NEW YORK, NY.- The Studio Museum in Harlem opened its fall/winter season of exhibitions and projects celebrating the work of multiple generations of modern and contemporary artists of African descent. This season, the exhibitions focus strongly on the Studio Museums rich permanent collection and on works by alumni of the renowned Artist-in-Residence program, while also presenting a wealth of very recent works by younger artists who are being shown at the Studio Museum for the first time. Exploring the multiple ties that connect artists across more than half a century, and delving equally into urgent social and political concerns and absorbing formal issues, the exhibitions immerse Studio Museum visitors in the depth, complexity, nuance and vigor of these ongoing traditions. Fall/winter 2016 exhibitions and projects are on view from November 12, 2015 to March 6, 2016. Like a figure glimpsed in a group of stars, the exhibition A Constellat
The Studio Museum in Harlem opened its fall/winter season of exhibitions and projects celebrating the work of multiple generations of modern and contemporary artists of African descent.
This season, the exhibitions focus strongly on the Studio Museums rich permanent collection and on works by alumni of the renowned Artist-in-Residence program, while also presenting a wealth of very recent works by younger artists who are being shown at the Studio Museum for the first time. Exploring the multiple ties that connect artists across more than half a century, and delving equally into urgent social and political concerns and absorbing formal issues, the exhibitions immerse Studio Museum visitors in the depth, complexity, nuance and vigor of these ongoing traditions. Fall/winter 2016 exhibitions and projects are on view from November 12, 2015 to March 6, 2016.
A Constellation
Like a figure glimpsed in a group of stars, the exhibition A Constellation traces connections among twenty-six artists of African descent: eight who emerged in the mid- to late twentieth century, and who are represented in the exhibition by now-historical works from the Studio Museums permanent collection, and eighteen younger artists whose works are being shown at the Studio Museum for the first time. As suggested by the title, A Constellation claims to be only one of the many configurations that might be discerned among this dynamic gathering of kindred artists and the concerns that animate their work. At the same time, however, the exhibition draws lines that clearly link these artists across the generations, through themes that are urgent at the present momentincluding questions of race, class and the bodyand that were also urgent decades ago.
A Constellation presents a dazzlingly diverse group of more than thirty artworks made in a wide variety of media, ranging from oil on canvas to mixed media works and installations. Among the connections made in the exhibition are the ties between Billie Zangewa (b.1973), a Malawian-born, South Africa-based artist who explores the female experience in her 2015 silk tapestry Mother and Child, and two artists of the senior generation with similar concerns but contrasting formal means, sculptor Elizabeth Catlett (19152012) and textile-based artist Faith Ringgold (b. 1930). Too Obvious (1996) by David Hammons (b. 1943) is a mordant critique of the economic system; Pass-Thru (2014), a Plexiglas sculpture by Cameron Rowland (b. 1988) is similar in its concern with economic inequality and also takes a conceptual approach, but with a cooler, more minimalist tone. The alter egos adopted by Adrian Piper (b. 1948) to challenge viewers expectations about race and gender connect with the multimedia work of Sondra Perry (b. 1986), whose Double, Quadruple, Etcetera, Etcera I (2015) shows the partially erased video image of a performer undergoing violent convulsions in a small white room. The history of African people in the diaspora is addressed in Mel Edwardss welded steel sculpture Working Thought (1985), from the Lynch Fragment series, and in photographer Nona Faustines From Her Body Sprang Their Greatest Wealth (2013). A Constellation also honors the lineage of abstract art that connects some of these artists across the generations, including Al Lovings crisp, hard-edged compositions such as Variations on a Six Sided Object (1967) and Torey Thorntons contemporary explorations of color and material. A Constellation is organized by Amanda Hunt, Assistant Curator.
