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Posts tagged: hide/seek

And yet another piece from Hide/Seek at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12), quite possibly my favorite discovery of the entire show, this charged painting by Joseph Christian Leyendecker, “Men Reading” (1914).

And yet another piece from Hide/Seek at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12), quite possibly my favorite discovery of the entire show, this charged painting by Joseph Christian Leyendecker, “Men Reading” (1914).

One of the funniest and most playful pieces from Hide/Seek at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12) is Wynn Chamberlain’s 1964 diptych “Poets (Joe Brainard, Frank O’Hara, Joe LeSueur, Frank Lima) (Clothed) and (Naked).”

One of the funniest and most playful pieces from Hide/Seek at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12) is Wynn Chamberlain’s 1964 diptych “Poets (Joe Brainard, Frank O’Hara, Joe LeSueur, Frank Lima) (Clothed) and (Naked).”

I almost couldn’t believe that this thickly applied, quasi-sculptural painting in Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture (at the Brooklyn Museum through February 12), is by pioneering collagist Jess Collins. It’s titled “Fig. 3 - Ida, Duncan and I. Translation #18,” from 1957.

I almost couldn’t believe that this thickly applied, quasi-sculptural painting in Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture (at the Brooklyn Museum through February 12), is by pioneering collagist Jess Collins. It’s titled “Fig. 3 - Ida, Duncan and I. Translation #18,” from 1957.

So many great pieces in Hide/Seek, the survey of portrayals of sexual difference in American portraiture currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12). This striking painting is Florine Stettheimer’s “Portrait of Marcel Duchamp” (1925).

So many great pieces in Hide/Seek, the survey of portrayals of sexual difference in American portraiture currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum (through February 12). This striking painting is Florine Stettheimer’s “Portrait of Marcel Duchamp” (1925).