murder)

Goya, 1808-1812, Städel, Frankfurt am Main, Germany

John Henry Ezzelin And Meduna
       
     
John Henry Ezzelin And Meduna

Henry Fuseli, 1741-1825

Hercules (Effects of Jealousy)
       
     
Hercules (Effects of Jealousy)

Durer, 1498

The Temptation of the Idler
       
     
The Temptation of the Idler

Durer, 1498

Dream of the sadist
       
     
Dream of the sadist

Otto Dix, 1913

The Judgement of Paris
       
     
The Judgement of Paris

Enrique Simonet, 1904

A woman making water
       
     
A woman making water

Rembrandt, 1631

The Italian Count (Ezzelin Bracciaferro, 'Iron Arm', Musing over Meduna, Destroyed by him for Disloyalty, during His Absence in the Holy Land)
       
     
The Italian Count (Ezzelin Bracciaferro, 'Iron Arm', Musing over Meduna, Destroyed by him for Disloyalty, during His Absence in the Holy Land)

Henry Fuseli, 1780, Romanticism

Anne Boleyn
       
     
Anne Boleyn

Hiroshi Sugimoto, 1999, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Commissioned by Deutsche Bank AG in consultation with the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation for the Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin

Stapled Flesh
       
     
Stapled Flesh

Kansuke Yamamoto, 1949, Surrealism

The First Plantation
       
     
The First Plantation

SM Sultan, Expressionism, c.1975

So Certain I Was a Horse
       
     
So Certain I Was a Horse

Betty Goodwin, 1985

Zertretene: Leichnam und Frauenakt am Pfahl / The Downtrodden: Corpse and Nude Woman on a Stake
       
     
Zertretene: Leichnam und Frauenakt am Pfahl / The Downtrodden: Corpse and Nude Woman on a Stake

Kathe Kollwitz, 1900, Gift of Dr. Denis M. Shaw and Susan Evans, McMaster Museum of Art

Dimensions: Plate: 23.9 x 63.3 cm (9 3/8 x 24 15/16 in.) Support: 53.8 x 76 cm (21 3/16 x 29 15/16 in.)

Medium: Etching with aquatint and drypoint on paper

Desdémona
       
     
Desdémona

Andres de Santa Maria, 1936, Impressionism

Othello and Desdemona
       
     
Othello and Desdemona

Eugene Delacroix, 1847 - 1849, Romanticism: National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Canada

Desdemona's Death Song
       
     
Desdemona's Death Song

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Romanticism

Othello y Desdemona
       
     
Othello y Desdemona

Carlos Alonso, 1969, Expressionism

Othello and Desdemona (Original Title: Foaming Sigh)
       
     
Othello and Desdemona (Original Title: Foaming Sigh)

Nabil Kanso, 1985; Atlanta, United States, Neo-Expressionism

Abyssinian Slave
       
     
Abyssinian Slave

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier, bronze sculpture, The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

Fernande with a Black Mantilla ( Fernande à la mantille noire )
       
     
Fernande with a Black Mantilla ( Fernande à la mantille noire )

Pablo Picasso, 1905, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Thannhauser Collection, Bequest, Hilde Thannhauser, 1991

“Images of labor abound in late-19th- and early 20th-century French art. From Jean-François Millet’s sowers and Gustave Courbet’s stone breakers to Berthe Morisot’s wet nurses and Edgar Degas’s dancers and milliners, workers were often idealized and portrayed as simple, robust souls who, because of their identification with the earth, with sustenance, and with survival, symbolized a state of blessed innocence. Perhaps no artist depicted the plight of the underclasses with greater poignancy than Picasso, who focused almost exclusively on the disenfranchised during his Blue Period (1901–04), known for its melancholy palette of predominantly blue tones and its gloomy themes. Living in relative poverty as a young, unknown artist during his early years in Paris, Picasso no doubt empathized with the laborers and beggars around him and often portrayed them with great sensitivity and pathos. Woman Ironing, painted at the end of the Blue Period in a lighter but still bleak color scheme of whites and grays, is Picasso’s quintessential image of travail and fatigue. Although rooted in the social and economic reality of turn-of-the-century Paris, the artist’s expressionistic treatment of his subject—he endowed her with attenuated proportions and angular contours—reveals a distinct stylistic debt to the delicate, elongated forms of El Greco. Never simply a chronicler of empirical facts, Picasso here imbued his subject with a poetic, almost spiritual presence, making her a metaphor for the misfortunes of the working poor.

