Monday, February 16, 2026

Baltimore Museum of Art: The Presence of Women

Having previously mentioned the concerted effort of the Baltimore Museum of Art to share a diverse and representative selection of works, allow me to share 5 paintings by women whose talents I would never have been aware of save for this egalitarian approach to ART.  The works span a life--70 years from 1884 to 1954.

"The New Model," circa 1884
Rosalie Lorraine Gill, 1867 - 1898
AMERICAN

We are in the intimate studio of William Merritt Chase, one of the most prolific, celebrated and sought after American impressionist artists of his era.  He not only painted, he also taught painting for many years at a school he initially christened the Chase School, but that when on to become the Parsons School of Design today.  He hobnobbed with some of the most successful artists of the turn of 20th Century, and among the thousands of his students over the years was one, Georgia O'Keeffe.  Somewhere in the milieu, Rosalie Loraine Gill showed up.  

She began her studies at age 12.  She went on to great success both in the United States where she exhibited at the The National Academy of Design and The Society of American Artists in 1884, AND at the World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago in 1893.  By the early 1880's, she'd established a residence in Paris where she also found success with paintings shown in the Paris Salon in 1888, and the next year at the Exhibition Universelle in Paris.  

She split her time between New York, Paris and Baltimore where she'd established gallery agents.  In 1897 she married Rene Lara receiving the honorific "Countess of Chabau".  Less than four months later, on January 26, 1989, she died of unknown causes, and she was buried the next day

In consideration of the subject matter of the painting, it is an intriguing passing of the torch.  
"Theater Posters, Ikao, Japan," 1900
Lilla Cabot Perry, 1848 - 1933
AMERICAN

Full disclosure, I once had the tremendous honor of co-teaching an adult Bible Study with a distant cousin of Lydia "Lilla" Cabot Perry.  She knew her as a child.  Lilla was born into a Boston Brahman heritage and benefitted widely from the connections such a start in life offers.  She grew up knowing the company of Louisa May Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson and James Russell Lowell--the later of which was a relative on her mother's side. 

Never in want of money, the death of her father opened up even more unfettered opportunities including studying in Paris where she developed a close friendship with Camille Pissarro.  Her career took her again and again to France, back to Japan and in the most exclusive circles in the United States.  At the time of her death, in 1933, she'd participated in nine prestigious exhibitions beginning with the 1893 World's Columbian Exhibition.
"Peonies," circa 1918
Margrethe Jensen, 1876 - 1926
NORWEGIAN

Her death at 50 shocked the local art community of Oslo, of which, she had played an ever important roll in since her latter 30's.  Trained in the most prestigious art school of the era in Oslo, she eventually did what so many in her generation did.  She eloped to Paris in the late days of the 19th century.  What she did in Paris, with whom and to what outcome remain lost to history.  What we do know is that she returned to Oslo around the time of the start of the First World War.  

Among her contemporaries, Edvard Munch was probably the closest and most recognizable.  Though considered a prolific painter, "Peonies" is the only work by Jensen that is on display in a major museum of art.  At the Baltimore Museum of Art, the work is part of the seminal Cohen Collection.
"Michael Greenwood At Pett Rectory," 1950
Sylvia Sleigh, 1916 - 2010
WELSH-AMERICAN

After being born in Wales, she grew up to attend formal art training in London.  There she met her first husband, fellow artists, Michael Greenwood.  This painting is an example of her budding overt feminist approach to art.  By posing him on a couch in an "odalisque" manner.  The more she evolved, the more she expressed her reason d'etre in placing men in vulnerable and submissive poses.  This peaked in the 1970's-80's with a series of works derivative of classic compositions where nude women were replaced by nude men.

Her activism blossomed into support of many women's art collectives, and culminated in her own collecting of artworks created by women.  From philanthropy to patronage, Sleigh dedicated both her life and resources to elevating women in the arts.

"Neighbor's Pride," 1954
Helen Louise Beccard, 1903 - 1994
AMERICAN

Assignment:  I've told you about four amazing female artists nearly lost to history.  Discover this one on your own!  Do the Google thing if you care.  Tell me what you find and what resonates with you.



Sunday, February 15, 2026

BMA: Benjamin West

 One of my favorite paintings at the Baltimore Museum of Art of this self-portrait of Benjamin West.  Long before I visited art museums, I collected stamps...

Baltimore Museum of Art: A Cultural Gem in Charm City

 I've had such a life in so many ways, and certainly ART has been one of them.  I have always had the ability to be creative.  As a child I quickly distinguished myself as one of the class artists.  Without a clue what to do with my life when I entered College I declared Art as my major.  It was not a good fit at all.  I ended up with a minor in Art, and that's fitting.  I confused art with mimicry.

I thought if I could draw something, or paint it to look like what it was, then I was making art.  Of course art is SO MUCH MORE.  Thankfully my inclination combined with so many acts of fate until I developed my understanding.  I've known real artists.  I've seen and enjoyed so much art.  I've learned about art as a continuum from cave paintings hidden beneath fields of lavender in southern France and hand outlines spat upon rock canyons in the outback of Australia to the most contemporary of artists.  

The years after college gave me opportunities few have to experience Exhibition Openings for many years at the National Gallery of Art, The MET in NYC, and even the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.  A pair of shelves in my living room are squeezed tightly with dozens and dozens of exhibition catalogs. They represent the shows whose openings I attended (they always give you a free copy) and those I have traveled to see on my own.   I have been to many art museums so many times that I know my way around them as if they were part of my home.  It's always an opportunity for succor when I am exploring, making new connections, visiting old friends and discovering new ones.  

One of my favorite games is to enter a gallery with works from a certain period, but of which I am unfamiliar and then guess the artist!  It always ends in one of two ways.  I'm right!--who an ego boost.  Or, I'm wrong, BUT I have something entirely new to consider.  Let me give a couple examples from my visit to the Baltimore Museum of Art today.  In one gallery of works by American artists 1900 to 1950, I encountered a large oil painting of picnickers enjoying a Sunday afternoon from the vantage of an overlook of a river with steep hills on the opposite side.  The paints were rich, and on the darker side with a very strong presence of ultramarine blue.  I based my guess on the blue, because the subject wasn't anything like I'd seen this artist do before.  It was George Bellows, and I nailed it.  

In another gallery an image of seafood piled on the sand of a beach below cliffs.  Same time frame, and I thought Marsden Hartley--but it was Henri Matisse!!  Holy French Master, Batman!  And then I thought what are the connections between Hartley and Matisse?  Hmmm.  

I went to the BMA hoping to see the exhibition: "Amy Sherald: American Sublime"; however, I discovered at the front desk that it was sold out.  That it is sold out for the next couple of weeks.  How I wish the BMA would post this information on their Goddamned Website, but they don't.  Fortunately, the BMA has more than enough to occupy and justify a visit any day of the week.

So plan B--enjoy what is there.  Look for things you haven't spent time with before.  Make some new friends.  One of the things that the BMA does as well as any museum --they rotate their collections.  There are a couple of notable exceptions like their amazing Antioch mosaics, the heart of the Cone sisters collection, and the works in their sculpture garden, but go back after a year and you'll see new and different works in almost every gallery.

The other thing that they also excel at is featuring artists from neglected demographics.  Woman artists.  Artists of Color.  LGBTQIA+ artists.  They take their mission as a cultural institution for all the people of Baltimore very seriously.

My visit began and ended with this spectacular chandelier by Mexican artist Raul de Nieves that presided over the main entrance.  Titled "Beautiful Nightmare," juxtaposed against the whimsical monumental Stained Glass of the upper foyer, it was a sensory extravaganza.  


Chicken Stir Fry