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Wednesday, December 31, 2025 |
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| Exhibition at the Norton Simon Museum will explore the intimate world of Galka Scheyer |
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Beatrice Wood (American, 18931998), Portrait of Galka Scheyer, 1934. Colored pencil on paper, 15 1/4 x 9 1/2 in. (38.7 x 24.1 cm) Norton Simon Museum, The Blue Four Galka Scheyer Collection © Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts/Happy Valley Foundation.
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PASADENA, CA.- Opening at the Norton Simon Museum on February 20, 2026, Dear Little Friend: Impressions of Galka Scheyer offers an intimate view of the German-born art dealer and collector Galka Scheyer (18891945), known for her pivotal role in bringing European modernism to the United States and promoting the so-called Blue FourLyonel Feininger, Alexei Jawlensky, Paul Klee and Vassily Kandinsky. This focus exhibition looks at her legacy through a lesser-known aspect of her lifethe friendships she forged with both artists and supporters.
Drawn from Scheyers archive and collection, which was transferred to the Pasadena Art Institute (now the Norton Simon Museum) in 1953, the exhibition features portraits of Scheyer given to her by artists Alexei Jawlensky, Maynard Dixon, Peter Krasnow and Beatrice Wood, among others. Alongside these are correspondence and ephemera that testify to her dedication to art and to her artists, as well as the excitement she generated in pursuing her mission. The exhibition title, Dear Little Friend, is taken from the affectionate salutation Feininger adopted in his letters to Scheyer and encapsulates the personal relationships and collaborative spirit that defined her enterprise in Europe and California.
Scheyer began her career as a painter in Braunschweig, Germany, but after meeting Jawlensky in 1916, she emerged as a dynamic advocate for modern art. Through Jawlensky, she was introduced to the vibrant arts communities of Europe, befriending Bauhaus masters Lyonel Feininger, Vassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee. She united these artists under the name the Blue Four, signaling their camaraderie and spiritual affinities, for the purpose of promoting their work in the United States beginning in 1924.
Settling in California in 1925, Scheyer became a pivotal force in introducing European modernism to American audiences. Her lectures, educational programs and exhibitions in the Bay Area and Los Angeles helped establish the region as a burgeoning center for modern art. Maynard Dixon, known for his iconic depictions of the American West, immediately endorsed her work. His playful inscription To Madame Moderne Kunst (To Ms. Modern Art), below his 1925 portrait of Scheyer, is a fitting tribute to the excitement she sparked within the San Francisco arts community.
When Scheyer moved to Los Angeles full-time in 1933, she continued to expand her circle to include artists, collectors and cultural luminaries such as Beatrice Wood, Louise and Walter Arensberg and architect Richard Neutra, who designed her home-cum-gallery space in the Hollywood Hills. Dear Little Friend features Woods vivid colored pencil drawing, which captures the dynamic, performative energy of Scheyers presentations.
This exhibition offers a nuanced perspective on Scheyers professional life and on the deep relationships she fostered. A cultural force and a confidante to the budding California arts community, Scheyer was, in the words of photographer Edward Weston, the ideal go-between for the artist and his public.
Dear Little Friend: Impressions of Galka Scheyer is organized by Gloria Williams Sander, Curator at the Norton Simon Museum.
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