Advance Exhibition Schedule 2015
Transcription
Advance Exhibition Schedule 2015
Advance Exhibition Schedule MEDIA CONTACTS: Anne Mannix Brown, [email protected] Jessica Novak, [email protected] Sarah Pedroni, [email protected] 443-573-1870 Spring 2015 UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS & INSTALLATIONS BLACK BOX: SHARON HAYES March 15 – October 11, 2015 FRONT ROOM: SARA VANDERBEEK April 12 – September 20, 2015 ON PAPER: SPIN, CRINKLE, PLUCK April 19 – September 20, 2015 AFRICAN AND ASIAN COLLECTION GALLERIES REOPENING DIVERGING STREAMS: EASTERN NIGERIAN ART SONDHEIM ARTSCAPE PRIZE: 2015 FINALISTS April 26, 2015 April 26 – November 1, 2015 June 24 – August 9, 2015 CURRENT EXHIBITIONS & INSTALLATIONS BLACK BOX: ANRI SALA ON PAPER: ALTERNATE REALITIES FRONT ROOM: DARIO ROBLETO GRAND REOPENING OF THE HISTORIC ENTRANCE & AMERICAN WING LESSONS LEARNED: AMERICAN SCHOOLGIRL EMBROIDERIES September 14, 2014 – February 22, 2015 September 21, 2014 – April 12, 2015 November 16, 2014 – March 29, 2015 November 23, 2014 November 23, 2014 – May 10, 2015 NEWS BALTIMORE CONTEMPORARY PRINT FAIR March 28 – 29, 2015 This schedule is current as of January 2015 and is subject to change. Please discard earlier versions. Please verify all information with BMA Communications before publishing. * - indicates working title BMA general admission is free for everyone—every day! Some galleries will be temporarily closed during the Museum's renovation. For information about the availability of a specific collection, please call 443-573-1701 during Museum hours. BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 2 of 7 UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS & INSTALLATIONS BLACK BOX: SHARON HAYES March 15 – October 11, 2015 Through her performances, films, and installations, Baltimore-born artist Sharon Hayes (American, born 1970) examines the intersection of history, politics, and speech, with a particular focus on the language of 20th-century protest groups. For this exhibition the BMA is presenting Hayes’ Ricerche: three (2013), a 38-minute video that debuted at the 2013 Venice Biennale and received a special mention from the Golden Lion award committee. The film questions attitudes of 36 students at an all women's college in western Massachusetts on issues of sexual and gender identity. Organization: Curated by Curator of Contemporary Art Kristen Hileman and presented in collaboration with The Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Advanced Media Studies and the Museums in Society program. Image: Sharon Hayes. Still from Ricerche: three. 2013 ©Sharon Hayes. Courtesy the artist and Tanya Leighton Gallery, Berlin. FRONT ROOM: SARA VANDERBEEK April 12 – September 20, 2015 Internationally acclaimed artist Sara VanDerBeek returned to her native Baltimore periodically in 2014 to reflect on her memories of the city, the BMA, and her profound connection to the museum’s collection. Her visits resulted in a series of compelling photographs illuminating fragments of Baltimore architecture shot in the city’s neighborhoods and at Second Chance salvage yard. In her solo exhibition, these are paired with elegant images of dance students at the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC). The exhibition also features three sculptures, including one created from the white marble typical of the stairs leading up to Baltimore rowhomes and associated with the neighborly ritual of weekly scrubbings. Organization: The exhibition is curated by Curator of Contemporary Art Kristen Hileman. Sponsor: Generously sponsored by Joanne Gold and Andrew Stern, The Hardiman Family Foundation, and an Anonymous Donor. Image: Sara VanDerBeek. Baltimore Dancer (Eurydice).2014. Courtesy of Artist and Metro Pictures Gallery NY ON PAPER: SPIN, CRINKLE, PLUCK April 19 – September 20, 2015 This exhibition showcases eight prints and drawings whose images are the result of a specific action or intention rather than a depiction of the action. Essentially, the artists are letting the object or action describe itself. For example, Trisha Brown’s image of a foot spinning is not a rendering of a foot in motion, but actually her foot pirouetting directly on the etching plate. The featured artists and their actions are: Tauba Auerbach (crinkle), Trisha Brown (spin), Mona Hatoum (pluck), Emil Lukas (wrap), Gabriel Orozco (spit), Stan Shellabarger (shuffle), Denise Tassin (wriggle), and Rachel Whiteread (squash). Organization: Curated by Associate Curator of Prints, Drawings & Photographs Ann Shafer. Image: Trisha Brown and Graphicstudio. Untitled Set One, No. 1. 