Presentation Highlights Work by International Artists at the Close of the 20th Century
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Presentation Highlights Work by International Artists at the Close of the 20th Century
Richard Prince, (American, born 1949), Untitled, 1991. Acrylic, silkscreen, and graphite on canvas. Philadelphia Museum of Art, purchased with a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, with matching funds from various donors, and with funds from the Adele Haas Turner and Beatrice Pastorius Turner Memorial Fund.



PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Philadelphia Museum of Art continues its commitment to presenting stimulating contemporary art with Notations: The Closing Decade (on view through November 2009) a presentation that includes the work of 13 artists from around the world made in the closing years of the 20th century. Taking the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 as a starting point, and leading up to the traumatic events of September 2001, the exhibition highlights the range of artistic pursuit during this period of profound global and societal transformation. It includes painting, sculpture, and video from the Museum’s collection complemented by a small number of loans.

The works on view vary dramatically in scale, medium and mood - from the meditative to the exuberant and from the elegiac to the surreal - reflecting the anxieties and the expectations that marked the end of a millennium through the lens of Francis Alÿs, Gabriel Orozco, Peter Doig, Sherrie Levine, Glenn Ligon, Jeff Wall and others.

Cuban-born artist Félix González-Torres (1957-1996) was inspired by the street lights of Little Italy in New York when he began creating his string-of-lights sculptures of which Untitled (Petit Palais) of 1992 was the first. A simple string of ordinary light bulbs that could be installed in multiple ways, the work rejects the monumental and heroic in favor of a quietly personal approach. At the time of its making, González-Torres had recently suffered the death of his longtime companion to AIDS, and the work suggests a wide range of meanings, reflecting the light’s capacity for revelation and transcendence and its inevitable dimming over time.

Glenn Ligon’s work has explored the ways in which language and culture inform personal identity, frequently using excerpts from texts by African American writers such as James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, and Ralph Ellison. In his 1992 work, Untitled (I’m Turning Into a Specter before Your Very Eyes and I’m Going to Haunt You), Ligon quotes Jean Genêt’s 1959 play The Blacks (Les Nègres) in block print that moves down the canvas in a repetitive pattern. The words gradually become illegible as the paint grows thicker – playfully underlining the literal meaning of the words, even as they seem to disappear. Canadian artist Jeff Wall’s large-format work Dead Troops Talk. A Vision After an Ambush of a Red Army Patrol, near Moquor, Afghanistan, Winter 1986, made in 1992, was inspired by world events. A powerfully graphic image war, this 7 x 21 ft. color transparency was created by digitally combining various photographs the artist had staged in his studio. Wall has taken an overtly theatrical and surreal approach to constructing the image, portraying the 1980s conflict between Russia and Afghanistan in the manner reminiscent of 19th-century depictions of war by artists such as Francisco Goya. Soldiers who have just been killed in battle are resurrected and engage with each other in what the artist describes as a macabre “dialogue of the dead.”

The monumentality of Wall’s image is countered by the fragility of Gabriel Orozco’s meditation on death Black Kites (1997). Orozco’s bleached human skull is traversed by a lead pencil chessboard design that imposes a labyrinthine pattern across its surface, including the eye sockets. The artist described his sculpture as a drawing in three dimensions.

By contrast Polly Apfelbaum’s Big Bubbles, 2001, bursts with color and texture. The spiraling rug-like floor sculpture consisting of over 1,000 pieces of cut and dyed synthetic velvet and measuring roughly 18 feet in diameter is a recent addition to the Museum’s collection. Big Bubbles probes the nature of painting taken off the wall.

“Many of these works will resonate with viewers in a particularly poignant fashion, given the freshness of the historical events in question,” Curator of Contemporary Art Carlos Basualdo said. “The exhibition is an opportunity to explore the ways in which a diverse group of artists were responding to a period of great turbulence, but also to consider the relationship between art and history-in-the-making.”

About ‘Notations’ - The Closing Decade is the sixth in an ongoing series of gallery installations titled “Notations,” inaugurated in 2006 and named after the 1968 book by American composer, writer, and visual artist John Cage—widely celebrated for his experimental approach to the arts. Cage’s Notations was an international and interdisciplinary anthology of musical scores by avant-garde musicians that also embraced contributions from visual artists and writers. At the same time Notations was an exhibition in book form, in which the scores doubled as drawings. “Notations” at the Philadelphia Museum of Art is a flexible tool used to explore aspects of contemporary art in the Museum’s expanding collection. The series of rotating projects is presented in the Gisela and Dennis Alter Gallery (176).










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