Sarah Kate Art Advisory

Sarah Kate Art Advisory An art advisory firm specializing in art selection and placement. We help collectors discover and connect with art that speaks to them

Pierre Bonnard Landscape at Le Cannet1928Oil on canvasPierre Bonnard’s beginnings were influenced by the sinuous lines a...
06/30/2025

Pierre Bonnard Landscape at Le Cannet
1928
Oil on canvas

Pierre Bonnard’s beginnings were influenced by the sinuous lines and hues of Paul Gauguin, and his late works inspired Mark Rothko, the ultimate colorist of the abstract age. He is known for his scenes of daily life, centering on his own extended family; for his complex depictions of interiors, often inhabited by his wife, Marthe; for his depictions of Marthe at her toilette or in her bath; and, finally, for his landscapes, which depict with equal joy his garden at Vernon in Normandy and his house and its environs at Le Cannet. In 1926, he purchased a property near the village, just north of Cannes on the Mediterranean, seeking in the warm climate of the French Riviera an environment that would be good for Marthe’s health.
Landscape at Le Cannet is the most ambitious depiction of the world that was the central setting in Bonnard’s art for the final decades of his life. Taking a position on the hill above his home, which he had christened “Le Bosquet” for the grove of trees that surrounded it, Bonnard looked to the west, toward the Esterel mountains. The roof of Le Bosquet, near the tree at center of the composition, gives a sense of Bonnard’s personal scale in the context of the panorama; the two hillocks in the foreground fall towards the pathway that borders the rear of Bonnard’s property, where a girl and her dog can be seen passing by. Bonnard places himself in the right foreground, beside a pair of goats; a cow stands among spiky plants at the other side of the canvas. Suffused with warm light and with a rainbowlike array of colors, the painting was intended to decorate the home of a distinguished collector on the outskirts of Paris.

A symphony of street findsRobert RauschenbergAmerican, 1925-2008Collection1954Oil, paper, fabric, wood, and metal on can...
06/23/2025

A symphony of street finds
Robert Rauschenberg
American, 1925-2008
Collection
1954
Oil, paper, fabric, wood, and metal on canvas
“A pair of socks,” Rauschenberg said, “is no less suitable to make a painting with than wood, nails, turpentine, oil, and fabric.” Aptly titled, Collection presents an array of fabric scraps, newspaper clippings, wood blocks, and paint drips that Rauschenberg layered and collaged together in one vibrant composition. This work is among the first to be designated as a “Combine,” a term the artist invented to describe the synthesis of painting and sculpture.
Rauschenberg’s egalitarian inclusion of comic strips, cigar boxes, and other urban detritus elevates the mundane to the realm of art, anticipating Pop artists’ incorporation of everyday objects, such as Andy Warhol’s soup cans, and mass-production techniques, such as Roy Lichtenstein’s benday dots.

Hung Liu1948-2021Still Point1998OIL ON CANVASAcquired through funds provided by the Collectors GalleryA99.17The oil wash...
06/10/2025

Hung Liu
1948-2021
Still Point
1998
OIL ON CANVAS
Acquired through funds provided by the Collectors Gallery
A99.17
The oil washes and drips that seep through my paintings contribute to a sense of loss while dissolving the historical authenticity of the photographs / paint from.
-Hung Liu
Hung Liu was trained to paint heroic realist works for the Communist revolution. In 1984, however, she left China and charted her own artistic course.

Provisional Committee to Restore Paul Robeson’sPassport“The Case of Paul Robeson’s Passport”press releaseNew York ca. 19...
05/20/2025

Provisional Committee to Restore Paul Robeson’s
Passport
“The Case of Paul Robeson’s Passport”
press release
New York ca. 1951
Paul Robeson Collection, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture

The prominent actor and singer Paul Robeson (1898-1976) used his celebrity to advance causes of peace, democracy, and equality around the world, becoming one of the most well-known advocates of civil rights and organized labor in the United States. Like other high-profile Black figures sympathetic to progressive causes, he was aggressively targeted by both government agencies and racist white audiences. His international activism and comments criticizing the U.S. government’s treatment of Black Americans attracted government attention.
Representatives of the State Department revoked his passport in 1950 and it was not returned to him until 1958. In the intervening years, he lost many speaking and singing engagements and suffered financial hardships. By revoking his passport, the State Department not only penalized the actor, but also sent a broader message to the American public about what types of speech were acceptable.

