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Exhibitions

Cape Cod Summer – Online Exhibition
Included Works

George Platt Lynes: Face/Flesh/Form
Press Release:
Photographer George Platt Lynes, famous for his commercial work in fashion magazines, secretly produced a substantial body of nude and homoerotic photography throughout his life. Though never shown during his lifetime, Lynes considered his male nudes to be his finest work; the models were often friends and acquaintances - gay artists, dancers, and writers from Lynes’ social circle. Much of Lynes’ most intimate work was acquired by the Kinsey Institute after his death in 1955 and would only later become celebrated and exhibited as groundbreaking photography, influencing later generations of artists to openly explore male sexuality.
George Platt Lynes: Face/Flesh/Form surveys the artist’s work, from his more commercial endeavors to his most intimate portraits of friends, lovers, and models posed in quietly striking moments. Included in the exhibition are several photographs of Chuck Howard, a favorite model of artists Paul Cadmus and Jared French and muse to Lynes, who captured both the erotic and everyday moments in their relationship.
George Platt Lynes: Face/Flesh/Form is on view in the Childs Gallery Print Department July 1 through August 28, 2021.

What Stands Before Us: Art in Quarantine
Press Release:
What Stands Before Us: Art in Quarantine is a group exhibition of art created during the Covid-19 pandemic. The exhibition encompasses the wide range of subjects that artists have personally grappled with during quarantine, including social isolation, the global health crisis, racial injustice, and climate change. This unprecedented time has brought new focus and greater urgency to the many challenges we face.
The exhibition takes its title from a line of Amanda Gorman’s inaugural poem, The Hill We Climb. This poem captured a powerful moment in a tumultuous year, delivering a message of hope and perseverance to a nation reeling from a global pandemic, political tension, and racial injustice. Gorman implores us to: “lift our gazes, not to what stands between us, but what stands before us”; to confront together the many threats to our future.
The Covid-19 pandemic and the events of the past year have led many artists to likewise shift or intensify their gaze. This year of isolation and reflection, of political tension and social upheaval, has brought into greater focus the many issues that currently stand before us, whether personal, political, societal, or global.
Featuring work by sixteen contemporary artists, What Stands Before Us documents a turbulent year through paintings, prints, photographs, and works on paper, each piece telling the story of its creator’s experiences. Robert Freeman, best known for his celebratory and joyful images of Black life, found he could not ignore our country’s current racial reckoning after the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other Black men and women at the hands of police. His diptych Struggle, viscerally depicting two lynchings, is part of his newest series Our Struggle, which directly addresses the artist’s indignation at the violent racial divide within our country. “As a visual artist releasing my anger, outrage and sadness has resulted in these canvases. This is a creative eruption of deep and vast emotional frustration.”
Karen Lee Sobol’s Germ of the Month watercolors reference medical journals, recalled from childhood, which featured magnified photos of microscopic organisms on the back cover. The images terrified her as a child, and took on haunting new meaning in the spring of 2020 as news continued of the Covid-19 virus’s rapid spread. Sobol’s images are bright and beautifully abstract, belying the deadly nature of the organisms they portray.
During the lockdown in Italy, Jorge R. Pombo used his solitude to start a series long on his mind: mixed media variations on John Singer Sargent’s The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit. Pombo wanted the darkness prominent in Sargent’s painting to feature as the central protagonist in his works. As his city of Reggio Emilia experienced the stillness of isolation, Pombo painted the collective “nothingness” of social distancing as an unpredictable and unsettling black void marring the familiarity of Sargent’s work.
In addition to those mentioned, the exhibition will include works by David Avery, Resa Blatman, Thomas Darsney, Paul Endres Jr., William Evertson, Andrew Fish, Sean Flood, Jillian Freyer, Joan Hall, John Thompson, Margaret Rose Vendryes, Anthony Peyton Young, and Sara Zielinski. Though each artist tackles the events and hardships of the past year through the lens of their individual experiences, they also urge us to consider the issues that stand before us as a collective whole – a potentially mighty force with which to confront the problems that threaten our future.

POP/Modernism – Online Exhibition
Press Release:
POP/Modernism explores the trajectory of art from Modernism through Post-Modernism. Modernism encompasses a period in history that began with Impressionism and spanned various movements - including Cubism, Fauvism, Constructivism - and culminating with Abstract Expressionism. With an obsession for the fruits of capitalism and popular culture, Pop Art became a bridge to Post-Modernism which at its core is identified by conceptual art.

