FRED SANDBACK Born 1943 in Bronxville, New York
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Hans Ulrich Obrist a Brief History of Curating
Hans Ulrich Obrist A Brief History of Curating JRP | RINGIER & LES PRESSES DU REEL 2 To the memory of Anne d’Harnoncourt, Walter Hopps, Pontus Hultén, Jean Leering, Franz Meyer, and Harald Szeemann 3 Christophe Cherix When Hans Ulrich Obrist asked the former director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Anne d’Harnoncourt, what advice she would give to a young curator entering the world of today’s more popular but less experimental museums, in her response she recalled with admiration Gilbert & George’s famous ode to art: “I think my advice would probably not change very much; it is to look and look and look, and then to look again, because nothing replaces looking … I am not being in Duchamp’s words ‘only retinal,’ I don’t mean that. I mean to be with art—I always thought that was a wonderful phrase of Gilbert & George’s, ‘to be with art is all we ask.’” How can one be fully with art? In other words, can art be experienced directly in a society that has produced so much discourse and built so many structures to guide the spectator? Gilbert & George’s answer is to consider art as a deity: “Oh Art where did you come from, who mothered such a strange being. For what kind of people are you: are you for the feeble-of-mind, are you for the poor-at-heart, art for those with no soul. Are you a branch of nature’s fantastic network or are you an invention of some ambitious man? Do you come from a long line of arts? For every artist is born in the usual way and we have never seen a young artist. -
The Museum of Modern Art: the Mainstream Assimilating New Art
AWAY FROM THE MAINSTREAM: THREE ALTERNATIVE SPACES IN NEW YORK AND THE EXPANSION OF ART IN THE 1970s By IM SUE LEE A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2013 1 © 2013 Im Sue Lee 2 To mom 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I am deeply grateful to my committee, Joyce Tsai, Melissa Hyde, Guolong Lai, and Phillip Wegner, for their constant, generous, and inspiring support. Joyce Tsai encouraged me to keep working on my dissertation project and guided me in the right direction. Mellissa Hyde and Guolong Lai gave me administrative support as well as intellectual guidance throughout the coursework and the research phase. Phillip Wegner inspired me with his deep understanding of critical theories. I also want to thank Alexander Alberro and Shepherd Steiner, who gave their precious advice when this project began. My thanks also go to Maureen Turim for her inspiring advice and intellectual stimuli. Thanks are also due to the librarians and archivists of art resources I consulted for this project: Jennifer Tobias at the Museum Library of MoMA, Michelle Harvey at the Museum Archive of MoMA, Marisa Bourgoin at Smithsonian Institution’s Archives of American Art, Elizabeth Hirsch at Artists Space, John Migliore at The Kitchen, Holly Stanton at Electronic Arts Intermix, and Amie Scally and Sean Keenan at White Columns. They helped me to access the resources and to publish the archival materials in my dissertation. I also wish to thank Lucy Lippard for her response to my questions. -
PRESS RELEASE Art Into Life!
Contact: Anne Niermann / Sonja Hempel Press and Public Relations Heinrich-Böll-Platz 50667 Cologne Tel + 49 221 221 23491 [email protected] [email protected] PRESS RELEASE Art into Life! Collector Wolfgang Hahn and the 60s June 24 – September 24, 2017 Press conference: Thursday, June 22, 11 a.m., preview starts at 10 a.m. Opening: Friday, June 23, 7 p.m. In the 1960s, the Rhineland was already an important center for a revolutionary occurrence in art: a new generation of artists with international networks rebelled against traditional art. They used everyday life as their source of inspiration and everyday objects as their material. They went out into their urban surroundings, challenging the limits of the art disciplines and collaborating with musicians, writers, filmmakers, and dancers. In touch with the latest trends of this exciting period, the Cologne painting restorer Wolfgang Hahn (1924–1987) began acquiring this new art and created a multifaceted collection of works of Nouveau Réalisme, Fluxus, Happening, Pop Art, and Conceptual Art. Wolfgang Hahn was head of the conservation department at the Wallraf Richartz Museum and the Museum Ludwig. This perspective influenced his view of contemporary art. He realized that the new art from around 1960 was quintessentially processual and performative, and from the very beginning he visited the events of new music, Fluxus events, and Happenings. He initiated works such as Daniel Spoerri’s Hahns Abendmahl (Hahn’s Supper) of 1964, implemented Lawrence Weiner’s concept A SQUARE REMOVAL FROM A RUG IN USE of 1969 in his living room, and not only purchased concepts and scores from artists, but also video works and 16mm films. -
Tate Papers Issue 12 2009: Lucy R. Lippard
