EXHIBITION Advisory
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Invisible Man-Exhibition-Advisory-6.20.19.Pdf
Image captions on page 3 The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) presents The Invisible Man and the Masque of Blackness, marking the artist Zak Ové’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles. Ové (b. 1966) is a British visual artist of Trinidadian descent who works in sculpture, film, and photography. His 40-piece sculptural installation The Invisible Man and the Masque of Blackness features a group of identical, 6 1/2-foot-tall reproductions of an African figure that the artist received as a gift from his father in his early childhood. Ové’s figures, fabricated from resin and graphite, hold their hands up at shoulder level in an act of quiet strength and resilience, and are spaced evenly in rows to ironically recall the formation of either a group soldiers or political dissidents. The exhibition title references two milestones in black history: Ben Jonson’s 1605 play The Masque of Blackness, the first stage production to utilize blackface makeup, and Ralph Ellison’s 1952 novel Invisible Man, the first novel by an African American to win the National Book Award. In addition to literary references, the artist draws inspiration from Caribbean Carnival, a festival that originated in the Mardi Gras celebrations of the region’s French colonists, and Canboulay, a parallel celebration in which enslaved people expressed themselves through music and costume and paid homage to their African traditions. Overall, the sculpture encapsulates the complex history of racial objectification and the evolution of black subjectivity. LACMA’s presentation will be the first time The Invisible Man and the Masque of Blackness is installed at an encyclopedic institution. -
K11 Art Foundation and New Museum Co-Present After Us
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 17, 2017 K11 Art Foundation and New Museum co-present After us A group exhibition of Chinese and international artists exploring how the use of online personae relates to notions of being human K11 art museum, Shanghai 17 March – 31 May 2017 CHEN Zhou, Life Imitation, 2016, Video file, 1:22 min, Image courtesy of the artist The K11 Art Foundation (KAF) is pleased to present After us, their first major project in China in partnership with the New Museum, New York. Exhibition curator Lauren Cornell, New Museum Curator and Associate Director of Technology Initiatives, is supported by Chinese curator Baoyang Chen, appointed by KAF as Assistant Curator, to explore how Chinese and international artists use surrogates, proxies, and avatars to expand the notion of being human. The exhibition features an international group of artists while focusing on emerging artists from China, in line with KAF’s mission. Included in the exhibition are works in sculpture, installation, photography, performance and video as well as works engaged with augmented and virtual reality. After us looks at the original personae that artists are animating: ones that amplify current social and emotional conditions and speculate on potential future states. With the rise of artificial intelligence, the social web and gaming, the process of adopting newly invented personae is now a common part of popular culture and daily life. Stand-ins for the self, for feelings and products, and for values and beliefs have expanded our lives and sense of possibility. The title After us raises the spectre of a society that will replace our own, and yet, many of the featured artists instead layer virtual or imagined states onto the present. -
Cultural Property, Museums, and the Pacific: Reframing the Debates Haidy Geismar*
International Journal of Cultural Property (2008) 15:109–122. Printed in the USA. Copyright © 2008 International Cultural Property Society doi:10.1017/S0940739108080089 Cultural Property, Museums, and the Pacific: Reframing the Debates Haidy Geismar* The following short articles were presented at a special session of the Pacific Arts Association, held at the College Arts Association annual meeting in New York in February 2007. Entitled “Cultural Properties—Reconnecting Pacific Arts,”the panel brought together curators and anthropologists working in the Pacific, and with Pacific collections elsewhere, with the intention of presenting a series of case stud- ies evoking the discourse around cultural property that has emerged within this institutional, social, and material framework. The panel was conceived in direct response to the ways that cultural property, specifically in relation to museum col- lections, has been discussed recently in major metropolitan art museums such as the British Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Met). This pre- vailing cultural property discourse tends to use antiquities—that most ancient, valu- able, and malleable of material culture, defined categorically by the very distancing of time that in turn becomes a primary justification for their circulation on the market or the covetous evocation of national identity—as a baseline for discus- sion of broader issues around national patrimony and ownership. Despite the attempts of many activist groups in Canada, the United States, Aus- tralia, New Zealand, and elsewhere, indigenous cultural property in this international context is generally conceived as raising a different set of problems. In these articles the authors argue that some ethical and legal perspectives raised within the domain of indigenous cultural property discourse and practice might be relevant and use- ful to more generic discussions of cultural property. -