Forgotten Favorites: An Online Exhibition
Press Release:
As we've been clearing out the gallery at 169 Newbury Street and moving into our new space at 168, we've reacquainted ourselves with many treasures temporarily forgotten or not seen in some time. Forgotten Favorites, an online exhibition, is a curated group of artworks we've fallen in love with all over again, from Old Master prints to American Impressionist paintings to mid-century sculpture. Enjoy revisiting some old favorites with fresh eyes, or meeting a new piece for the first time!
Included Works

John Thompson: An Artist Collects
Press Release:
John Thompson: An Artist Collects explores the fascinating connection between an artist’s practice and the artwork they choose to collect. This unique exhibition showcases the private art collection of artist John Thompson alongside examples of his own work. An accomplished painter and printmaker, Thompson is also a lifelong collector. His eclectic art collection, assembled over several decades, comprises more than 1,000 works, with exceptional examples of paintings and prints from Old Master through Contemporary. An Artist Collects features Contemporary selections from Thompson’s collection, including works by Patrick Casey, Jim Dine, Walton Ford, Robert Freeman, Nicola Lopez, Ana Maria Pacheco, and John Walker, exhibited with his own creative output.
Thompson’s multilayered prints and paintings evoke the fleeting beauty of small moments in nature: the play of light on leafy branches, the rustle of wind through grass, the ripple of raindrops across a pond. Thompson uses multiple printmaking techniques to orchestrate his expressive prints, building and layering overlapping elements. Each monoprint is a unique work of art, a harmonious symphony of pattern, texture, color, and light. For Thompson, a love of materials and willingness to experiment are paramount.
As a collector, Thompson is particularly drawn to proofs and early states, works that provide insight into the artist’s process or technique. He appreciates the painstaking effort involved in the creation of an artwork and admires the audacity and necessity of experimentation. Thompson’s collecting habits both inform and reflect the qualities he values most in his own work: technique, process, virtuosity, experimentation, and expressiveness
Originally scheduled for exhibition in the fall of 2020, An Artist Collects was postponed due to Covid-19. Thompson notes that the ongoing pandemic has affected both his creative and collecting processes. More time in his studio has allowed him to retreat into art - both his own and that of others. Thompson’s Waltham studio doubles as storage for much of his extensive collection, and, surrounded by both his art and centuries of works by others, he is afforded a hyper focus on both what he wants to create and what he wants to collect. His artistic output has recently concentrated on woodcuts; though no stranger to the medium, Thompson felt drawn to their more assertive nature throughout the past year. He also feels collecting has become more important to him, and the extra time spent with his vast holdings of hundreds of years of paintings and prints has refined his approach to acquisitions. Thompson continues to seek out both older, historical works and those of established and emerging contemporary artists, with an eye for artistic ingenuity.
John Thompson: An Artist Collects is the first exhibition to open at Childs Gallery’s new 168 Newbury Street location. Showcasing art through the introspective lens of the artistic process itself, An Artist Collects is a fitting inaugural exhibition, and we look forward to welcoming guests. As part of our Covid-19 precautions, we are currently open to the public 11am to 4pm, Tuesday through Sunday, and by appointment.

Henry Moore: Prints
Press Release:
On view in Childs Gallery’s new Print Department at 168 Newbury Street, Henry Moore: Prints presents an impressive array of etchings and lithographs by the famed British artist. Best remembered as a sculptor of figurative semi-abstraction, Moore also produced numerous prints during his career, often of his wildly popular reclining and seated figures. Henry Moore: Prints features several examples of these ubiquitous forms, including the monumental Stone Reclining Figure (also a rare artist proof), as well as animals, interiors, and mothers with children – another frequent motif after the birth of Moore’s daughter in 1946. The exhibition also demonstrates the artist’s progression from early work principally concerned with mass, to later figures, pierced through with openings to examine space.
The exhibition is on view in our upstairs Print Department through April 25, 2021.

Goya: Prints from Los Caprichos – An Online Exhibition
Press Release:
Goya’s seminal series, Los Caprichos, is a visual condemnation of the follies and foolishness of the 18th century Spanish society in which he lived. Comprising 80 etchings, Los Caprichos wittily criticizes wide-ranging dangers including superstition, ignorance, and irrationality. Though inspired by his own society, Goya’s prints expose humanity’s universal failings, revealing the tendency of all cultural movements to give way to fascism and inequity. Our new online exhibition Goya: Prints from Los Caprichos presents works from this visionary series, including several etchings from the coveted first edition of 1799.
The exhibition is timed to coincide with the upcoming display of contemporary artist Emily Lombardo’s The Caprichos at Monserrat College of Art (January 25 through May 15, 2021). Lombardo’s prints are in direct conversation and homage to Goya’s Los Caprichos, exploring the foibles and follies of our modern era, while also highlighting the timelessness of the original work.
Included Works