2006. From the series “Untitled Set One.” The Baltimore Museum of Art: Women’s Committee Acquisitions Endowment for Contemporary Prints and Photographs, BMA 2007.338. Published by Graphicstudio/USF BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 3 of 7 REOPENING OF AFRICAN AND ASIAN COLLECTION GALLERIES April 26, 2015 The BMA will reopen its fully renovated galleries dedicated to the new presentation of the museum’s African and Asian art collections following a two-year renovation. These collections will occupy expanded galleries on the first floor of the museum’s landmark neoclassical building designed by leading American architect John Russell Pope. The new presentations of both collections represent significant expansions from previous installations―more than tripling the gallery space for African art and doubling the galleries for Asian art—and is a major milestone in the BMA’s $28 million renovation. The renovated galleries for the BMA’s preeminent collection of African art will have improved displays for more than 100 objects with new casework promoting viewing works in the round and higher ceilings that more effectively suggest the scale of the larger artworks in their original contexts. The reinstallation will also address the impact of region, history, and culture on African art traditions to encourage visitors to engage with the unique experience and cultural expression that each African art object offers. The BMA has one of the earliest and most important collections of African art in the United States. Approximately 150 sublime works of art from China will be presented in two new galleries dedicated to the BMA’s Asian collection. The first gallery will include a thematic survey of the BMA’s renowned Chinese high-fired ceramics representing 1,000 years of innovation from white stoneware of the 9th and 10th centuries to imaginative monochromatic works created in the 17th through 19th centuries. The second gallery will focus on the importance of the temple and the tomb in Chinese artistic tradition through the presentation of objects related to China’s Taoist, Confucian, and Buddhist spiritual practices. Organization: Curated by former BMA Associate Curator for African Art Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch (now at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) and Associate Curator of Asian Art Frances Klapthor. Images: Water Moon Guanyin (Shui Yue Guanyin).15th century. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Julius Levy Memorial Fund, BMA 1944.80. Baga peoples. Great Mother Headdress(D’mba). Late 19th–early-20th century.The Baltimore Museum of Art: Gift of Alan Wurtzburger, BMA 1957.97. DIVERGING STREAMS: EASTERN NIGERIAN ART April 26 – November 1, 2015 The new galleries for African art include an area for thematic focus exhibitions. The first exhibition brings together approximately 20 headdresses, masks, and costumes from the eastern Nigerian region of Africa. These works demonstrate the aesthetic relationships between the Igbo, Jukun, Igala, Ogoni, Boki, Idoma, Ibibio, and Ejagham cultures that lived between the Benue and Cross rivers. Many of the works are drawn from an important private collection. Organization: Curated by former BMA Associate Curator for African Art Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch (now at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). Image: Ogoni peoples. Mask (Elu). Mid-20th century. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Gift of Robert and Emily Miller Rody, Baltimore. BMA 1975.7. BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 4 of 7 SONDHEIM ARTSCAPE PRIZE: 2015 FINALISTS June 24 – August 9, 2015 In conjunction with Artscape, Baltimore’s premier arts festival organized by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, the BMA presents a special exhibition of the finalists for the $25,000 Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize. Finalists and semi-finalists are chosen by an independent panel of jurors. This prestigious award is named after the late Baltimore civic leader Walter Sondheim and his late wife, Janet, and presented in conjunction with Artscape, America’s largest free arts festival. Organization: Presented by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts in partnership with The Baltimore Museum of Art. Image: 2014 Sondheim Artscape Prize winner Neil Feather. Photo by Baltimore Promotion & The Arts. CURRENT EXHIBITIONS & INSTALLATIONS BLACK BOX: ANRI SALA September 14, 2014 – February 22, 2015 Inspired by art historian Michael Fried’s analysis of the art of Anri Sala (Albanian, born 1974) in his book Four Honest Outlaws (2011), this exhibition features Sala’s 43-minute film 1395 Days Without Red, selected by the art historian and the artist. The film recreates the terror and uncertainty civilians endured during the siege of Sarajevo by interspersing scenes of the Sarajevo Philharmonic Orchestra rehearsing the First Movement of Tchaikovsky’s Pathetique with those