Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Question of the Day | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm

Rembrandt? Picasso? O'Keeffe? Tell us: Who is your favorite artist?

The wOw women reveal the artists whose work they find simply breathtaking
© Shutterstock
Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm

Joan Ganz Cooney: A Favorite Among Favorites

I have many favorite artists but I think that if I had my choice of any painting I’d choose the red Matisse in the Hermitage.
Liz Smith

Liz Smith | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm

Liz Smith's Godson: The Next Manet?

Well, it’s a toss-up between Rousseau and his tigers and jungles and Manet (no, not Monet) and his French people sitting around on the grass. But actually, it is my godson’s work in pencil, ink, crayon, chalk or paint that just knocks me out.
Judith Martin

Judith Martin | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm

Judith Martin on Gentile Bellini

Tintoretto, for his magnificence; Giorgione, runner-up, for his. But when I am in a gossipy mood, I like to hang out with Gentile Bellini — nowhere near their class, not even the best painter in his immediate family — because he is so cleverly anecdotal.
Jane Wagner

Jane Wagner | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm

Jane Wagner Names Her Favorite Artist

Robert Rauschenberg
Julia Reed

Julia Reed | 03/29/2009 1:05 pm

An Art Lesson With Julia Reed

Fortunately for me, my favorite artists also happen to be my really close friends: William Dunlap, John Alexander and James Surls. Dunlap serves on the board of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art with me, and is a phenomenally generous soul and walking performance-art piece in addition to being a really wonderful painter. Like Eli Manning, for whom he just did a huge Mississippi landscape, I am blessed to have many of his canvasses. (His wife, Linda Burgess, and daughter, Maggie Dunlap, are also gifted artists — I call them the von Dunlaps.) Roberta Smith compared Alexander to Durer after a show of his drawings at the Beadleston Gallery in Manhattan, and his retrospective at the Smithsonian last year was an amazing show (with an amazing book).

Surls, like Alexander, grew up in Texas and is a soulful writer as well as being a genius of a sculptor. One of my favorite (and most hilarious) photographs features Alexander and New Orleans art dealer Arthur Roger posing as Surls sculptures in my garden – oh, how I wish they were the real thing! The real thing is actually available for viewing right now on the Park Avenue median between 50th and 57th Streets as part of the New York City Parks Public Art Program.

I also really love the photography of Sally Mann, who is one of the nicest people I have ever met.

My favorite dead guys? The Spaniards: Goya, Velasquez and Melendez, whose stunning still-lifes are at the Prado. Melendez’s gorgeous self-portrait is at the Louvre.
Read more about: Art, Artist, Arts, Culture, Painter, Photography

292 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Ladyhawke ..
I have been privileged to view many artists, here and in Europe, but top of my list, dear to my heart is Andrew Wyeth…I do admire Georgia O’ Keefe for sheer sensuality, have always been moved by Francisco Goya, especailly the "Maja" paintings.  I love Gustav Klimt and his colors and passion, also admire Sargent,  and Grandma Moses.  We should all be proud of the Arts in our part of the world, and support it in anyway we can.  Seems the arts are low on peoples lists of concerns during times of trouble, but they are what makes us what and who we are.
By Ladyhawke .. on 03/26/2009 10:36 am
Dora M
Sharon, as a fellow Goya admirer I just have to comment on one of my favorite stories of his- when he painted the Maja paintings the Duchess’s husband was incensed that he had the nerve to have his wife pose nude, to which he is said to have replied "don’t worry, she didn’t pose nude, I painted her from memory", haha! I love the fact that he was so subversive with all the royals :)
By Dora M on 03/26/2009 11:16 am
Suzanne de Cornelia

"Seems the arts are low on peoples lists of concerns during times of trouble, but they are what makes us what and who we are."

 

Exactly…..what we have now is ‘reality shows’ and a legacy of broken lives, tent cities. A refocus on art has turned around and lifted societies and created unforgettable civilizations and Golden Ages. 

By Suzanne de Cornelia on 03/26/2009 11:45 am
EKA -
I mourn the loss of "Public" art. I was thrilled to see a new development in our town place several bronze pieces in the public area outside on the lawn. There should be a requirement that all large public buildings devote 1% of the total cost to some kind of public art. Our generation seems to be leaving nothing behind buy steel and glass.
By EKA - on 03/26/2009 12:58 pm
Suzanne de Cornelia
EKA, San Francisco does a good job of supporting public art. Mayor Newsom is committed to it.
By Suzanne de Cornelia on 03/26/2009 4:36 pm
Hines Hammond
I concur EKA. Wonderful share a public bench with a mom and her child in bronze perhaps. That’s what I’m imagining. Glad you have the new pieces to enjoy.
By Hines Hammond on 03/29/2009 12:00 pm
georgia fatwood
Dear EKA…at one point there was a 1% for art "law"….have to look it up….you know how I hate homework…..
By georgia fatwood on 04/01/2009 9:21 pm
Suzanne de Cornelia
Sharon, We went to the Brandywine River Museum in Chads Ford, PA to see all the Andrew Wyeth paintings, and three generations of Wyeth family paintings. Fun trip….had also been in CT, NYC, and drove through the Hudson Valley/Sleepy Hollow…then to see friends in Willmington, DE and on to WDC/MD. Saw my first wild Bald Eagle. So many high points on that trip, the Wyeth paintings among them.
By Suzanne de Cornelia on 03/26/2009 3:20 pm
georgia fatwood
Suzanne…a high school chum of mine "married well" and lived near Chadd’s Ford…She and her husband were instrumental in promoting the three Wyeths and the restoration of the Thomas Eakins house in Philly….I house sat for a month one summer with dozens of the "real things" from the Brandywine School, Eakins, the Wyeths…notebooks, sketches, paintboxes….glorious…. 
By georgia fatwood on 04/01/2009 9:28 pm
WowedbywowOwow NYC
Picasso - a master of technique, an artist skilled in all media, a brilliant traditionalist as well as a genius of creativitiy. 
By WowedbywowOwow NYC on 03/26/2009 10:51 am
J B
I love the work of A.T. Cox…a western artist.
By J B on 03/26/2009 10:52 am
Mommy Dearest
Georgia O’Keeffe, my dears.  A singular perspective, immediately identifiable and all her own.
By Mommy Dearest on 03/26/2009 11:21 am
Suzanne de Cornelia
A contemporary of hers who was so fascinating, out in Ojai, was potter Beatrice Wood. 
By Suzanne de Cornelia on 03/26/2009 3:24 pm
georgia fatwood
Hi Suzanne….as a hermit, I treasure a quote from Beatrice…"I had the most perfect Thanksgiving Day…no one came over and no one called….."
By georgia fatwood on 04/01/2009 9:24 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe

                                  BONNARD’S REFLECTION

His bedrooms reek of sex and melancholy:

whose leg flexes across a shoulder, whose

hot hand finds a thigh, arms around the

smooth swerves of whose back? We clutter,

he says, and choke. We fail love, telling

all sorts of lies. The whole pink globe

of the cherry tress pressed against one window,

blotting the sky out. Eros erodes us. This

is where itch begins to rhyme with ache:

one more nail in whose coffin? You’ll wait

and see. Flowers on the down comforter

already hissing and whispering what it is

they know to the flowers on the dawn curtain.

                               ——--Eamon Grennan 

By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 03/26/2009 11:33 am