At Home

Time Capsule: Art of the Forties
Press Release:
After seventy-six years at 169 Newbury Street, Childs Gallery will be transitioning to a new space across the street at 168 Newbury. We will remain at our current address until the beginning of next year, when we will fully transition into our new location. Despite our many years at 169, this isn’t the gallery's first move – when Charles Childs founded his eponymous gallery in 1937, it was originally located at 171 Newbury Street, and moved to its current location in 1944.
Maintaining our long-term presence on one of Boston’s best-known streets, conveniently on the same block, we will remain easily accessible to our artists and clients. We will be operating as normal, with a full schedule of exhibitions during the relocation process.
Time Capsule: Art of the Forties is planned as one of Childs Gallery’s last exhibitions at its 169 Newbury Street location. Looking forward to the gallery’s next chapter has inspired us to reflect on the past. With Time Capsule we take a look back at the decade that saw the gallery’s last change of address: the 1940s.
Much like the present moment, the 1940s was not only a time of physical transition for Childs Gallery, it was also a turbulent decade that in many respects reshaped the globe. The period was truly one of transition for the art world - the decade witnessed the shifting ascendancy of movements ranging from American Regionalism and Social Realism to Modern Abstraction and Abstract Expressionism. Regionalism and Social Realism dominated American art during the 1930s and early 1940s, highlighting social concerns and aspects of traditional American life. During, and in the wake of World War II, refugee artists arriving in the United States helped to usher in Modern Abstraction. By the end of WWII, the American art scene had begun to change dramatically. The decade served as an incubating period between pre-war avant-garde movements and such breakthrough movements as Abstract Expressionism.
Time Capsule: Art of the Forties provides a snapshot of a decade of transition in American art. Drawn from Childs Gallery’s holdings, the exhibition includes paintings, drawings, and prints of the period and includes examples of Regionalism, Social Realism, Abstraction, and Expressionism. The exhibition also features work by many of the gallery’s longest represented artists who were working during the decade, such as Herbert Barnett, Jason Berger, Henry Botkin, Bernard Brussel-Smith, Donald De Lue, Molly Luce, Ben Norris, Anne Powers, and Dudley Vaill Talcott.
As we look toward our future with an exhibition celebrating our past, we invite visitors to view Time Capsule: Art of the Forties at our 169 address Tuesday through Sunday, 11am to 4pm and look forward to welcoming guests into our new 168 space in the near future. We view our upcoming relocation as an opportunity to truly make our mark in the storied history of Childs, while maintaining the traditions that have made the gallery both successful and beloved. We look forward to continuing our relationships with our art, artists, and clients at 168 Newbury Street.
Please stay tuned for more updates on our relocation process. We will be updating our social media pages with additional information as we move forward.
We thank you for your continued support!


![Mixed media by Vaclav Vytlacil: Three Fish [Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/vaclav_vytlacil_three_fish__marthas_vineyard__ps92-42-236-4_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)

![Painting by Marion Patten: Provincetown Houses [Massachusetts], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/marion_patten_provincetown_houses__massachus_clc13467-47r_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Provincetown [Massachusetts], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/henry_botkin_provincetown__massachusetts__84-6-176_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Painting by Marion Patten: [Houses Along the Road, Provincetown, Massachusetts], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/marion_patten__houses_along_the_road__provin_cgl40160-3_childs_gallery-1-250x250.jpg)
![Watercolor by Henry Botkin: Highland Light [Cape Cod], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/henry_botkin_highland_light__cape_cod__cgl39310-3168_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)




![Photograph By George Platt Lynes: [bernard Perlin] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george_platt_lynes_bernard_perlin_21-23-07_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Photograph By George Platt Lynes: [chuck Howard In Profile] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george_platt_lynes_chuck_howard_in_profile_21-23-02_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Photograph by George Platt Lynes: [Chuck Howard Posing Among an Adorned Tree II], available at Childs Gallery, Boston](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george-platt-lynes_chuck-howard-posing-among-an-adorned-tree-ii_bb6571-05_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Photograph By George Platt Lynes: [chuck Howard In Provincetown] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george_platt_lynes_chuck_howard_in_provincetown_21-23-06_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)
![Photograph By George Platt Lynes: [chuck Howard In Bed I] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george_platt_lynes_chuck_howard_in_bed_i_bb6571-06_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)




















![Drawing by Frank Benson: [Salmon Fishing Scene], available at Childs Gallery, Boston](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/frank-benson_salmon-fishing-scene_childs_gallery_12467-250x250.jpg)


![Painting By William Partridge Burpee: [rising Wave Breaking On Rock] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/william_partridge_burpee_rising_wave_breaking_on_rock_15-21-01_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)









![Painting by Samuel W. Griggs: [Mount Washington Winter Scene], represented by Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/samuel_w._griggs__mount_washington_winter_scene_bb1516-02r_childs_gallery-1-250x250.jpg)

![Photograph by Bruce Bellas (Bruce of Los Angeles): [Unidentified Model with Disc], available at Childs Gallery, Boston](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/bruce-bellas-bruce-of-los-angeles_unidentified-model-with-disc_21-24-005_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)



































![Watercolor By Ben Norris: Boys On Rocks #2 [hawaii] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/ben_norris_boys_on_rocks_2_hawaii_98-19-b0127ps92-42-270-13_childs_gallery-250x250.jpg)








![Photograph By George Platt Lynes: [bernard Perlin] At Childs Gallery](https://childsgallery.com/wp-content/uploads/george_platt_lynes_bernard_perlin_21-23-07_childs_gallery-768x938.jpg)