of a musician making her way through what became known as Sniper Alley. The film’s title references a caution to civilians to avoid wearing bright colors so as to not draw a sniper’s attention. Fried and Sala will participate in a conversation at the BMA on Saturday, February 21. Admission is free. Organization: Curated by the artist and Michael Fried, The Johns Hopkins University J. R. Herbert Boone Chair in the Humanities, and organized by Curator of Contemporary Art Kristen Hileman. Image: 1395 Days Without Red. 2011. A film by Anri Sala. In collaboration with Liria Bégéja. From a project by Šejla Kameric´ and Anri Sala in collaboration with Ari Benjamin Meyes. © Anri Sala, Šejla Kameric´, Artangel, SCCA/pro.ba 2011. Courtesy of Marian Goodman Gallery (New York) and Hauser & Wirth (London/Zurich) ON PAPER: ALTERNATE REALITIES September 21, 2014 – April 12, 2015 This exhibition presents 26 prints by a diverse group of artists who are engaging in a dialog between high and low art by playfully exaggerating and reimaging the visual language of popular culture—religious stories, myths, and folk tales—to consider larger issues of class, gender, and politics. Among the works featured are two complete portfolios by Raymond Pettibon and Trenton Doyle Hancock, as well as newly acquired works by Wangechi Mutu, Amy Cutler, Chitra Ganesh, Toshio Sasaki, Iona Rozeal Brown, and William Villalongo. A long, accordion-bound book by Enrique Chagoya will span the center of the gallery. This exhibition marks the first time all of these works will be on view. Organization: Curated by Associate Curator of Prints, Drawings & Photographs Ann Shafer. Image: iona rozeal brown. Untitled (Female). 2003. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Purchased as the gift of Dr. Peyton Eggleston, Baltimore; and Women’s Committee Acquisitions Endowment for Contemporary Prints and Photographs. BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 5 of 7 FRONT ROOM: DARIO ROBLETO November 16, 2014 – March 29, 2015 This exhibition features Robleto’s Setlists for a Setting Sun body of work—poetic sculptures, prints, and cut-paper works that weave together the histories of recorded light and sound, drawing inspiration from nautical history, space exploration, early sound recordings, and family legacies within American popular music. The Front Room exhibition debuts three new works created by Robleto (American, born 1972) at the Headlands Center of the Arts in Sausalito, CA, as part of its new program to commission art from outstanding contemporary artists. Two of the new works were inspired by the BMA’s proximity to the Space Telescope Science Institute on the campus of The Johns Hopkins University, where the artist will be giving a talk on Tuesday, March 3. Admission is free. Organization: Curated by Curator of Contemporary Art Kristen Hileman. Image: Dario Robleto. Detail from Setlists for a Setting Sun (Dark Was the Night). 2014. Courtesy the artist and Inman Gallery. Photo by Logan Beck. GRAND REOPENING OF HISTORIC ENTRANCE AND AMERICAN WING November 23, 2014 After more than 30 years, the BMA reopened the Merrick Historic Entrance for visitors on November 23, 2014, in celebration of the Museum’s 100th anniversary. The reopening also included the renovated Dorothy McIlvain Scott American Wing and a new presentation of the BMA’s outstanding collection of American paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts—considered one of the finest on the East Coast. As the first museum by the great American architect John Russell Pope, the BMA’s original building is a Beaux Arts masterpiece revitalized with the newly reopened threshold. The reopening, which heralds the museum’s goal to provide more welcoming and memorable art experiences, also extends to the terrace steps where the community and visitors are invited to gather. From the Merrick Historic Entrance, visitors enter a grand columned hall adorned with its original chandeliers to explore nine adjacent galleries and four architectural interiors featuring hundreds of masterworks from the museum’s expansive holdings of American art. The new presentation of the collection offers a more global view of American art chronologically presented from the 18th century to the 1960s, as well as dedicated galleries to showcase stunning glass works by Louis Comfort Tiffany and Maryland’s influence in art, architecture, decoration, and collecting. BMA Go Mobile, a mobile-optimized website that launched in 2012, has been expanded with rich content about the American art on view. The grand reopening is a significant milestone in the BMA’s $28 million renovation to provide visitors with a more welcoming environment and more imaginative and inspiring encounters with art. The first phase of the BMA’s ambitious multi-year