Tate Papers Issue 12 2009: Lucy R. Lippard http://www.tate.org.uk/research/tateresearch/tatepapers/09autumn/lippa... ISSN 1753-9854 TATE’S ONLINE RESEARCH JOURNAL Landmark Exhibitions Issue Curating by Numbers Lucy R. Lippard Cultural amnesia – imposed less by memory loss than by deliberate political strategy – has drawn a curtain over much important curatorial work done in the past four decades. As this amnesia has been particularly prevalent in the fields of feminism and oppositional art, it is heartening to see young scholars addressing the history of exhibitions and hopefully resurrecting some of its more marginalised events. I have never become a proper curator. Most of the fifty or so shows I have curated since 1966 have been small, not terribly ‘professional’, and often held in unconventional venues, ranging from store windows, the streets, union halls, demonstrations, an old jail, libraries, community centres, and schools … plus a few in museums. I have no curating methodology nor any training in museology, except for working at the Library of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, for a couple of years when I was just out of college. But that experience – the only real job I have ever had – probably prepared me well for the archival, informational aspect of conceptual art. I shall concentrate here on the first few exhibitions I organised in the 1960s and early 1970s, especially those with numbers as their titles. To begin with, my modus operandi contradicted, or simply ignored, the connoisseurship that is conventionally understood to be at the heart of curating. I have always preferred the inclusive to the exclusive, and both conceptual art and feminism satisfied an ongoing desire for the open-ended. -
Women Light Artists in Postwar California Elizabeth M. Gollnick
Diffusion: Women Light Artists in Postwar California Elizabeth M. Gollnick Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2018 © 2018 Elizabeth M. Gollnick All Rights Reserved Diffusion: Women Light Artists in Postwar California Elizabeth M. Gollnick Abstract This dissertation redefines Los Angeles “light and space” art, tracing the multiple strains of abstract light art that developed in California during the postwar technology boom. These artists used new technical materials and industrial processes to expand modernist definitions of medium and create perceptual experiences based on their shared understanding of light as artistic material. The diversity and experimental nature of early Light and Space practice has been suppressed within the discourse of “minimal abstraction,” a term I use to signal the expansion of my analysis beyond the boundaries of work that is traditionally associated with “minimalism” as a movement. My project focuses on three women: Mary Corse, Helen Pashgian and Maria Nordman, each of whom represents a different trajectory of postwar light-based practice in California. While all of these artists express ambivalence about attempts to align their practice with the Light and Space movement, their work provides fundamental insight into the development of light art and minimal abstract practice in California during this era. In chapter one, I map the evolution of Mary Corse’s experimental “light painting” between 1964 and 1971, in which the artist experimented with new technology—including fluorescent bulbs and the reflective glass microspheres used in freeway lane dividers—to expand the perceptual boundaries of monochrome painting by manifesting an experience of pure white light. -
Untitled) 1961, That Spewed Shaving Cream, Grand Central Moderns Gallery, NYC
Critical Mass Happenings Fluxus Performance Intermedia and Rutgers University 1958-1972 By: Geoffrey Hendricks ISBN: 0813533031 See detail of this book on Amazon.com Book served by AMAZON NOIR (www.amazon-noir.com) project by: PAOLO CIRIO paolocirio.net UBERMORGEN.COM ubermorgen.com ALESSANDRO LUDOVICO neural.it Page 1 Critical Mass: Some Reflections M O R D E C A I - M A R K M A C L O W Icons of my childhood were the piles of red-bound copies of An Anthology that my father, Jackson Mac Low, received for having edited and published it. Despite his repeated declarations that he was not a part of George Maciunas's self-declared movement, my father's involve- ment in the first Fluxus book left him irrevocably tangled in it. I myself seem to have been influenced by my father's experimental, algorithmic approach to poetry, and ended up a computational astrophysicist, studying how stars form out of the chaotic, turbulent interstellar gas. I think there was some hope that with this background I might explain the true, or correct, meaning of the term "critical mass." Unfortunately, as a scientist, I have no special access to truth, and correctness depends entirely on con- text. Let me explain this a bit before discussing the term "critical mass" itself. Science is often taught as if it consisted of a series of true facts, strung together with a narrative of how these facts were discovered. The actual practice of sci- ence, however, requires the assumption that nothing is guaranteed to be true except as, and only so far as, it can be confirmed by empirical evidence. -
DONALD JUDD Born 1928 in Excelsior Springs, Missouri
