DUBLIN.- The most extensive showing to date of the Museums own Collection; an exhibition based on the work of American composer Morton Feldman and the many celebrated artists in his circle; a series of displays marking important new donations to IMMA, and a special exhibition promoting engagement with the visual arts by those with disabilities are all part of a busy and wide-ranging programme for 2010 at the
Irish Museum of Modern Art, announced today (Wednesday 27 January) by the Minister of State with responsibility for the Arts, Dr. Martin Mansergh, TD. Plans for the coming year also include solo exhibitions by such leading international artists as Francis Al˙s, Carlos Garaicoa, Jorge Pardo and Anne Tallentire; an intriguing show exploring the life of works within a collection, a development of the What is
? lectures series introducing concepts of contemporary art practice and a new initiative designed to enhance primary schools pupils enjoyment of the Museums Collection.
Speaking at the launch of the 2010 programme, Dr. Martin Mansergh, TD, said: The vital role which arts and culture plays in both fostering and demonstrating our national spirit of innovation and creativity cannot be overstated. Dr. Mansergh added: This years IMMA programme is ambitious, imaginative and wide ranging - all characteristics which are now synonymous with our Irish Museum of Modern Art . I am delighted to have this opportunity to show my support for the level of initiative and sheer hard work which the IMMA 2010 programme represents. I congratulate the Chairperson, Eoin McGonigal , SC , Board Members, Director Enrique Juncosa and all the staff at IMMA for all their achievements to date.
Commenting on the programme IMMA Director Enrique Juncosa said: We are very pleased to announce the programme for 2010, which includes a great variety of exhibitions and other events: by now a kind of IMMA trademark. This years programme is probably a bit more experimental than usual, presenting such leading international artists as Francis Al˙s and Jorge Pardo. I would particularly like to highlight the exhibition about the American composer Morton Feldman, entitled Vertical Thoughts. Feldman was not only one of the most influential composers of the second half of the 20th century, but was also a close friend of artists such as Philip Guston, Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Cy Twombly, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg, whose work will be presented in the show."
Exhibitions
The new temporary exhibitions programme gets underway on February 17th with exhibitions by Cuban-American Jorge Pardo and Irish artist Anne Tallentire. Widely regarded as one of the most inventive artists of his generation, Pardo follows his participation in IMMAs 2006 Lunar Reggae show with an exploration of the place of art within new media. His highly conceptual virtual retrospective takes the form of photomural wallpaper, covering the entire gallery space and incorporating every aspect of the exhibition. Anne Tallentire, much praised for the originality of her work, presents recent projects and related pieces focusing on how the ordering, or disordering, of things can signify everyday social and cultural determinants. Juxtaposing action, object and image she employs a range of media from text to photography and film. The exhibition includes a number of collaborative projects, another regular feature of Tallentires work.
An exhibition by leading Belgian-born experimental artist Francis Al˙s follows on 26 February, inspired by his personal observations from the many cities to which his compulsive wanderings have taken him. Al˙s works in a variety of media, and at IMMA presents his major series of paintings, "Le Temps du Sommeil", which now numbers 111 works; some still being works in progress. The series travels to Tate Modern in June, the first stage in a major international retrospective of Al˙ss work.
From March 31st "Vertical Thoughts" focuses on the work of the influential 20th-century American composer Morton Feldman and the many celebrated visual artists with whom he was closely associated. In 1967 Feldman curated an exhibition entitled Six Painters in Houston, Texas, and Vertical Thoughts takes its inspiration from that, presenting the work of such legendary figures as Philip Guston, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Piet Mondrian, Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and many others not featured in the 1967 show. The exhibition also includes music scores, record covers, photographs and documents, as well as Oriental rugs, which influenced the composers work. A film and music programme will accompany the exhibition.
The Latin flavour continues on June 9th with exhibitions by Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa and Spanish painter Ferran García Sevilla. Employing a multi-disciplinary approach embracing architecture, narrative, history, and politics, Carlos Garaicoa uses his native city of Havana as a laboratory to construct provocative commentaries on a range of contemporary issues. These include architecture's ability to alter the course of history, the failure of modernism as a catalyst for social change and the decay of 20th-century utopias. Ferran García Sevillas eclectic style draws on his world travels, and on comic books, urban graffiti, philosophy and Eastern cultures, resulting in sensuous open spaces in which everything, including iconography and ideas, blends together. His raw, colourful, primitive canvases are often peppered with caustic, hand-scrawled commentaries on life and politics.
Collection
The Museum's Collection takes centre stage from October 20, when all of the galleries will be devoted to the first of a two-part exhibition of works from IMMA's own Collection. This will be the first time that the entire Museum has been given over to the Collection, in an ambitious project leading up to and continuing into IMMA's 20th anniversary year in 2011. Part one of the exhibition, entitled, "The Moderns", will trace important artistic events and developments from the early 1900s to the 1970s, presenting some 100 artists through approximately 250 works. In addition, key pieces from other public and private collections will help to form the historical and contextual thread of the exhibition.
Another Collection exhibition, entitled "What Happens Next is a Secret", opened yesterday, January 26. This addresses the intriguing question of what happens when works become part of a collection and are subsequently shown in different contexts. During the course of the exhibition works will be removed, pointing to the often hidden nature of museum collections, while replacements will create new associations. Works from the Collection are also featured in "Altered Images", which aims to stimulate engagement with the visual arts by the general public and particularly by those with disabilities. A joint project between Mayo County Council, South Tipperary County Council and IMMA, as part of the Museums National Programme, the exhibition has already met with an extremely positive response when shown in "Clonmel and Ballina" in 2009.
Meanwhile, the carefully-planned growth in the Collection continues with the acquisition in 2009 of 52 prints by the celebrated American-born artist Mary Farl Powers, generously donated by the artists family, and other donated works, including those by Lynda Benglis, Alan Phelan and a joint work by Seamus Heaney and Felim Egan.
This most welcome trend continues in 2010 with the gift of several works from the personal collection of artist Brian ODoherty and art theorist Barbara Novak. The collection ranges across American art of the 20th century, particularly that of the 1960s and 70s, and includes the work of such celebrated artists as Edward Hopper, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg. An exhibition from the collection will open on 8 September. A further gift of some 30 fine art prints by the Graphic Studio Dublin , being made to mark the studios 50th anniversary, will also be celebrated with an exhibition, again opening on September 8th, highlighting the role of fine art printing in the development of contemporary Irish art.
From January 14th to February 27th William Hogarths famous prints, A Harlots Progress, from the Madden Arnholz Collection at IMMA, are being shown as part of City of Women, at The Lab, Foley Street, Dublin. Loans from the Collection will also travel to the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum , Ridgefield , Connecticut ; the Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, Hammer Museum , Los Angeles ; the Musée de la Ville de Strasbourg and the Sprengel Museum , Hannover . Meanwhile, the five-year loan of 22 works by Irish artists to the Irish Embassy in The Hague continues until 2012.