NEW YORK, NY.- Fast Forward: Painting from the 1980s offers a focused look at painting from this decade with works drawn entirely from the
Museums collection. The exhibition is on view in the Museums eighth-floor Hurst Family Galleries from January 27 to May 14, 2017.
In the 1980s, painting recaptured the imagination of the contemporary art world against a backdrop of expansive change. During this explosive period, an unprecedented number of galleries appeared on the scene, particularly in downtown New York. New media, such as video and installation art, was on the rise and both museums and galleries presented an array of ambitious and provocative exhibitions. Yet, despite other mediums such as photography and video gaining traction, many artists actively embraced the medium of painting, exploring its bold physicality and unique capacity for expression and innovation.
The exhibition features work by artists often identified with the 1980sJean-Michel Basquiat, Sherrie Levine, David Salle, and Julian Schnabelas well as by a significant number of less celebrated painters. Often through exuberant work that engaged with the heroic gesture or pop imagery, these artists explored the traditions of figuration and history painting, and offered new interpretations of abstraction. Many addressed fundamental questions about art-making in their work, while others took on political issues including AIDS, feminism, gentrification, and war. Far from dead, artists renegotiated their commitment to painting in the 1980s, and in the face of a media-saturated environment. The medium suddenly came to represent an important intersection between new ways of seeing and a seemingly traditional way of making artone full of possibility and thriving as many artists actively re-imagined what painting could be.
Fast Forward: Painting from the 1980s is organized by Jane Panetta, associate curator, with Melinda Lang, curatorial assistant.