HARTFORD, CT.- From her explorations of artistic expression with friend and vanguard photographer Robert Mapplethorpe in the 1960s and 70s to her profound influence on the nascent punk rock scene in the late 1970s and 80s, pioneering artist, musician, and poet Patti Smith has made her mark on the American cultural landscape throughout her 40-year career. This fall, an exhibition of Smiths work will premiere at the
Wadsworth Atheneum, featuring over sixty new photographs and multimedia installations created between 2002 and 2011.
The first museum presentation of Smiths work in the United States in nearly ten years, Patti Smith: Camera Solo will highlight the continual symbiosis between Smiths photography and her interest in poetry and literature and is on view from October 21, 2011 February 19, 2012.
Patti Smiths photography, shaped over decades of observation, commemorates the artists, poets, authors, family and friends from whom she draws inspiration. Modest in scale and shot solely in black and white, they are sometimes disquieting and often beautiful, but always intimate, said Susan Talbott, Director and CEO, Wadsworth Atheneum. We are thrilled to present this work at the Wadsworth Atheneum where Smiths mentor Sam Wagstaff was curator and the work of her dear friend Robert Mapplethorpe was the subject of two separate exhibitions.
Patti Smith: Camera Solo will present approximately sixty black-and-white silver gelatin prints photographed with her vintage Polaroid camera. In the era of digital imaging and manipulation, Smiths works champion the use of photography in its most classical sense: as a tool to document a found moment. Their diminutive scale and diffused lighting emphasize the subtleties and the importance of each subject, as in Arthur Rimbauds Utensils or Roberts Slippers, where the objects are tightly-cropped and detached from their surroundings.
Smiths multi-media installations, two of which will be on view at the Wadsworth, combine written word, photography, and three-dimensional objects that appear in her photographs. A new installation created specifically for this exhibition will be inspired by one of Smiths greatest muses, the nineteenth-century French poet Arthur Rimbaud. The exhibitions opening event on October 20th, 2011 will take place on Rimbauds birthday and, as she has done annually since 1974, Smith will stage a performance honoring him that evening.
During the course of the exhibition, Smith will make several appearances at the museumincluding the performance honoring Rimbaud, a book-signing of her National Book Award-winning memoir Just Kids, and an evening performance of music and spoken word. The exhibition will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue that includes an interview with the artist.
The Wadsworth is currently undergoing a comprehensive renovation across all five of the museums buildings, which will result in the addition of 8,000 square feet of reclaimed gallery space, a 14% increase, and the complete reinstallation of the museums permanent collection. Marking the completion of the first phase of the renovation, the Morgan Great Hall reopened in May 2011 after a year-long closure, and has been reinstalled for the first time with large-scale works from the museums Contemporary art collection by artists such as Willem de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Andreas Gursky, Robert Rauschenberg, Sean Scully, Frank Stella, and Andy Warhol, among others. The renovation will also bring significant improvements for visitors, including improved wayfinding, new interior and exterior signage, bi-lingual signage, and space for commissioned art on the exterior of the museum. The entire renovation project is slated for completion in 2013.
Patti Smith
Patti Smith (b. 1946) began as a visual artist and has been making drawings and taking photographs since the late 1960s. In recent years her practice has expanded to include installation. The artist has been represented by Robert Miller Gallery since 1978. In 2008, Smith was the subject of Patti Smith Land 250 at the Fondation Cartier pour lart contemporaine, Paris, and Written Portrait - Patti Smith at Artium Centro-Museo Vasco de Arte Contemporáneo, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain. Strange Messenger: The Work of Patti Smith, a three hundred -work retrospective, was organized by The Andy Warhol Museum in 2002 and traveled to numerous venues including the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, and the Museum Boijsman Van Beuningen, Rotterdam. Her work has also been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum Eki, Kyoto; Haus der Kunst, Munich; Triennale di Milano, Milan; Palais des Beaux Arts, Brussels and the Pompidou Center in Paris. Just Kids, a memoir of her remarkable relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe during the epochal days of New York City and the Chelsea Hotel in the late sixties and seventies, won her the 2010 National Book Award in the nonfiction category. Her 1975 album Horses, established Smith as one of most original and important musical artists of her generation and was followed by nine releases, including Radio Ethiopia; Easter; Dream of Life; Gone Again; and Trampin'. She continues to perform throughout the world and in 2007 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In July of 2005 she was presented with the prestigious insignia of Commander of the Order of the Arts and Letters, an esteemed French cultural honor. In May 2011, Smith won the Polar Music Prize, Sweden's most prestigious music award.