Howard Smith


Howard Smith (1943) specializes in researching the means of painting and the process of painting, mainly the interaction between colour and background and the relationship between this art and the viewer. This exhibition (No end in sight) of this representative of essentialist painting shows, through more than 70 paintings, watercolours and drawings, the importance of this artist, who for more than 50 years has been systematically and poetically investigating the possibilities and effects of colour.

 

A Small Great Animal


Poster and Photo: Maison de la Nature Neuchâteloise, Brot-Dessous.

The exhibition shows the importance of the quality of the water in the gorges of the Areuse. They have been supplying water to two-thirds of the population of the canton of Neuchâtel for more than a century. The exhibition highlights the tiny shellfish Gelyella monardi, less than 1/3 of a millimetre in size. This unique animal has been inhabiting the vast (under) water reservoirs for 20 million years. It is a bio-indicator of water quality and is internationally recognised as a unique animal.

Mother and Child


Mother and Child. Museum der Kulturen, Basel. Photo: TES.

The origins of the Museum of Cultures (Museum der Kulturen) in Basel date back to 1849, when Basel had one of the first ethnographic collections accessible to the public in Europe and the world. This year, the cathedral (das Münster) celebrates its millennial history. The cathedral and the museum are neighbours and the new exhibition Mother and Child (Mutter und Kind) in the museum is the result of a common theme: Mary and her Child Jesus. The museum shows the relationship between mother and child in every culture on the five continents. Are motherhood and the relationship universal? The exhibition does not answer this question, but shows how mother and child are portrayed in many ways in art, myths and stories. The relationship in the first part of the exhibition is divinely marked, the images of Mary (Maria lactans) and her ancient predecessors (Isis and Horus for example) or, for example, Mother Earth as a (pregnant) woman in Peru. In the second part, the exhibition shows the relationship embedded in social systems. A third part deals with the themes of pregnancy, birth, childbirth and breastfeeding. They have a different meaning in each culture. In the fourth part, ideal and reality are juxtaposed and contrasted: the extended family, the foster father, the one-child policy, the single mother, divorce, the foster child, same-sex parenthood and other (modern) themes. From this perspective, the exhibition presents numerous exceptional works of art from five continents and leaves the conclusions to the visitor.