Julie Mehretu CV 2018 V5
JULIE MEHRETU 1970 Born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Lives and works in New York Education 1997 MFA, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence 1992 BA, Kalamazoo College, Michigan 1990 University Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar, Senegal Solo exhibitions 2018 Marian Goodman Gallery (with Tacita Dean), Paris 2017 A Universal History of Everything and Nothing , Serralves Museum, Porto, Portugal; Centro Botín, Santander, Spain HOWL, eon (I, II) , San Francisco Museum of Modern Art commission 2016 Struggling With Words That Count (with Jessica Rankin), Carlier Gebauer, Berlin Hoodnyx, Voodoo and Stelae , Marian Goodman Gallery, New York The Addis Show , Gebre Kristos Desta Center, Addis Ababa Earthfold (with Jessica Rankin), Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Deurle, Belgium Epigraph, Damascus , Niels Borch Jensen Gallery and Editions, Berlin 2014 Half a Shadow , Carlier Gebauer, Berlin The Mathematics of Droves , White Cube, São Paulo Myriads Only By Dark , Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl, New York 2013 Liminal Squared , White Cube, London Liminal Squared , Marian Goodman Gallery, New York Mind, Breath and Beat Drawings , Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris Excavations: The Prints of Julie Mehretu , School of Art and Design, Ohio University2012 Excavations: The Prints of Julie Mehretu , The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, New York 2010 Notations After The Ring , Arnold & Marie Schwartz Gallery, Metropolitan Opera House, New York Grey Area , Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 2009 Excavations: The Prints of Julie Mehretu , High Point Prints, Minneapolis, -
The Corcoran Gallery of Art My Initial Thoughts on the Exhibition
The Corcoran Gallery of Art My initial thoughts on the exhibition philosophy of the Gallery are as follows: The Corcoran has five major attributes. 1. The permanent collection . " 2. Washington artists 3. The School 4. Location 5. Gallery space 1. Permanent Collection The permanent collection is the finest collection of 18th and 19th Century American art. The Clark Collection has invaluable European masterpieces. In addition, the Corcoran hae prints, drawings and recent acquisitions of contemporary art. The entire permanent collection should be re-examined and more fully utilized. In fact, a NEA Grant exists for the utilization of the permanent collection. Work must be done on this project immediately. My thoughts on the Corcoran are than certain galleries should be used to "lead into" the collection. In the lower atrium, galleries 41 and 42 could be used by drawings and prints from the permanent collection. In the upper atrium, galleries 65 , 66 and 68 could be used for exhibiting of modern paintings and recent acquisitions in the permanent collection. All these galleries could be made available on special occasions. The permanent collection would commence in gallery 76 and move logically around into galleries 65 through 68. For temporary exhibitions galleries 62, 63, 64 and 67 are magnificant huge spaces. Gallery 58 should come into operation as a gallery space. In the lower atrium, gallery 30 and possibly 42 should be used for Washington art. The corridors and atrium space gives further opportunity for the exhibition of work. Consideration should be given to the exhibition of the entire permanent collection, if that is possible. -
Download Our Exhibition Catalogue
FOREWORD Published to accompany the exhibition at We are delighted to welcome you to the second exhibition at Two Temple Place, London 26th January 2013 – 14th April 2013 Two Temple Place, Amongst Heroes: the artist in working Cornwall. Published in 2013 by Two Temple Place 2 Temple Place, London, wc2r 3bd The Bulldog Trust launched its Exhibition Programme at our Copyright © Two Temple Place headquarters on the Embankment in 2011. In welcoming the public to Two Temple Place we have three objectives: to raise Raising the Worker: awareness of museums and galleries around the UK by displaying Cornwall’s Artists and the Representation of Industry Copyright © Roo Gunzi part of their collections; to promote curatorial excellence by offering up-and-coming curators the opportunity to design a What are the Cornish boys to do? How Changing Industry Affected Cornwall’s Population high profile solo show with guidance from our experienced Copyright © Dr Bernard Deacon curatorial advisor; and to give the public the opportunity to Trustee of the Royal Institution of Cornwall and Honorary Research Fellow, University of Exeter visit and enjoy Two Temple Place itself. A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Two Temple Place was originally built as an office for William Waldorf Astor in the late 19th century and the Bulldog Trust isbn 978-0-9570628-1-8 have been fortunate to own the house since 1999. For our curators, Designed and produced by NA Creative devising a show for the ornate and intricately decorated space is a huge challenge that calls for imagination and ingenuity. -
Julie Mehretu CV 2018
JULIE MEHRETU 1970 Born in Addis Ababa. Lives and works in New York Education 1997 MFA, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence 1992 BA Kalamazoo College, Michigan 1990–91 University Cheik Anta Diop, Dakar Solo exhibitions 2017 Julie Mehretu: A Universal History of Everything and Nothing , Serralves Museum, Porto and Centro Botín, Santander, Spain 2016 Struggling With Words That Count (with Jessica Rankin), Carlier Gebauer, Berlin Hoodnyx , Voodoo and Stelae , Marian Goodman Gallery, New York The Addis Show , Gebre Kristos Desta Center, Addis Ababa Earthfold (with Jessica Rankin), Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Deurle, Belgium 2014 Half A Shadow , Carlier Gebauer, Berlin zThe Mathematics of Drove s, White Cube, São Paulo 2013 Liminal Squared , Marian Goodman Gallery, New York Liminal Squared , White Cube, London Mind, Breath and Beat Drawings , Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris 2010 Notations After The Ring , Arnold & Marie Schwartz Gallery, Metropolitan Opera House, New York Grey Area , Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 2009 Excavations: The Prints of Julie Mehretu , High Point Prints, Minneapolis Grey Area , Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin 2008 City Sitings , North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh Eye of the Storm , Carl Scholsberg Gallery, Montserrat College, Beverley City Sitings , Williams College Art Gallery, Williamstown, Massachusetts 2007 City Sitings , The Detroit Institute of Arts Black City , Kunstverein Hanover and Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark 2006 Black City , MUSAC – Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León, Spain Heavy -
Julie Mehretu and Jason Moran. Photo by Damien Young
Julie Mehretu and Jason Moran. Photo by Damien Young. Among the performances unfolding throughout Performa 17, few have a monumental backstory like MASS (HOWL, eon), which debuts tonight at Harlem Parish. One would expect as much from either of its creators, jazz musician Jason Moran or artist Julie Mehretu—who, as collaborators, make a formidable duo indeed: Moran, considered one of his generation’s leading jazz pianists, is also a prolific composer. He began moonlighting in the art world around 2005; he’s since worked with figures like Glenn Ligon and Lorna Simpson, and frequently performs alongside Joan Jonas. He’s now represented by Luhring Augustine, and, this spring, he will have his first solo museum show at the Walker Center. Meanwhile, following Mehretu’s groundbreaking 2010 mural, which soars across 80-feet of wall just beyond the entrance to Manhattan’s Goldman Sachs building, she has continued to take her large-scale, staggeringly intricate paintings to new heights. Her latest is HOWL, eon (I, II), a diptych unveiled by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in September. She had spent more than a year completing the two massive canvases, which, with each at 27 feet tall and 32 feet wide, she accommodated by moving her studio to the cavernous nave of a shuttered church in Harlem. A Texas native, Moran graduated from the Manhattan School of Music in 1997. Not long after, he signed with Blue Note, the iconic jazz record label that launched his idol, Thelonious Monk. Moran would soon be headlining esteemed venues across New York, and, later, around the world. -
New Documentary Offers Touching Portrait of Collector and Philanthropist Agnes Gund
New Documentary Offers Touching Portrait of Collector and Philanthropist Agnes Gund BY MAXIMILÍANO DURÓN October 9, 2020 4:43pm A still from Aggie, showing Agnes Gund, right, doing a studio visit with artist Xaviera Simmons, left. Encapsulating the life story of Agnes Gund, one of the most beloved people in the art world, is no small task, but a new documentary called Aggie has set out to try. Long considered one of the world’s top collectors, and formerly the president of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, she more recently made headlines when she decided to sell a major artwork by Roy Lichtenstein to fund a new initiative that aims to end mass incarceration in the United States. A hero to many, she has now been memorialized by her daughter, Catherine Gund, a well-regarded documentary filmmaker who has turned her lens on her mother for a newly released feature-length film. It’s clear that Agnes Gund is a bit of an unwilling subject. Just after the opening credits, Catherine asks Agnes from offscreen, “What do you think of this film?” Agnes replies, “I hope the film will not be seen by too many people.” Unfortunately for Agnes, the film is likely to have widespread appeal, no doubt because of the all-star lineup of interviews it contains, from artists like Julie Mehretu, Teresita Fernández, Glenn Ligon, John Waters, Catherine Opie, as well as Whitney Museum curator Rujeko Hockley, Ford Foundation director Darren Walker, and Thelma Golden, the director and chief curator of the Studio Museum in Harlem. -
Victorians Decoded: Art and Telegraphy
Victorians Decoded: Art and Telegraphy - New Exhibition Celebrates 150th Anniversary of the Transatlantic Cable Submitted by: Rose Media Group Wednesday, 10 August 2016 Wednesday, 10th August 2016 Guildhall Art Gallery, City of London, 20th September 2016 to 22nd January 2017 The 150th anniversary of the first communications cable laid across the Atlantic Ocean, connecting Europe with America will be celebrated in a new and free exhibition entitled ‘Victorians Decoded: Art and Telegraphy’ (http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/things-to-do/visit-the-city/attractions/guildhall-galleries/Pages/victorians-decoded.aspx) at the City of London Corporation’s Guildhall Art Gallery, from 20th September 2016 to 22nd January 2017. This exciting collaboration between Guildhall Art Gallery, King’s College London, The Courtauld Institute of Art and the Institute of Making at University College London will explore how cable telegraphy transformed people’s understanding of time, space and speed of communication. Never-before-seen paintings from the City Corporation’s art gallery and work by prominent Victorian artists will be on display as well as rare artefacts such as code books, communication devices, samples of transatlantic telegraph cables and ‘The Great Grammatizor’, a specially-designed messaging machine that will enable the public to create a coded message of their own. Paintings by Edward John Poynter, Edwin Landseer, James Clarke Hook, William Logsdail, William Lionel Wyllie and James Tissot will be displayed, all of whom registered a changing world. Four themed rooms; Distance, Resistance, Transmission and Coding will tell the story of laying the heavy cables which weighed more than one imperial ton per kilometre across the Atlantic Ocean floor, from Valentia Island in Ireland to Newfoundland in Canada. -
JASON MORAN Born 1975, Houston, TX Lives and Works in New York
JASON MORAN Born 1975, Houston, TX Lives and works in New York, NY HONORS AND AWARDS 2017, Residency, American Academy in Rome 2014-2021, Artistic Director for Jazz, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC 2011–2013, Artistic Advisor for Jazz, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC 2010, MacArthur Fellow 2008, US Artists Fellow TEACHING 2010–2016, New England Conservatory of Music, Boston, MA SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2021 Jason Moran: The Sound Will Tell You, Luhring Augustine Tribeca, New York, NY 2018-2020 Jason Moran, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston, Boston, MA; Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY* 2016 Jason Moran: STAGED, Luhring Augustine Bushwick, Brooklyn, NY GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2021 The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA 2020 The Pleasure Pavilion: A Series of Installations, Luhring Augustine Bushwick, Brooklyn, NY * A catalogue was published with this exhibition 2019-2020 Soft Power, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA* 2019 Another Music In a Different Kitchen: Studio Recordings & Records by Artists, Karma Bookstore, New York, NY* 2018-2019 Uptown to Harlem: African American Works from the Collection of Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg, Riverview School, East Sandwich, MA 2018 By the People Festival, National Cathedral, Washington, DC Prospect.4, Algiers Point, New Orleans, LA 2016 Art of Jazz: Form / Performance -
Theaster Gates and Michelle Grabner to Curate Sculpture Milwaukee's
Press Contact: Meg Strobel FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Director of Marketing & Community Engagement Sculpture Milwaukee (920)427-0900 [email protected] THEASTER GATES AND MICHELLE GRABNER TO CURATE SCULPTURE MILWAUKEE’S 2021 EXHIBITION [MILWAUKEE, WI, February 16, 2021—] Sculpture Milwaukee announced today that its 2021 exhibition will be co-curated by artists Theaster Gates and Michelle Grabner. The show will launch in June 2021 and run through autumn of 2022. Now in its fifth year, Sculpture Milwaukee is one of the largest annual outdoor exhibitions to focus on contemporary sculpture and public art practices. The announcement of Gates and Grabner as co-curators continues the Guest Curator Program which began last year with Mary Jane Jacob, Professor and Director of the Institute for Curatorial Research and Practice, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Lisa Sutcliffe, the Herzfeld Curator of Photography and Media Arts at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Their contributions expanded the structure of the exhibition by introducing a technoscape film by Leslie Hewitt and a video by Amy Yoes into the structure of the exhibition. “We’re excited about the new ways in which Gates and Grabner will shape the exhibition,” said Sculpture Milwaukee's Board Chair, Wayne Morgan of Baker Tilly. Adding, “Theaster Gates, and Michelle Grabner are two influential artists and educators who make their home in the American Midwest where they have dedicated themselves to supporting artists and the artistic imagination in local, regional, and national