'Telling Stories: Resilience and Struggle in Contemporary Narrative Drawing' opens in Toledo
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, December 27, 2024


'Telling Stories: Resilience and Struggle in Contemporary Narrative Drawing' opens in Toledo
Annie Pootoogook, Dr. Phil, 2006. Ink and pencil crayon on paper, 20 x 26 in. Collection of Patricia Feheley.



TOLEDO, OH.- Three internationally renowned artists, who represent the extraordinary vitality of contemporary drawing, are being featured in a special exhibition beginning in November at the Toledo Museum of Art. Telling Stories: Resilience and Struggle in Contemporary Narrative Drawing on view at TMA from Nov. 21, 2020, through Feb. 14, 2021. Twenty-five large and small-scale works and an animated film, drawn from TMA’s holdings and public and private collections across North America, are being featured in the exhibition.

Telling Stories displays the work of the third-generation Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook of Cape Dorset, Canada, and two American artists, Amy Cutler and Robyn O’Neil. These artists showcase the power of drawing as a distinctive form of expression, creating open-ended narratives within natural landscape settings that chronicle the complexities of modern human relationships. Their remarkable compositions ­– that rely upon inventive mark-making systems and singular approaches to rendering space – incorporate the surface of the paper to call attention to the medium's distinct properties.

“Drawing has seen a remarkable resurgence as a preferred means of art-making over the last 35 years by young artists who have discovered exciting new possibilities for the medium," said Robin Reisenfeld, TMA’s senior curator of works on paper. "The exhibition offers a lens into this accessible and ever-evolving form of expression by bringing together three artists whose central practice utilizes graphite and paper. Telling Stories also supports the Museum’s mission to provide a diversity of exhibitions for a broad array of audiences.”




Told primarily through pencil and paper, the theme of human resilience in the face of pressing societal and ecological concerns is a central focus for each artist. Their tales offer the viewer varying modes of human engagement with one another and the natural world – whether in collective harmony, or through self-destructive impulses and shifting alliances – and the struggles that ensue. At the same time, the works draw on a range of cultural and stylistic sources, characteristic of the global nature of contemporary artmaking.

Robyn O’Neil is well known for her monumental graphite compositions depicting tiny, anonymous male figures who inhabit vast and forbidding natural settings. In style and mood, her distinctly contemporary works build upon the longstanding tradition of landscape art to consider human struggles in nature, extreme weather and nature’s ephemeral beauty. Scenarios that often recall the collective sense of anxiety and isolation are inspired by a wide range of artistic sources, ranging from the Northern Renaissance artist Hieronymous Bosch (1450 -1516) to the Hudson River School painters and their evocation of nature’s grandeur and destructive forces.

Annie Pootoogook’s colorful, directly observed compositions chronicle the everyday domestic and social activities of her Cape Dorset community and challenge picturesque portrayals of Inuit life often found in traditional Inuit graphic art. Her scenes of interior home life and outdoor recreational and hunting activities, sprinkled with references to western rituals of media consumption, mass-produced consumer items and modern technology, document contemporary Inuit experience as a fluid continuum between past and future. Pootoogook's perceptive and inventive drawing style utilizes flattened and cinema-like perspectives, the isolation of objects and the distortion of scale to capture the rapidly changing, local Inuit culture and its absorption into our global society.

Amy Cutler taps into a broad range of visual motifs, fairy tales and personal experiences to create dreamlike compositions. These depictions feature female characters often engaged in illogical, repetitive tasks accompanied by animals. Her large-scale, exceedingly detailed graphite composition Fossa (2016) utilizes the paper’s surface to imagine a fictional, self-sustaining community of women dwelling within the confines of tall, hollowed-out tree trunks. Cutler’s enchanting worlds subvert narrative conventions to comment on the prescribed roles and expectations society places on women.










Today's News

November 24, 2020

The great hope of...France?

MSU Broad Director Mónica Ramírez-Montagut appointed to ICOM-US Board of Directors, joins AAMD

Joan B Mirviss LTD exhibits works by artists Akiyama Yō and Kitamura Junko

Elders and an artist bring a social sculpture to life

You're gonna need a bigger museum: 'Jaws' shark installed

Christie's presents Latest x Greatest featuring Supreme rarities alongside contemporary art

Von Bartha opens two solo exhibitions by Imi Knoebel and Bernar Venet

Jane Austen leads Fine Books & Manuscripts at Swann

François Catroux, decorator of choice for aristocrats, dies at 83

Freeman's Modern & Contemporary auction realizes $2.7 million

Exhibition of sculptural paintings by artist Rachel Klinghoffer on view at One River School

Sotheby's New York announces second annual Auction of Aboriginal Art

Whitney Museum of American Art opens Salman Toor's first solo museum exhibition

Bruce Swedien, a shaper of Michael Jackson's sound, dies at 86

Janine Yorimoto Boldt named Associate Curator of American Art at the Chazen

Saint Louis Art Museum presents 'Buzz Spector: Alterations'

Christie's to offer 200 drawings by Quentin Blake to benefit House of Illustration

Artsy supports and spotlights emerging African artists

Christie's Paris announces highlights included in the African and Oceanic Art Sale

'Telling Stories: Resilience and Struggle in Contemporary Narrative Drawing' opens in Toledo

James, Jordan, Obama linked in auction of sports memorabilia

Sotheby's partners with Goldin Auctions for sports memorabilia sale

Medals belonging to PGA golfer Gary Alliss to be sold at Dix Noonan Webb

Tomokazu Matsuyama's first solo exhibition in Mainland China opens at the Long Museum West Bund

The Responsible And Ethical Decision Of Choosing Green Electric Scooters

Baccarat Trick To Make You A Winner Every Day

Authentication Of Sbobet 888 And its Determination

Online poker site- the best option to earn a sound amount of payouts

Simple Ways to Hire a Cross Country Movers

The Role of Art in Our Society

Why you should go for a custom frame instead of a regular one

Which transport service is better, bus, train or a car?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful