Portraits, Plots, and Places: The Permanent
Transcription
Portraits, Plots, and Places: The Permanent
Exhibitions Gallery Guide EI Andy Warhol 16 Jackies 1964 acrylic, enamel on canvas Collection Walker Art Center Art Center Acquisition Fund, 1968 Carrie Mae Weems Untitled 1990 three silver prints Collection Walker Art Center Rollwagen/Cray Research Photography Fund, 1991 Portraits, Plots, and Places: The Permanent Collection Revisited Galleries 4, 5, and 6 Opens January 7 A new installation of works from the Walker Art Center's permanent collection opens on Tuesday, January 7. Rather than presenting a chronology of developments in 20th-century art, the installation is organized by theme and by clusters of works by individual artists. The effort is to encourage new ways of looking across generations and among media. Included in addition to paintings and sculptures are drawings, photographs, prints, multiples, artists' books, models, video works, and a mm installation. A number of new acquisitions are on view for the first time, as are many exemplary and favorite works familiar to Walker visitors. Every 18 months some clusters will be removed, and others will be added. Alberto Giacometti Buste di Diego (Bust of Diego) circa 1954 bronze Collection Walker Art Center Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, 1957 physical and perceptual experience of the work itself, are joined in the gallery by later paintings of the 1970s by Brice Marden and Agnes Martin. Sculptures by Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, and Fred Sandback clarify the essential link between Minimalism and architecture - the shared space between the object and the viewer. In an adjoining room, Edward Hopper's Office at Night (1940) sets the stage for a group of works in which the viewer becomes a voyeur into private tableaux. A recent untitled photographic triptych boY Carrie Mae Weems depicts a black woman and a black man posed in a domestic setting in an exploration of the shifting ambigu- ities of a personal relationship. GeOl:ge Segats In the first room (in Gallery 4) color is the key sculptural setting The Diner (1964 - 1966) is element linking four masterpieces of early 20th- offset by a large pastel-and-charcoal drawcentury modernism with color-field works from ing by Michelle Zalopany of an empty resthe 1960s and 1970s. Paintings by Lyonel taurant. Amixed-mediaenvironmentbyEdward Feininger, Stanton Mac donald -Wright, Franz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, surrealistic and inMarc, and Joseph Stella, in which radiant color trospective, finds a counterpoint in a videotape provides a symbolic and visionary underpinning by Minneapolis artist Bruce Charlesworth in to representation, contrast with a monumental which a melodrama has gone zanily mad. abstract painting by Morris Louis and prints by Helen Frankenthaler in which the saturation and Several works by Louise Nevelson, including the flow of color highlight the supple materiality of room-scale, all-black wall construction Sky paint and canvas . Cathedral Presence (1951-1964), are grouped in a Single gallery to show not only the depth in An adjacent room features works by Mark Rothko, which this artist's work is represented in the including paintings presented to the Walker by collection but also its relationship to architecture. the Rothko Foundation in 1985 and 1986, as well Joseph Cornell's box Andromeda (Sand Fountain) as a recent gift of a painting from 1955. In his use (1953 -1956) is an intriguing example of whatthe of color, Rothko, a central figure of Abstract artist called "philosophical toys," in which the Expressionism, shares both the sublime aspira- interior space is likened to the spectator's dream tions of early modernism and the concerns for the world. Two other surrealistic assemblages, by integrity of materials typical of later contempo- Bruce Conner and Lee Bontecou, complement Nevelson and Cornell's interior mind spaces. rary artists. The portrait is the subject of the second thematic grouping in Gallery 4. On view are works by artists ranging from Alberto Giacometti to Jasper Johns to Lorna Simpson. The portrait is explored not as a direct representation but as an expressive, symbolic, and metaphOrical reading of human psychology and its relationship to societal pulls. The portrayal of character as mask, persona, or shell underlies these diverse works, which include a Joseph Beuys felt-suit multiple, a largescale black-and-white photograph by young African-American artist Lorna Simpson, Marsden Hartley's haunting oil portrait Cleophas (19381939), Andy Warhol's 16 Jackies (1964), and a Susan Rothenberg painting of a horse, Tattoo (1979), which she has described as "a symbol of people, a self-portrait." Minimai Art, one of the strengths of the Walker collection, is shown in Gallery 5. Paintings by Barnett Newman and Ad Reinhardt, in which narrative and symbol are purged in favor of the In contrast to Nevelson's work, an adjacent room of works by Richard Artschwager fuses surrealistic distortion and disorientation with a Pop-spirited humor. A number of recently acquired Artschwager multiples - odd adapations of everyday objects and figures of speech - join his large laminated-plastic relief of a door archway, Low Overhead (1984), creating a playroom for the imagination. Artschwager says of his use of laminated plastic to imitate wood, "It looked as if wood had passed through it, as if the thing only half existed ... it was a picture of a piece of wood." . In the large spaces of Gallery 6 are works by contemporary artists that address issues of history, myth, and allegory. A large, recently acquired painting (see cover) by German artist Sigmar Polke, Mrs . Autumn and Her Two Daughters (1991), is on view for the first time. Another recent acquisition, a monumental black-and-white photograph of celebrants in a Polish disco by young English artist Craigie Horsfield, brings a The Walker Art Center calendar of events is printed on recycled paper. Brueghel-like vision to the flux of the contemporaryworld. Sculpture by Jannis Kounellis and two major paintings by Anselm Kiefer, The Order of Angels (1985 -1987) and Emanation (1984 -1986), also are seen in a new context. The last thematic grouping in the new installation combines conceptual and analytical modes of making art, emphasizing the lingUistic, mathematical, and time-based systems through which art is conceived. Chuck Close's fust large, photographiC painting, Big Self-Portrait (1968), is shown with Mark Tansey's painting Constructing the Grand Canyon (1990). Marcel Broodthaers' plastic plaques are seen with a Jasper Johns painting' Flags-{ 1965 . One-of:cSiah. .AnJ\Qjam:.s areh· tectural models for a bridge, a series of date paintings by JatJanese-American artist On Kawara, and a large gridded sculpture by Sol LeWitt highlight these reflexive and de constructive methods. Artists' books by LeWitt and Eleanor Antin are also on view. These will be periodically alternated with other artists' books, including works by Ed Ruscha and Lawrence Weiner. At the center of Gallery 6, and linking the last two thematic groupings, is a room built for the presentation of a mm installation, entitled Box (1977), by Irish artist James Coleman. Based on footage from the Jack Dempsey-Gene Tunney heavyweight championship boxing match of 1927, the work at once recalls history and addresses the viewer's own fight for self-awareness. With both the mm projector and the mm itself exposed, Box explores its own construction as well as how the audience derives meaning from it. Works explonng new themes will, from time to time, replace existing groups, allowing the entire installation to evolve gradually and present fresh, provocative possibilities for interpretation. This installation of the permanent collection is dedicated to the memory of Edmond R. and Evelyn H . Ruben, two longtime patrons of the Walker Art Center. Portraits, Plots, and Places: The Permanent Collection Revisited has been made possible in part with funds from the National Endowment for the Arts.