Black: Color, Material, Concept
As an element of art and design, black is both a seemingly basic part of visual experience and an amazingly rich gradation of tones and depths. As a word, it is a one-syllable locus for meanings that can fill columns in a dictionary. As a social construction, it is one of the most highly charged and proudly asserted realities in American life. The exhibition Black delves into the ways that modern and contemporary artists of African descent have considered the possibilities of black through their choice of media, their imagery and the ideas they bring to their work. The exhibition includes more than two dozen paintings, sculptures and prints, drawn primarily from the Studio Museums incomparable permanent collection. The list of twenty-two artists represented in the exhibition ranges from modernist elders such as Sam Gilliam (b. 1933) and Jack Whitten (b. 1939), to a midcentury generation that includes, Kerry James Marshall (b. 1955), Glenn Ligon (b. 1960), Leonardo Drew (b. 1961), and Nari Ward (b. 1963), to artists who came of age in the post-Civil Rights era, such as Kara Walker (b. 1969), Noah Davis (1983-2015) and Kameelah Janan Rasheed (b. 1985). Black is organized by Lauren Haynes, Associate Curator, Permanent Collection.
Marc Andre Robinson: Twice Told
One ever feels his two-ness, wrote W.E.B. DuBois in The Souls of Black Folkan American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings
Marc Andre Robinson, an alumnus of the Studio Museums 2005 Artist-in-Residence program, has drawn on DuBoiss thought for the title of his new work of minimalist sculpture, Twice Told, presented as a solo exhibition. In Twice Told, Robinson suspends the disassembled pieces of chairs from the ceiling of the gallery to form two curving lines. Among its other associations, this dual, undulating, whip-like shape evokes unsettling parallels between an American history born out of slavery and our contemporary society. Marc Andre Robinson: Twice Told is organized by Naima J. Keith, Associate Curator, and Hallie Ringle, Senior Curatorial Assistant.
Focus: Danielle Dean
In the latest of its Focus series of single-work exhibitions, the Studio Museum presents True Red (2015), a new video animation by artist Danielle Dean that explores the capacity for objects to seemingly acquire lives of their own, and offers a droll comment on the efforts of marketers to grant life to commodities. Dean borrows the title of her work from the name of an athletic shoe that Nike released in 2003, True Red, marketing it as the vampire sneaker. Taking the tagline literally, Dean turns True Red into the undead protagonist of an animation in which the sneaker repeatedly changes shape, turning into forms including a bat, a castle and an oozing red substance.
An alumnus of Central St. Martins, London (BFA) and California Institute of the Arts (MFA), Dean participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art: Independent Study Program in 2013 and is a 2014-16 Core Artist in Residence at the Museum of Fine Art, Houston. Focus: Danielle Dean is organized by Amanda Hunt, Assistant Curator.
Harlem Postcards Fall/Winter 201516
Harlem Postcards is an ongoing project that invites contemporary artists to create postcards that evoke the cultural ferment, political vitality, visual stimulation and artistic inspiration of Harlem. Presenting perspectives on Harlem that are both intimate and dynamic, the images reflect the idiosyncratic visions of contemporary artists from a wide range of backgrounds and locations. Each postcard is produced as a limited edition that the Studio Museum makes available for free to visitors. This season, the Studio Museum features postcard images by Ava Hassinger, Kia Labeija, Zanele Muholi and Jessica Vaughn. Harlem Postcards Fall/Winter 201516 is organized by Hallie Ringle, Senior Curatorial Assistant.
Lorraine OGrady: Art Is
In response to ongoing public enthusiasm, the Studio Museum has extended its presentation of Lorraine OGrady: Art Is
through March 6, 2016. Organized by Amanda Hunt, Assistant Curator, the exhibition presents all forty photographs that resulted from Lorraine OGradys performance piece of the same title, in which she entered her own float in the 1983 African-American Day Parade and rode up Harlems Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard with fifteen collaborators dressed in white. Displayed on top of the float was an enormous, ornate gilded frame, while the words Art Is
were emblazoned on the floats decorative skirt. At various points along the route, OGrady and her collaborators jumped off the float and held up empty, gilded picture frames, inviting people to pose in them. The joyful responses turned parade onlookers into participants, affirmed the readiness of Harlems residents to see themselves as works of art and created an irreplaceable record of the people and places of Harlem some thirty years ago. Lorraine OGrady: Art Is
is organized by Amanda Hunt, Assistant Curator.