WATER MILL, NY.- The Parrish Art Museum presents Connections and Contextthe third annual installation of the permanent collection at the Museum, on view through November 2016. Connections and Context features significant recent acquisitions, some of which mark the introduction of artists new to the Museums collection, as well as works that have not been shown in the Museums current building in Water Mill (which opened November 2012). Some 70 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper are presented in nine thematic, mini-narratives that explore the concept of dialoguehow artworks interact with one another while claiming individual visual territory.
The Permanent Collection: Connections and Context provides new ways of looking at the familiar and the unfamiliar, bringing to light kinships among works of art that, when viewed together, encourage inventive ways of thinking about the world around us and our relationship to it, said Parrish Art Museum Director Terrie Sultan.
Connections and Context features recent acquisitions that introduce renowned artists to the Parrish collection, including an important painting by Hans Hofmann, Image in Green (1950), and photographs Chuck Close (2000) by Annie Leibovitz and David Wojnarowicz (1985) by Nan Goldin. New works that denote significant additions to the Museums existing collections of artists include The Cantaloupe Pickers (1983) by Donald Sultan, and Lucille Ball (1975), one of Cindy Shermans early film still shots. In addition, Connections and Context includes four important paintings dating from 1953 to 1970 that have not been on view in the previous iterations of the permanent collection in the current building: John Ferrens New York Summer Landscape (1953); Friedel Dzubass Untitled (ca. 1958); Raymond Parkers Untitled (1962); and Dan Christensens Moondowner (1970).
The thematic exhibitions in Connections and Context provide insight into relationships among works of art and artists. For example, Christensens Moondowner and Esteban Vicentes Untitled (1991) suggest the notion of landscape as a place and an emotional state. Both Michael Tetherows Untitled (1975) and Sultans The Cantaloupe Pickers contemplate social, political, and cultural concepts through contrasting approaches to abstract visual gesture. Colleagueship among artists is revealed in Home Sweet Home, with Joe Figs miniature recreations of the adjoining art studios of April Gornik and Eric Fischl, and paintings by long-time friends Robert Dash and Fairfield Porter of the latters home. Home Sweet Home explores every notion of homefrom the serenity of Dashs Afternoon #2 (1965) and Porters The Living Room (1952), to the instability conveyed by the present danger in Clines Patriot, to the whimsical take on domesticity apparent in Christa Maiwalds embroidered canvas of a smug cat curled up on a layer cake, and Monica Bankss delicate English porcelain tea cake topped with a dead bird.
In Collective Conversation, four works spanning 50 years explore architecture, geometry, solid form, and fleeting gesture, such as Dan Flavins work composed almost entirely of light; Keith Sonniers juxtaposition of solid shapes and fragile neon; Dorothea Rockburnes wall installation combining folded canvas and drawing; and Mel Kendricks experimentation with structure and texture through the medium of pulp paper. Inscapethe Inner Nature of Things contrasts twelve artists diverse approaches to expressing emotion through abstraction, ranging from basic forms combined with loose, expressive lines in paintings by Louisa Chase, Mary Heilmann, and Perle Fine; to pure abstract gesture that governs the work of Friedel Dzubas, John Ferren, Hans Hofmann, Raymond Parker, and Esteban Vicente.
American Views provides a fresh look at landscape, both real and imagined, though late 19th and early 20th century paintings such as Samuel Colmans and George Henry Smillies detailed studies of farms, and varied depictions of the effects of light on water by Martin Johnson Heade, John Henry Twachtman, and Childe Hassam. Three groupings of photographs installed in the spine gallery provide contrast and context, from the philosophical investigation of nature and perception in five large-scale photographs by Jean-Luc Mylayne, to the opportunity to reconsider everyday surroundings in Close to Home, to the intimate collaboration between subject and photographer in Picturing Artists. A special presentation on view within Connections and Context is James Brooks: Process of Discovery. A major painting in the Parrish collection by the 1950s New York School artist is augmented by a series of works on paper on long term loan from the James and Charlotte Brooks Foundation that reveal Brookss process of discovery.