This document was updated January 6, 2021. For reference only and not for purposes of publication. For more information, please contact the gallery. DONALD JUDD Born 1928 in Excelsior Springs, Missouri. Died 1994 in New York City. SOLO EXHIBITIONS 1957 Don Judd, Panoras Gallery, New York, NY, June 24 – July 6, 1957. 1963–1964 Don Judd, Green Gallery, New York, NY, December 17, 1963 – January 11, 1964. 1966 Don Judd, Leo Castelli Gallery, 4 East 77th Street, New York, NY, February 5 – March 2, 1966. Donald Judd Visiting Artist, Hopkins Center Art Galleries, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, July 16 – August 9, 1966. 1968 Don Judd, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, February 26 – March 24, 1968 [catalogue]. Don Judd, Irving Blum Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, May 7 – June 1, 1968. 1969 Don Judd, Leo Castelli Gallery, 4 East 77th Street, New York, NY, January 4 – 25, 1969. Don Judd: Structures, Galerie Ileana Sonnabend, Paris, France, May 6 – 29, 1969. New Works, Galerie Bischofberger, Zürich, Switzerland, May – June 1969. Don Judd, Galerie Rudolf Zwirner, Cologne, Germany, June 4 – 30, 1969. Donald Judd, Irving Blum Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, September 16 – November 1, 1969. 1970 Don Judd, Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, January 16 – March 1, 1970; traveled to Folkwang Museum, Essen, Germany, April 11 – May 10, 1970; Kunstverein Hannover, Germany, June 20 – August 2, 1970; and Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, United Kingdom, September 29 – November 1, 1970 [catalogue]. Don Judd, The Helman Gallery, St. Louis, MO, April 3 – 29, 1970. Don Judd, Leo Castelli Gallery, 4 East 77th Street, and 108th Street Warehouse, New York, NY, April 11 – May 9, 1970. -
Guide to the Colin De Land and Pat Hearn Library Collection MSS.012 Hannah Mandel; Collection Processed by Ann Butler, Ryan Evans and Hannah Mandel
CCS Bard Archives Phone: 845.758.7567 Center for Curatorial Studies Fax: 845.758.2442 Bard College Email: [email protected] Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504 Guide to the Colin de Land and Pat Hearn Library Collection MSS.012 Hannah Mandel; Collection processed by Ann Butler, Ryan Evans and Hannah Mandel. This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on February 06, 2019 . Describing Archives: A Content Standard Guide to the Colin de Land and Pat Hearn Library Collection MSS.012 Table of Contents Summary Information ................................................................................................................................................ 3 Biographical / Historical ............................................................................................................................................. 5 Scope and Contents ................................................................................................................................................. 6 Arrangement .............................................................................................................................................................. 6 Administrative Information ......................................................................................................................................... 7 Related Materials ...................................................................................................................................................... 7 Controlled Access Headings .................................................................................................................................... -
Richard Serra Born 1938 in San Francisco, California
This document was updated March 4, 2021. For reference only and not for purposes of publication. For more information, please contact the gallery. Richard Serra Born 1938 in San Francisco, California. Lives and works in New York and Nova Scotia, Canada. EDUCATION 1961 B.A., University of California, San Diego 1962 B.F.A., Yale University, New Haven 1964 M.F.A., Yale Univesity, New Haven SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2020 Richard Serra: Works on Paper, Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco (February 20-June 2020) 2019 Richard Serra | Finally Finished, David Klein Gallery, Birmingham, Michigan (November 2- December 21, 2019) Richard Serra: Composites, Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl, New York (October 17, 2019- February 1, 2020) Richard Serra Drawings, Paul Coulon, London (September 26-November 15, 2019) Richard Serra: Forged Rounds, Gagosian Gallery (24th Street), New York (September 17- December 7, 2019) Richard Serra: Reverse Curve, Gagosian Gallery (21st Street), New York (September 17, 2019- February 1, 2020) Richard Serra: Triptychs and Diptychs, Gagosian Gallery (Madison Avenue), New York (September 16-November 2, 2019) Richard Serra: Equals, Hiram Butler Gallery, Houston (March 5-April 27, 2019) Richard Serra: 1985-1996, Krakow Witkin Gallery, Boston (January 5-February 9, 2019) 2018 Richard Serra: Equals, Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl, New York (September 22- November 3, 2018) Richard Serra Drawings, David Zwirner, Hong Kong (May 23-June 30, 2018) Richard Serra: Rifts, Gagosian Gallery (Grosvenor Hill), London (April 6-May 25, 2018) Richard -
Archival Assemblages: Rutgers and the Avant -Garde, 1953-1964
