"Painting Air: Spencer Finch" opens at the Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, June 29, 2025


"Painting Air: Spencer Finch" opens at the Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design
Installation view of Painting Air: Spencer Finch, February 24-July 29, 2012. Photography by Erik Gould. Courtesy of the Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design, Providence.



PROVIDENCE, RI.- The Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design announces Painting Air: Spencer Finch, a major exhibition by Brooklyn-based artist Spencer Finch. In this two-part show, the Museum debuts a largescale installation by Finch, shown with more than 60 pieces—from ancient objects to late-20th-century art—selected by the artist from the Museum’s collection. Painting Air opened Friday, February 24 and runs through July 29, 2012.

“The Museum’s invitation to Finch to create an exhibition highlighting works in our collection has its roots in Andy Warhol’s Raid the Icebox 1, the seminal project mounted at the RISD Museum of Art in 1970. It’s exciting to see how Finch’s approach to the Museum’s collection contrasts with Warhol’s,” says Museum Director John W. Smith.

The work of Impressionist painter Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926) serves as the aesthetic touchstone for both parts of the exhibition, and even informed its title. Painting Air comes from a statement Monet made in 1895: “I want to paint the air… and that is nothing short of impossible.” Finch’s new installation, Painting Air (2012), created for the exhibition, seeks to capture the movement and reflection the artist observed in a recent visit to Monet’s water garden in Giverny. For both Finch (RISD MFA ’89) and Monet, the pond at Giverny served as a laboratory in which they merge the experience of nature with the art-making process. Finch evokes his experience by suspending 100 transparent and highly reflective glass panels in the middle of an expansive, 150-linear-foot mural comprised of 34 colors. Light and color shift across the surfaces of the gently swaying panels, reflecting the painting and the movements of visitors, and transforming viewers’ perspectives from one moment to the next.

“As abstract and ephemeral as some of Finch’s projects appear to be, they are based in fact and scientific phenomena. He acutely observes natural occurrences, which he then filters through memory as well as literary, artistic, and scientific accounts. The results are often poetic, as he tries to make visible what cannot easily be seen,” says Judith Tannenbaum, Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art.

Another installation, Sky (Over Franz Joseph Glacier, April 8, 2008, 10:40 am) (2008), recalls Finch’s visit to Franz Joseph Glacier in New Zealand. Using an industrial-sized ice machine and a pool, he not only embodies the physical and cyclical activities of this natural phenomenon, but also produces a pure monochrome painting that precisely matches the intense blue color of the sky he observed above the vast glacier. In Bee Purple (2008/2012), Finch attempts to make visible to us a color that honeybees can see, but which is undetectable to the human eye. He further explores the relationships between art, science, and nature in, among other works, 8456 Shades of Blue (After Hume) (2008), a set of 28 drawings inspired by Scottish empiricist and philosopher David Hume; Walden Pond (Morning Effect, March 13, 2007) (2007), a representative map of the colors and footprint of Walden Pond created from a collage of Monet scenes; and Taxonomy of Clouds (2006), 17 photographs that capture the unique beauty and shape of clouds, as reflected in puddles on the ground.

In another section, works from the collection that Finch chose for this exhibition start with a painting he encountered at the Museum in the late 1980s: Monet’s The Basin at Argenteuil (1874), which Finch copied during his time as a graduate student. Finch’s study of Monet’s luminous composition proved to be a turning point that set him on the trajectory he has followed to this day, and the Museum is delighted to present this extraordinary work as part of Painting Air.

Using the permanent collection, Finch identifies relationships between art works as varied as Egon Schiele’s intensely expressive watercolors and John Singer Sargent’s fluid watercolors. He groups darkly-hued landscape paintings attributed to Romantic painters Ralph Blakelock and Albert Pinkham Ryder with a Bruce Nauman video, Japanese woodblock prints, and Seurat drawings to illustrate “tonalism,” which is the representation of darkness—the inverse of Impressionism. And he celebrates the beginning of his own visual awareness in the early 1970s, using works that were created or acquired by the Museum in 1972, including works by Warhol, Joan Mitchell, Anni Albers, Harry Callahan, Richard Estes, Robert Ryman, and Salvador Dali. Other works—ranging from a Chinese Han Dynasty earthenware jar (ca. 206 BC-AD 220) to late 20th-century Op Art—are arranged in thematic groupings, revealing links or contrasts between artists, unexpected visual connections among disparate works, and his own personal sensibility. Finch’s fresh take on the Museum’s collections—his process made visible by the unique pairings and themes of objects he selected—invites visitors to make their own creative connections and discoveries with art.










Today's News

February 26, 2012

Exhibition in Bonn features the journeys August Macke undertook during his brief life

Exhibition of the largest single collection of 13th century Mongolian artifacts opens at the Field Museum

MoMA presents exhibition covering Cindy Sherman's career, from the 1970s to the present

Unprecedented imaging project supported by the Getty reveals master work in minute detail-online

The Ashmolean Museum campaigns to save a masterpiece by Edouard Manet for the nation

New York City's Hispanic Society of America, which holds a world-class collection, seeks to make itself known

LACMA to begin transport of boulder for major artwork, Levitated Mass, by artist Michael Heizer

Designers Miuccia Prada, Elsa Schiaparelli in new Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibit

On the 210th anniversary of Victor Hugo's birth, Christie's announces the sale of the Hugo Collection

Phillips de Pury & Co. announces highlights from its New York photographs single owner sale

Florida museum auctions off antique cars, carousel, bringing in $38.3 million in sales

Baryshnikov shows his dance photography at the Gary Nader Art Centre in Miami

Bonhams to sell pistols of aide-de-camp to King George III, a veteran of American War of Independence

Poland, US museum tussle over Auschwitz barracks

Claim surfaces of Anne Frank baptism by Mormons

Andrea Galvani's first solo exhibition with Meulensteen opens in New York

"Painting Air: Spencer Finch" opens at the Museum of Art Rhode Island School of Design

Time is out of joint: Photography 1966-2011 by Boris Mikhailov on view at Berlinische Galerie

Academy unhappy but helpless to stop Oscar auction




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful