INDIANAPOLIS, IN.- The Indianapolis Museum of Art announced today that it will debut a work by artist Judith G. Levy, commissioned for the Museums ongoing series of site-specific installations in its principal entry pavilion. Premiering July 10, 2009, Levys piece, titled Memory Cloud, will be the artists first major solo museum exhibition.
Memory Cloud will appear as a monumental "cloud" at the center of the IMAs Efroymson Family Entrance Pavilion. The work will comprise approximately 1,200 translucent plastic photo viewers that hang on strands of microfilament. Visitors will be able to hold individual viewers up to the light to see an image inside. Each of the viewers will contain a unique photograph, drawn from a collection of thousands of found 35mm slide transparencies that the artist has collected throughout the Midwest. These photographs capture people posing for family snapshots, attending holiday events, working, enjoying vacations or simply observing the world around them.
My goal is that this installation will give visitors an opportunity to create individual and collective experiences, as they are prompted by specific images they see to retrieve some of their own memories and share them with others, Levy said. Many of the plastic viewers will be within reach, but others will be inaccessible in order to acknowledge the elusive nature of memory. As I looked through many thousands of slides in my collection from the 50s, 60s and 70s, I was deeply moved by our very human need to signify an experience with a photograph and by the poignancy in our efforts to try to preserve the moment.
Judith G. Levy is an artist based in Lawrence, Kansas, who until recently lived and worked in Indianapolis and whose work has been shown at numerous venues throughout the city.
Levy is an ambitious artist whose work is in dialogue with international trends and may already be familiar to many IMA visitors, said Lisa Freiman, senior curator of contemporary art at the IMA. We are pleased to showcase Levys project Memory Cloud, which emphasizes visitor interaction and experience, in this installation in the IMAs entrance pavilion.
A free opening reception with the artist will take place on July 9, 2009, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the IMA. Light hors doeuvres and a cash bar will be available.
Levys piece is part of the Efroymson Family Entrance Pavilion installation series launched in February 2007 and made possible by a $2.5 million grant from the Indianapolis-based Efroymson Fund. The works are installed on a rotating basis with a new commission from a different artist approximately every six months. Levys work follows an installation by New Yorkbased artist Orly Genger, titled Whole, which was on display in the IMAs Efroymson Family Entrance Pavilion from November 21, 2008 through June 14, 2009.
Judith G. Levy
Born in Far Rockaway, New York, Levy has spent a significant portion of her career in the Midwest, including five years in Indianapolis. Levy has created numerous public art projects and has been featured in solo exhibitions at galleries in Indianapolis, Minneapolis and Chicago, as well as many group exhibitions in the U.S. and Canada. Levys art deals with themes of private and public history and the role that both fact and fiction play in shaping memories. Her work incorporates a variety of mediums, including drawing, installation, video and performance.
In 2008, Levy was awarded a Lilly Endowment Creative Renewal Fellowship by the Arts Council of Indianapolis. In 2007, she was awarded a public art commission to create a sculpture titled Wonder for the White River State Park in Indianapolis. As part of the artist collaborative Silevy, her project Everybody Loves a Parade was also included in the IMAs recent exhibition On Procession. Levy received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Drawing and Painting from Hunter College in New York, and a masters degree from Adelphi University.