renovation was realized when the Contemporary Wing reopened in November 2012. The final phase of the multi-year project will be completed with the opening of a new center for learning and creativity in 2015. Organization: Curated by Senior Curator of Decorative Arts and American Painting & Sculpture David Park Curry. Images: Paintings by Milton Avery and Gertrude Greene shown with a 21st-century reading chair designed by Nils Holger Moormann and a 19th-century reading chair in the BMA’s newly renovated American Wing. A view of the BMA’s salon-hung gallery of Maryland art. Photos by Mitro Hood. BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 6 of 7 LESSONS LEARNED: AMERICAN SCHOOLGIRL EMBROIDERIES November 23, 2014 – May 10, 2015 In conjunction with the American Wing reopening, the BMA is presenting more than 20 examples of American samplers and embroideries from the 18th through the turn of the 20th century in the Berman Textile Gallery. In addition to lettering and still lifes, the exhibition includes intricately embroidered landscapes, literary and Biblical scenes, and tributes to national heroes. One of the most impressive examples depicts Telemachus, son of Odysseus, on the island of the sorceress Calypso. These works were often created by schoolchildren and became show pieces advertising the accomplishments of their young makers. Organization: Curated by Curator of Textiles Anita Jones. Image: Godfrey Folwell. Queen of Sheba. 1819. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Purchase with exchange funds from Gift of Mrs. George A. Bunting, Gift of H.D. Caplan, and Gift of Judge Irwin Untermyer, BMA 1992.124 NEWS BALTIMORE CONTEMPORARY PRINT FAIR March 28 – 29, 2015 One of the BMA’s most highly anticipated events of the year, the Baltimore Contemporary Print Fair showcases limited editions, drawings, multi-part portfolios, single prints, and photographs by established and emerging artists from approximately 20 vendors from around the United States. Take advantage of the fair’s intimate and inviting setting to talk to printers, gallerists, and BMA curators to learn more about the art, artists, and printmaking techniques. Proceeds from the Print Fair support contemporary acquisitions for the BMA’s collection of works on paper. In conjunction with the BMA’s event, Print City Baltimore, held March 21-April 5, showcases print exhibitions at other venues throughout Baltimore City. Visit printcitybaltimore.org for details. Organization: The Baltimore Contemporary Print Fair is presented by the BMA’s Print, Drawing & Photograph Society. Image: Photo by Ben Levy. THE BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART Founded in 1914, the BMA is home to an internationally renowned collection of 19th-century, modern, and contemporary art. Among its 90,000 objects is the largest holding of works by Henri Matisse in the world; European and American fine and decorative arts and textiles; prints and drawings from the 15th-century to the present; works by established and emerging contemporary artists; objects from Africa, Asia, the Ancient Americas, and Pacific Islands; and two beautifully landscaped sculpture gardens. The museum is currently undergoing a $28 million phased renovation to improve the visitor experience that debuted with the Contemporary Wing reopening in November 2012, and the historic Merrick Entrance, American art galleries, and Zamoiski East Entrance during the museum’s 100th anniversary in 2014. Renovations to the African and Asian art galleries and a new learning and creativity center will be completed in 2015. Since 2006, the BMA has eliminated general admission fees so that everyone can enjoy the power of art. BMA Spring 2015 Advance Exhibition Schedule Page 7 of 7 FREE ADMISSION General admission to the BMA is free for everyone—every day! Special exhibitions and programs may be ticketed. HOURS Wednesday–Friday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; Saturday–Sunday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m. CLOSED Mondays and Tuesdays; New Year’s Day, July 4, Thanksgiving, Christmas. NOTE: Some galleries will be temporarily closed during the Museum's three-year phased renovation. For information about a specific collection on the day of your visit, please call 443-573-1701 during Museum hours. LOCATION The BMA is located on Art Museum Drive at North Charles and 31st Streets, three miles north of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, and is accessible by buses 3 and 11. Parking is available on the street, in the BMA lots, and in JHU’s South Garage on Wyman Park Drive. CONTACT INFORMATION General Information: The BMA Shop: Public Programs & Events: 443-573-1700 443-573-1844 443-573-1832 BMA Box Office Gertrude’s Restaurant Web site ### 443-573-1701 410-889-3399 artbma.org