Honestly, this work if stained glass makes me think of the Verner Herzog movie about a town that lost its ability to mak...
03/25/2025

Honestly, this work if stained glass makes me think of the Verner Herzog movie about a town that lost its ability to make colored glass in the middle ages. It seemed like but a farce and a tragedy until I learned that Herzog gave the actors L*D before filming.

The stained glass panel is worked to the highest refinement, both in the sophisticated application of the vitreous paint. Such a cool process of layering color.

By the late 1400s glass became more affordable, and houses increasingly were fitted with colorless glass windows, sometimes inset with small stained-glass panels. This family coat of arms was probably made for a private home. Typical of such panels, it is color-ful, light, and playful. A beautiful courtly woman is shown next to the arms of the Eberler family of Basel, Switzerland. She wears a richly patterned blue gown with short slit sleeves, long kid gloves, a dagger attached to a gold belt, a gold necklace, and an elaborate headdress with a trailing white veil with contasts with the powerfully menacing boar

Heraldic Panel with the Arms of the Eberler Family Swiss (possibly Basel), about 1490
Pot-metal, flashed, and colorless glass, oxide paint, and silver stain; lead came (framing strips)

Édouard Vuillard (French, 1868-1940)Lucie Hessel, c. 1905Oil on cardboardVuillard liked to say, “I do not paint portrait...
03/17/2025

Édouard Vuillard (French, 1868-1940)
Lucie Hessel, c. 1905
Oil on cardboard
Vuillard liked to say, “I do not paint portraits. I paint people in their homes.” And indeed pictures like this one enlist domestic surroundings to suggest their sitters’ personalities and relationships to the artist. Here, Lucie Hessel—the wife of Vuillard’s dealer-is casually posed in a room crowded with picture frames. Hessel was also the artist’s friend, his confidant, his muse, and ultimately his lover. Vuillard depicted her in over one hundred paint-ings; an inscription in the upper right-hand corner of this portrait indicates that this one was a gift for her.

OC rock found surreptitiously placed by a Rococo Meissen swan candelabra  at the national gallery of art, Washington Dc....
02/13/2025

OC rock found surreptitiously placed by a Rococo Meissen swan candelabra at the national gallery of art, Washington Dc. A show of kindness and imagination greatly needed.

Zoom in. What are you seeing?What do these faces say to you?   Do any speak out? Why?   Which looks the meanest?  The mo...
02/11/2025

Zoom in. What are you seeing?
What do these faces say to you? Do any speak out? Why? Which looks the meanest? The most strategic? The one with something to prove? The one with the most appetites? The least present? The most corrupt? And why? What makes you say that?

Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.
Daumier’s Portrait Busts
From about 1832 to 18s5, Honoré Daumier made pained clay busts (now at the Musée d’Orsay, Paris) as models for lithographs caricaturing members of the French parliament and other government officials. Daumier’s patron, the editor Charles Philipon, published the lithographs in his satiric journals La Caricature and Le Charivari. By daring to present the officials as foolish and corrupt abusers of power, both men risked fines and imprisonment. The busts were not cast in bronze until the mid-twentieth century. The National Gallery of Art owns one of the rare complete sets of all thirty-six bronzes.

What also amazes me is that these 3-d clay busts were studies for his lithographic prints- which opens up a whole new way to think about the breadth of his talent and creative process ( I had to lighten the picture because the characters features were not distinguished in the original)

Engaging with  ‘s “Portrait of Mnonja” mixed media at Smisthonian American Art Museum
02/06/2025

Engaging with ‘s “Portrait of Mnonja” mixed media at Smisthonian American Art Museum

Idelle WeberVampirela   #2- Harlem 127th street, WATERCOLOR ON PAPER,1975Gustave Courbet the Stone breakers, oil on canv...
02/03/2025

Idelle Weber
Vampirela #2- Harlem 127th street, WATERCOLOR ON PAPER,1975
Gustave Courbet
the Stone breakers, oil on canvas 1848
Idelle Weber
Quilt, watercolor on paper , 1974

I saw these works at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles in a show of photo realism, a type of art often spoken of dismissively in art circles. But this artist who worked im WATERCOLOR was able to vividly capture reality and abstraction in a way that I, with my trembling hands could not. She even references the great tradition of Courbets realism.
In Vampirella #2-Harlem-127th St., Weber focuses her gaze downward on a weatherbeaten accumulation of garbage: a broken wooden chair and battered cardboard box are shown alongside tattered remnants of branded consumer goods, a license plate, knit sweater, and two comics books (Vampirella and Justice League of America) in a dirt lot surrounded by chain-link fencing. Her painstaking attention to this banal scene belongs to a realist painting tradition that can be traced back to Gustave Courbet’s The Stonebreakers (1849; now destroyed), in which Courbet paid the rocks as much artistic attention as the laborers. Weber once recalled that her favorite childhood toy was a “giant magnifying glass,” which is an apt metaphor for her exploration of the ugly, gritty realities of city life that offers an alternative view of the culture of consumption.

#акварель

Gonzo journalist artist and illustrator Ralph Steadman Ralph Steadman , paintings, drawings, collagesWho’s World Is It A...
11/10/2024

Gonzo journalist artist and illustrator Ralph Steadman Ralph Steadman ,
paintings, drawings, collages

Who’s World Is It Anyways?, 2005
Ink on paper
During a trip to the USA in the early 1970s, Steadman visited Santa Fe, where he bought an amulet from an Indigenous American artist. Over the years, the amulet has been joined by a talisman from Hunter S. Thompson, a silver toothpick from his daughter, and various other trinkets, which alternate from time to time. The amulet is the only item that has endured in his daily attire.
Santa Fe Plaza, ca. 1973
Pen, ink, watercolor and whiteout on paper

“All Animals Are Equal But Some Animals Are MOre
Equal Thank Others.” — George Orwell
How It All Went Wrong, 1994
Mixed media on paper
In The Beginning, 1994
Mixed media on paper
Steadman’s illustrated version of Animal Farm, George Orwell’s acclaimed novella, was created to celebrate the book’s 50th Anniversary. The story, an allegory of the Russian Revolution of 1917, explores the ideas of freedom, rebellion, and the corrupting nature of power.
Overlaying the strengths and weaknesses of socialism on top of the background of a farmyard, the animals, tired of being ruled by humans, bid for independence and freedom and forcibly evict the humans from the farm.
The ironic outcome, after a period of happiness and democracy, is that over time, the innate characteristics of the animals see them fall prey to the same weaknesses and vices as their human masters. The pigs emerge as new tyrants, behaving and even dressing like the humans they so despised. Steadman’s illustrations are powerful and beautiful, from the tender portraits of Boxer, the steadfast and loyal horse, to the viciousness of the pigs with their guard dogs. The collection is a compelling visual representation of Orwell’s timeless critique of totalitarianism and the corrupting nature of power.

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From researching for a play I was set designing at Henry Street, and  spending time with a colleague going through pries...
11/03/2024

From researching for a play I was set designing at Henry Street, and spending time with a colleague going through priest right of passage, to meeting up recently with a friend who has become a religious percussionist - I have unintentionally come into the outskirts of Voodoo and Santeria realms. Through these interactions, I came to learn about and appreciate the deep links to Africa and native religions that are blended into catholic traditions in both the Americas and the Caribbean. These are rich traditions that have inspired innovative contemporary artworks. These pieces remind me of that connection related to the Puerto Rican context.

Recently, two exhibitions have shone a spotlight on the creative production of Black Puerto Rican artists, celebrating their work and their struggle against the racial blind spots of the national cultural discourse. Working in a broad range of media, these artists address different themes concerning identity, community displacement, spirituality, abstraction, food sovereignty, migration, post-plantation histories, and explorations on reggaetón and other forms of music. Their multifaceted approach not only celebrates their work but also rejects an inherent link between Blackness, folklore, and craft, inspiring us to appreciate their unique perspectives.

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