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Mel Bochner Explores Language at the Art Institute |
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Mel Bochner, Portrait of Eva Hesse (1966). Ink on graph paper. Courtesy of the artist. From the exhibition focus: Mel Bochner--Language 1966-2006 at the Art Institute of Chicago until January 7, 2007.
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CHICAGO, IL.- Focus: Mel Bochner: Language 1966-2006 First Exhibition of Language-Based Work Conversation with Bochner and a Daylong Symposium to Kick Off Exhibition Mel Bochner (born 1940), a pioneer of conceptual art, was one of the first artists in the 1960s to introduce language into the visual field. Though his work over the decades has received broad national and international attention, his language projects have remained surprisingly undocumented. Focus: Mel Bochner: Language1966-2006 is the first exhibition to bring together his language-based works. Presenting over 50 works on paper, paintings, sculptures, photographs, and installations, this exhibition is on view through January 7, 2007 in Galleries 138 and 139 of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Critics have long been attentive to, and appreciative of, Bochners recurring themes, including his interest in measurement, counting, and shape. Less well recognized, however, is the transformative role language has played in his career. Offering four decades of work, across a variety of media, Mel Bochner: Language allows viewers to chart the way Bochner moved from the common conception of language as a descriptive tool to an investigation of the complex relationships between language and perception. Highlights of the exhibition include the rarely seen landmark work Working drawings and other visible things on paper not necessarily meant to be viewed as art (1966), which the art historian Benjamin Buchloh has called the first conceptual art installation.
Also featured will be a series of magazine interventions published between 1966 and 1968; a number of early pen-and-ink word portraits of Bochners contemporaries including Eva Hesse, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, and Ad Reinhardt; and recent, multi-colored canvases with texts drawn from Wittgensteins writings and Rogets Thesaurus, works described earlier this year by Roberta Smith in the New York Times as unleash[ing] something malicious, sharp and funny that has always lurked beneath the surface, conveying the rage of life while maintaining the artists characteristic surface of elegance, intellect, and formalism.
In addition to several works from Bochners own collection that have never before been exhibited, Mel Bochner: Language will feature a number of historical installationssuch as Language is Not Transparent (1970) and Axiom of Indifference (1973)that will be recreated in Art Institutes contemporary galleries by the artist himself. Coinciding with the Art Institute exhibition, a new work by Bochner, The Joys of Yiddish (2006), is on view from September 18 at the Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies at 610 South Michigan Avenue, just down the street from the Art Institute. Part of The Language Barrier projecta series of site-specific outdoor works on the 50-foot construction barricade for the Institutes new buildingThe Joys of Yiddish examines the complexity of the Yiddish language in all its humor and humanity.
The Art Institute will host a symposium on Bochner and his work co-organized by Judith Russi Kirshner, Dean of the College of Architecture and the Arts at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and James Meyer, Associate Professor of Art History at Emory University in Atlanta. Bringing together leading international thinkers on Bochners work, the one-day academic symposium will be open to the public and will begin with a keynote address by Yve-Alain Bois of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
Panel participants of the symposium include Eric de Bruyn (University of Groningen, Holland); Jeffrey Thompson (Western Michigan University); independent art historian and critic Johanna Burton; Scott Rothkopf, editor of Artforum; artist Carroll Dunham; Chrissie Iles (curator, Whitney Museum of American Art); and Christophe Cherix (curator, Art and History Museum in Geneva). Together they will explore Bochners ideas about the complex and occasionally contradictory interactions between verbal language and visual art.
Featuring close to 65 objects, a full-color and expanded catalogue of the exhibition will be available in May 2007. The publication will include an introduction by James Rondeau, Curator and Frances and Thomas Dittmer Chair of Contemporary Art at the Art Institute of Chicago; acknowledgements by James Cuno, Director and President of the Museum; and an essay by scholar and critic Johanna Burton.
Mel Bochner: Language is curated by James Rondeau, Curator and Frances and Thomas Dittmer Chair of Contemporary Art at the Art Institute of Chicago with Lisa Dorin, assistant curator in the Department of Contemporary Art, and Mark Pascale, associate curator of Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago. This exhibition is made possible by a gift from Judith Racht and Irving Stenn, Jr. with additional funding and support provided by Judith Neisser. Ongoing support for Focus exhibitions is provided by The Alfred L. McDougal and Nancy Lauter McDougal Fund for Contemporary Art. The accompanying catalogue and academic symposium are generously funded by the Community Associates of the Art Institute of Chicago, Lannan Foundation, and Nathan and Suzanne Cohen Foundation, Inc. Featured here are Useless (2005), collection of Betty and Edward Harris, and Portrait of Eva Hesse (1966), collection of the artist.
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