Moma PS1 PRESENTS a THEMATIC EXHIBITION INVESTIGATING the NATURE of IMAGES in CONTEMPORARY ART TODAY

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Moma PS1 PRESENTS a THEMATIC EXHIBITION INVESTIGATING the NATURE of IMAGES in CONTEMPORARY ART TODAY MoMA PS1 PRESENTS A THEMATIC EXHIBITION INVESTIGATING THE NATURE OF IMAGES IN CONTEMPORARY ART TODAY Exhibition includes sculptures, videos, photographs, and installations by five emerging artists—Trisha Baga, Lucas Blalock, Josh Kline, Margaret Lee, and Helen Marten—using images as a raw material New Pictures of Common Objects October 21, 2012–December 31, 2012 2nd Floor Project Rooms, MoMA PS1 (Long Island City, NY—August 23, 2012) MoMA PS1 presents New Pictures of Common Objects, a thematic exhibition investigating the nature of images today. Treating images as raw material, these five artists work in a range of media including sculpture, video, photography, and installation. They recognize the elastic and diffuse nature of images, utilizing pictures that may or may not be created by themselves to challenge expectations of genre, form, and meaning. New Pictures of Common Objects is curated by MoMA PS1 Assistant Curator Christopher Y. Lew and will be on view in the Second Floor Project Rooms at MoMA PS1 from October 21 through December 31, 2012. The title of the exhibition references the 1962 show New Painting of Common Objects, curated by Walter Hopps. This early survey examined how artists first engaged with mass consumption and popular culture. Today artists have a very different relationship to these topics. The divisions between high and low, culture and commodity, the object and its image matter less than before. The collapse of these distinctions has coincided with recent advancements in technology, which have helped to amass a vast archive of images that is easily accessible by computer, smartphone, and other devices. Technology has also amplified the fluid and flexible nature of pictures—early pop culture envisioned throngs of passive consumers while individuals today engage with imagery as active participants. Twenty-first-century images may still be distributed from central sources, but—unlike the 1960s and even the ’80s, when pictures truly proliferated—today’s imagery is also rapidly circulated and exchanged among peers. This decentralized model has flattened hierarchies, fostering a sense of equivalence and ambiguity in which making, consuming, and sharing are all regarded as creative acts. Speaking about the dissemination of images, artist Helen Marten has said, ―There is a viral mentality that borrows from a mass of known imagery, from accessible and generous vocabularies, but does so understanding that it will become dispersed, boot-legged, pirated.‖ Trisha Baga (American, b. 1985) creates video installations that make loose narrative associations between a variety of imagery and physical objects. Baga says she aims to evoke emotional attachments with inanimate objects by bringing together items from her studio, like cardboard boxes, shoes, and radios, and placing them within video projections of diaristic imagery, music videos, and computer generated imagery. Lucas Blalock (American, b. 1978) makes pictures that upset conventional genres of photography, such as portraiture, architectural photographs, stock images, and commercial advertising. Utilizing digital and analog methods of production, Blalock photographs everyday objects—such as erasers, fabrics, and hardware supplies— in ways that suggest imagery gone awry. Josh Kline (American, b. 1979) employs the visual language of advertising to investigate the lifestyle economy. His sculptures of hands and other body parts are based on body scans of the designers, architects, and tastemakers who shape the brands familiar to us all. Kline’s sculptures have the dual role of acting as portraits of the creative workers they are based on and as archetypes of the new labor class. Divorced from the whole body and displayed on commercial shelving units, Kline’s sculptures are metonyms of modern work and the idealization of contemporary life. Similarly, his videos examine service industries and the disquieting experiences they can provoke and ameliorate. Margaret Lee (American, b. 1980) casts from life and meticulously hand paints sculptures that replicate fruits and vegetables. Her watermelons, cucumbers, and potatoes are what she considers the perfect produce—they never go bad and are always enticing in both photographs and life. The translation from sculpture to photography is crucial for Lee as the works are intended to function as both objects and images. Helen Marten (British, b. 1985) investigates the connotations of style, design, and idiom in her 2011 video Dust and Piranhas. Two architectural columns are digitally animated and personified, speaking—and at times rapping—about stylistic choices that point towards notions of status and consumer culture. New Pictures of Common Objects is supported in part by Matthew McNulty. The exhibition is organized by MoMA PS1 Assistant Curator Christopher Y. Lew. Press Contact: Rebecca Taylor, (718) 786-3139, [email protected] For downloadable high-resolution images, register at MoMA.org/press. MoMAPS1.org • MoMA.org Hours: MoMA PS1 is open from 12:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., Thursday through Monday. It is closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. artbook@MoMA PS1 is open from 1:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., Thursday through Sunday. Admission: $10 suggested donation; $5 for students and senior citizens; free for MoMA members and MoMA admission ticket holders. The MoMA ticket must be presented at MoMA PS1 within thirty days of date on ticket and is not valid during Warm Up or other MoMA PS1 events or benefits. Directions: MoMA PS1 is located at 22-25 Jackson Avenue at 46th Ave in Long Island City, Queens, across the Queensboro Bridge from midtown Manhattan and is easily accessible by bus and subway. Traveling by subway, take either the E or M to Court Square-23 Street; the 7 to 45 Road-Courthouse Square; or the G to Court Sq or 21 St-Van Alst. By bus, take the Q67 to Jackson and 46th Ave or the B62 to 46th Ave. MoMA PS1 Background: MoMA PS1 is one of the largest and oldest organizations in the United States devoted to contemporary art. Established in 1976 by Alanna Heiss, MoMA PS1 originated from The Institute for Art and Urban Resources, a not-for-profit organization founded five years prior with the mission of turning abandoned, underutilized buildings in New York City into artist studios and exhibition spaces. P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, as it then was known, became an affiliate of The Museum of Modern Art in 2000. Support: Operations and programs of MoMA PS1 are supported by the MoMA PS1 Board of Directors; the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; Helen M. Marshall, Queens Borough President; Council Member James Van Bramer; The Council of the City of New York; and the MoMA PS1 Annual Fund, Annual Exhibition Fund, and The Student Body. The MoMA PS1 Annual Fund is supported by The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Union Beer Distributors, Susan G. Jacoby, Mathis Pfohl Foundation, Christina Dalle Pezze, Jane K. Lombard, Andrew Edlin Gallery, Marian Goodman Gallery, Saks Fifth Avenue, and other donors. .
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