SANTA MONICA, CA.- Santa Monica Museum of Art presents NY/LA, an innovative program initiative that diversifies SMMoAs curatorial voice through an all-new, annual exhibition series. Developed by New York-based independent curator Jeffrey Uslip and SMMoA Deputy Director and curator Lisa Melandri, NY/LA connects emerging contemporary artists on the East and West coasts. NY/LA debuts at SMMoA with two exhibitions on view from January 14 through February 25, 2012: Adam Berg: Endangered Spaces (LA) in Project Room 1 and Georgi Tushev: Strange Attractor (NY) in Project Room 2.
NY/LA identifies the intersections of contemporary art that emerge from both coasts and highlight important work from these cultural centers. The annual series sees Uslip and Melandri each select one artist from the East and West coasts, respectively, to show at SMMoA.
The series also addresses current themes and practices of critical debate. Rather than present two artists who share thematic elements or particular artistic congruencies, Uslip and Melandri selects artists whose work represents emerging trends in contemporary art, creating a synergy that would not otherwise be explored.
"Both Los Angeles and New York are known for their innovations, their ability to spark new movements and cultivate new thought and action through art," Melandri said. "Our goal is to bring the best of both coasts together and elevate the conversation."
The debut NY/LA exhibitionsAdam Berg: Endangered Spaces and Georgi Tushev: Strange Attractorexplore the theme of scientific inquiry. Melandri is curator of Adam Berg: Endangered Spacesa new, multi-dimensional video, sculpture, and photo installation that explores the relationship between man-made environments and displaced wildlife. In this work, Berg identifies a parallel future between endangered animals and threatened architectural spaces.
Uslip is curator of Georgi Tushev: Strange Attractor which presents a series of paintings and works on paper that investigate the effects of oil paint exposed to extreme magnetic fields. Tushevs work subverts the traditional medium of painting allowing viewers to consider the cellular cycle of life and the material possibilities of paint.
Through its bicoastal focus, NY/LA promotes an ongoing dialogue that links contemporary art across the United States. Having each lived and worked on the East and West coasts, Uslips and Melandris collaboration brings a fresh and original curatorial perspective to this new exhibition series. Uslips participation as an independent New York-based curator fulfills SMMoAs continued objective to broaden its curatorial perspective through collaboration.
"NY/LA is a new program initiative that continues SMMoAs commitment to innovative artistic practices," Uslip said. "By presenting concurrent project room exhibitions with one artist from New York and the other from Los Angeles, our aim is to foster a national dialogue between these two cultural centers."
With NY/LA, SMMoA continues to reshuffle and revitalize its programming.