Picasso’s attention soon shifted from the creation of social and quasi-religious allegories to an investigation of space, volume, and perception, culminating in the invention of Cubism. His portrait Fernande with a Black Mantilla is a transitional work. Still somewhat expressionistic and romantic, with its subdued tonality and lively brushstrokes, the picture depicts his mistress Fernande Olivier wearing a mantilla, which perhaps symbolizes the artist’s Spanish origins. The iconic stylization of her face and its abbreviated features, however, foretell Picasso’s increasing interest in the abstract qualities and solidity of Iberian sculpture, which would profoundly influence his subsequent works. Though naturalistically delineated, the painting presages his imminent experiments with abstraction."

Nancy Spector

Head of a Peasant Woman with Dark Cap
       
     
Head of a Peasant Woman with Dark Cap

Vincent van Gogh, 1885; Nuenen, Netherlands

Head of a Peasant Woman with Greenish Lace Cap
       
     
Head of a Peasant Woman with Greenish Lace Cap

Vincent van Gogh, 1885; Nuenen, Netherlands: Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Head of a Woman
       
     
Head of a Woman

Vincent van Gogh, c.1883; The Hague, Netherlands: Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Head of a Woman
       
     
Head of a Woman

Vincent Van Gogh, c.1883, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Bent Figure of a Woman Sien
       
     
Bent Figure of a Woman Sien

Vincent van Gogh, 1882; The Hague, Netherlands: Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands

Woman with Parakeet ( La femme à la perruche )
       
     
Woman with Parakeet ( La femme à la perruche )

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, 1871, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Thannhauser Collection, Gift, Justin K. Thannhauser, 1978

“The woman holding the parakeet is Lise Tréhot, an artist’s model and Renoir’s close companion of six years. Tréhot posed extensively for Renoir during the early years of his career, and her youthful features are recognizable in many canvases painted between 1867 and 1872. Renoir likely created this picture in 1871, soon after his return from the Franco-Prussian War and before Tréhot married an architect from a well-to-do family in April 1872, evidently never seeing Renoir again.

Using the feathery, textured brushwork that characterizes his work, even in this proto-Impressionist phase, Renoir depicts Tréhot as a bourgeois lady. Wearing a black taffeta dress with white cuffs and a red sash, she stands in an elegant interior adorned with ornately patterned carpeting and wallpaper, and exotic, verdant houseplants. Though the intimate scene suggests that Renoir has captured a young, upper-middle-class woman playing with her pet bird, the rich yet stifling interior restricts the model’s space, just like that of the parakeet when confined to its gilded cage. The analogy between the woman and the bird is further underscored by the model’s elaborate ruffled dress, appended by bright red plumage. Throughout art history, countless images of women with birds have foregrounded the intimacy and emotional bond between human and animal; in Woman with Parakeet, the bird may also play the role of confidant.

In this portrayal of the daily experience of a fashionable Parisian woman, a life relegated almost exclusively to indoor domestic spaces, the subtle tensions embedded in the painting frustrate the possibility of a purely pleasurable, innocent reading. Instead, Woman with Parakeet engages with the very contradictions that governed the lives of nineteenth-century bourgeois French women.”

Streets of Mexico
       
     
Streets of Mexico

David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1956, Social Realism

The Smoker
       
     
The Smoker

Edvard Munch, 1895, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Estate of Karl Nierendorf, By purchase