ARCHIVAL ASSEMBLAGES: RUTGERS AND THE AVANT -GARDE, 1953-1964 an exhibition Erika B. Gorder, Curator September 12-December 14, 2001 Special Collections and University Archives Gallery Rutgers University Libraries mgsa IN MEMORY OF GEORGE SEGAL 1924-2000 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I have been fortunate enough to work with many dedicated and talented professionals whose interest and hard work make this exhibition possible. I would first like to thank Dr. Joan Marter, Professor of Art History at Rutgers, who served as advisor to me for this project and for her extensive research and scholarship that presented the history of these Avant-Garde artists of Rutgers to the academy and the public alike. I am also indebted to Joe Jacobs and the Newark Museum for creating the phenomenal1999 exhibition, Off Umits: Rutgers University and the Avant-Garde, 1957-1963, which inspired me to re-explore its themes from an archival perspective. I would especially like to acknowledge and thank Geoffrey Hendricks for his in-depth knowledge about art at Rutgers, for taking the time to invite me into his home studio and granting an interview, and his generosity in loaning materials from his personal archives. Sara Seagull from the Robert Watts Studio Archives was a wealth of information and is truly dedicated to the work and memory of Robert Watts as artist and teacher. The Robert Watts Studio Archives graciously loaned materials to the exhibition. Jeffrey Weschler, Senior Curator, and Cathleen Anderson, Registrar, of the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum were responsible for the loan of the Lucas Samaras piece included in the exhibition. -
Joel Shapiro
JOEL SHAPIRO Born 1941 New York, New York Lives and works in New York, New York Education 1964 New York University, New York, B.A. 1969 New York University, New York, M.A. Awards and Honors 2015 Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture, International Sculpture Center, New York 2013 Outstanding Contribution to the Arts Award, Americans for the Arts, New York 2012 Member Academician, The National Academy, New York The Gabarron International Award for Visual Arts, New York 2010 Distinguished Alumni, NYU Steinhardt, New York 2005 Chevalier dans l’Ordre des arts et des lettres, French Ministry of Culture, Paris 2008 Art Award, Smithsonisan Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C. 2004 Award for Excellence for Artistic Contributions to the Fight Against AIDS, American Foundation for AIDS Research, Dallas 1999 Resident in the Visual Arts, American Academy in Rome, Rome 1994 Member of Swedish Royal Academy of Art, Stockholm 1990 Merit Medal for Sculpture, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, New York 1986 Skowhegan Medal for Sculpture, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Madison 1984 Creative Arts Award, Brandeis University, Waltham 1975 Visual Arts Fellowship, National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, D.C. Selected Solo Exhibitions 2018 Joel Shapiro: Plastic, Paper, Wood, and Wire, Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven (forthcoming) 2017 Joel Shapiro I Floor Wall Ceiling, Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Winterthur, Switzerland 2016 Joel Shapiro, Dominique Lévy, New York Joel Shapiro, The Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas 2015 Joel Shapiro: Wood Plaster Bronze, Galerie Karsten Greve, Cologne 2014 Joel Shapiro: Painted Wood, Almine Rech Gallery, Brussels Joel Shapiro: Iron and Bronze 1973–76, Craig F. -
THE D.A.P. CATALOG FALL 2019 Recent Releases from Artbook | D.A.P
THE D.A.P. CATALOG FALL 2019 Recent releases from Artbook | D.A.P. Paul Klee: Pedagogical Sketchbook 9783037785850 Hbk, U.S. $35.00 CDN $49.95 Lars Müller Publishers Piet Mondrian: New Design 9783037785867 Hbk, U.S. $35.00 CDN $49.95 Lars Müller Publishers Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music 9781909526624 Hbk, U.S. $59.95 CDN $75.00 Reel Art Press Jean-Philippe Delhomme: Artists’ Instagrams 9781947359048 Hbk, U.S. $29.95 CDN $27.00 August Editions Walks to the Paradise Garden: A Lowdown Southern Odyssey 9781732848207 Hbk, U.S. $45.00 CDN $55.00 Institute 193 Balkrishna Doshi: William Klein: Celebration Architecture for the People 9788417048792 9783945852316 Hbk, U.S. $39.95 CDN $55.00 Sebastian Posingis, from Sebastian Posingis: Salt River, published by Steidl. See page 128. Hbk, U.S. $85.00 CDN $115.00 La Fábrica Vitra Design Museum Antonello da Messina: The Spectacle of Illusion Inside Painting Deception, Magic and the Paranormal 9788857238982 9781942884378 Hbk, U.S. $50.00 CDN $69.95 Featured Releases 2 Hbk, U.S. $35.00 CDN $49.95 Skira Journals 109 D.A.P. Limited Editions 112 Picasso: Blue and Rose Periods Fall Highlights 114 9783775745055 CATALOG EDITOR Hbk, U.S. $85.00 CDN $115.00 Thomas Evans Photography 116 Hatje Cantz DESIGNER Art 132 Soviet Asia Martha Ormiston Design 176 PHOTOGRAPHY 9780995745551 Architecture 180 Justin Lubliner, Carter Seddon Hbk, U.S. $32.50 CDN $45.00 Fuel Publishing COPY WRITING Arthur Cañedo, Janine DeFeo, Megan Ashley DiNoia, Thomas Evans, Jack Patterson Specialty Books 188 Art 190 FRONT COVER IMAGE Henrietta Shore, Two Worlds (1921).