Monday, June 15, 2026

Duets

Claes Oldenburg
Two Cheeseburgers with Everything
1962
burlap, plaster and enamel
Museum of Modern Art, New York


Anonymous American Photographer
Women dressed to match
ca. 1940
gelatin silver print
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Herbert Bayer
Things to Come
ca. 1938
photolithograph
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Anonymous American Manufacturer
Pair of Vases
ca. 1870-80
cobalt glass
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Elizabeth Peyton
Prince Harry and Prince William
2000
lithograph
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Henry Swift
Plaster Forms
ca. 1932
gelatin silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Andy Warhol
Silver Marlon
1963
screenprint over silver paint on linen
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Eero Aarnio for Magis (Italy)
Puppy Stools
2005
polyethylene
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Anonymous English Artist
Eye Studies
ca. 1850-1900
drawing
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Charles Courtney Curran
Lotus Blossoms
1888
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Anonymous Chinese Sculptor
Coffin Finials
10th-13th century
wood
Princeton University Art Museum

Stuart Davis
Two Heads
1929
lithograph
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Susan Felter
Flying EspaƱas
1982
C-print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Anonymous American Photographer
Double Studio Portrait
ca. 1955
gelatin silver print
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Nan Goldin
Honda brothers in cherry blossom storm #2 Tokyo
1994
C-print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Lady Clementina Hawarden
Clementina Maude and Isabella Grace, daughters of the artist
ca. 1863
albumen print
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Philip Guston
Edge of Town
1969
oil on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York

As a boy lately come up from the country to town
Returns for the day to his village in expensive shoes,
Standing scornful in a ring of old companions
Amazes them with new expressions, with strange hints
And promises, then leaves them never to return,
Who later will never know of his feverish end
In dockland dosshouse or frozen on the Embankment
Under the luminous dial of Big Ben –
So is the fate of the insolent mind that takes
Truth as itself, in homicidal fantasies
Of itself as the divine punisher of the world,
In aphasia and general paralysis of the insane.

– W.H. Auden (1929)