MILWAUKEE, WIS.- As part of its grand reopening, the
Milwaukee Art Museum debuted the new Herzfeld Center for Photography and Media Arts, a 10,000-square-foot space devoted to a global array of photography, film, video installation, and media art. Unparalleled in size and scope for the region, the Center presents the Museums rarely seen photography collection of 3,800 works, and will host exhibitions by world-renowned artists working in photography, film, video and digital media. It is funded by a generous gift from long-time supporters, the Herzfeld Foundation.
As the Museums first dedicated space for light and media art, and signals both the growing importance of photography and media art as art forms and as a cornerstone of the Museums Collections.
The Herzfeld Center makes Milwaukee the new destination for photography and media art audiences nationwide, said Lisa Sutcliffe, curator of photography and media arts. Milwaukees photography and film community is a vibrant part of the cultural landscape of the city, and the Museum now reflects these vital art forms.
The Centers inaugural exhibition, Light Borne in Darkness, presents highlights from the Museums Collection, shown together for the first time. Visitors can discover the history of the medium through its most important masters, including Edward Steichen, whose Pool, Milwaukee (ca. 1899), launched his career as a photographer; Alfred Stieglitz, considered the father of American photography; Wisconsin native and social reformer Lewis Hine; American masters Diane Arbus, Lee Friedlander, Garry Winogrand, and Stephen Shore; iconic works by Walker Evans, Louis Faurer, Robert Frank, and William Klein; and landmark works by Uta Barth, Roni Horn, and Lorna Simpson.
In new media art spaces, Stanley Landsmans Walk-In Infinity Chamber (1968), an experiential installation and visitor favorite, are on view adjacent to the newly acquired You and I, Horizontal (II) (2006), by Anthony McCall, an interactive solid light projection.
Planned future exhibitions will feature such luminaries as Dutch photographer Rineke Djikstrawhose portraits of youth and adolescents were the subject of a recent retrospective at the Guggenheim in New York Cityand emerging artists such as Penelope Umbrico, who creates cutting-edge work using images found on the Internet.
The Herzfeld Center continues the Museums long tradition of being at the forefront of photography and media arts. It presented the first American exhibition of works by artist László Moholy-Nagy in 1931, and as early as 1957long before most other major American museums collected photographsmade its first acquisition of six photographs by Edward Weston. In 1967, the Museum co-organized Light|Motion|Space with the Walker Art Center of Minneapolis, one of the first exhibitions of new technologies and experimental media in the United States.
Since that time, the Museums Collection has grown regularly with gifts and purchases, and now ranges from the earliest nineteenth-century examples of the medium to artists working today.
Beginning in 1985, the Herzfeld Foundation has been integral to the Museums development of a rich and vibrant photography program. Richard and Ethel Herzfeld were active in the Milwaukee community, and contributed significant time and resources to enriching the cultural life of the cityRichard was especially drawn to photographys spirit of innovation, and took a lively interest in the medium. The exhibition and acquisition program at the Museum flourished with their support, building on a strong foundation of important early acquisitions and key donations. The new Center reflects their legacy.