DALLAS, TX.- The work of six contemporary artists who have adapted elements and characteristics of theater, opera, and performance in their work will be featured in a new exhibition, Performance/Art, opening October 8. Along with the
Dallas Museum of Arts companion exhibitions All the Worlds a Stage: Celebrating Performance in the Visual Arts, which opened on August 30, and A Dream Come True: The Dallas Arts District, opening September 25, the DMA is set to honor and commemorate this falls opening of Dallass new AT&T Performing Arts Center and the completion of the Dallas Arts District.
Encompassing painting, sculpture, video, and installation, Performance/Art will present the work of Argentine painter Guillermo Kuitca, Canadian sculptor David Altmejd, Finnish video artist Eija-Liisa Ahtila, British-Nigerian sculptor and media and installation artist Yinka Shonibare, MBE, and the Dallas-based sculptors and installation artists Frances Bagley and Tom Orr.
From Shonibares ingenious reinterpretation of Verdi, to Kuitcas images exploring architecture of theaters and his Dallas Winspear Opera House curtain studies, to Bagley and Orrs commissioned installation, Performance/Art invites audiences to immerse themselves in dynamic works of art that take our ideas about the performing arts and then present us with an entirely new range of exciting sensory theatrical experiences, said Charles Wylie, The Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art, the exhibitions organizer.
The exhibition highlights include studies by Kuitca for his commission for the Winspear Opera House at Dallass new AT&T Performing Arts Center, his first design for a stage curtain. Known for his psychologically penetrating paintings and drawings, Kuitca deconstructs theater seating charts and album covers to examine how architecture and imagery can be signs and symbols of the experience of theater and music.
In a separate gallery, Shonibares video Un ballo in maschera, freely based on the Verdi opera of the same name, explores overlapping African and European cultural identities and gender roles through the lens of dance and opera. Shonibares performers are dressed in 18th-century costumes fashioned from his signature colorful wax-print African cloth and enact a dazzling series of choreographed scenes based on the Verdi masterpiece.
Ahtilas haunting three-screen video Talo/The House will be installed much as a theater might look; although Ahtilas ingenious use of space allows her audience to become fully engaged with the sights and sounds of a completely unique environment. Set in a northern Finnish forest, the work includes an interior monologue similar to a theatrical soliloquy and follows a character who quietly and beguilingly narrates her increasingly tenuous grip on reality.
Performance/Art will also feature a new installation by Bagley and Orr commissioned especially for this exhibition. Based on their visually and thematically powerful sets and costumes for the 2006 Dallas Opera production of Verdis Nabucco, this dramatic installation provides a tangible connection between the DMA and its new neighbors history.
Finally, David Altmejds mesmerizing sculpture The Eye, a deceptively symmetrical piece with mirror as its primary medium, will be on view. The artist created this spectacular work while thinking of John Adams recent opera Doctor Atomic, about the creation of the atomic bomb, in which a grand architectural construction of mirrors flooded with light created a hypnotically and nearly overwhelming experiential environment suggesting any number of scientific and cosmological notions.