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Judith H. Dobrzynski on Culture

Exhibitions

What’s New About the New Greek Galleries at MFA?

Do people learn more at art museums when chronology governs a display or when a thematic narrative rules? It’s a perennial question, and traditionally many museums with extensive collections answer it with the former because, with a broad, deep array of art in a particular category, they can. Less well-endowed collections have often gone the thematic route simply because they can’t do a civilization or a period justice with their skimpy (or gap-filled) holdings.

MenanderBut not always. Lately more museums are going narrative because they thing visitors find it more appealing. So it was not perhaps surprising that the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston will on Tuesday open three Ancient Greek galleries, encompassing about 230 objects, with themes: wine, in Dionysos and the Symposium; poets in Homer and the Epics; and performers in Theater and Performance. The three galleries have been renovated for the new first-time thematic displays, and many of the pieces have been conserved.

That’s dramatist Menander, c. 1st C BC – 1st C AD, at right.

I haven’t seen these displays, but I’m for the trial. Even if you look at the small selection of objects for these galleries online, you’ll notice a lot of painted red-on-black vases and marble sculptures. In many a museum, faced with a sea of them — particularly the vases — visitors naturally tune out of the details because there are so many. One must be really patient, truly study the vases, to appreciate them in full.

Here, perhaps themes will help.

According to the press release announcing this change, MFA is also deploying technology to help:

The MFA’s renowned collection of Greek art contains some of the most visually complicated objects in the Museum. iPads will be placed near two particularly detailed vases in order to explain the narratives and “unpack” their symbols. Visitors can discover details they may not have otherwise noticed (similar to “Looking Closer” interactives in the Benin Kingdom Gallery and Kunstkammer Gallery).  In the Homer Gallery, one iPad will focus on the Mixing bowl (calyx krater) with scenes from the fall of Troy (about 470–460 BC). Circled by a continuous frieze of episodes from the Greek sack of the city of Troy, depictions include images of the priestess Kassandra, King Priam of Troy and the Trojan warrior Aeneas. The iPad in the Theater and Performance gallery highlights the Mixing bowl (volute krater) with the Death of Thersites(about 340 BC)—an elaborate vase that was probably influenced by a lost play. Depicted are Achilles, who has just beheaded Thersites, as well as divinities and a number of characters from the Iliad.

Is this a populist move that will be criticized as pandering? It may, but — sight unseen, mind you — I don’t think, in concept, it should be.

Photo Credit: Courtesy of the MFA, Boston

Crystal Bridges: The Anti-Whitney-Biennial

Saturday is the day. That’s when the art world, which has been wondering what Don Bacigalupi, president of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and assistant curator Chad Alligood have been seeing for the better part of 2013 and much of 2014 on their search for underappreciated artists, will find out. That’s when the museum unveils State of the Art: Discovering American Art Now — their selections. It is definitely an unconventional ride through art in America.

I say that even though I haven’t seen the show, though the press preview was today (I think), but I have gotten a little look. I have the illustrated checklist, and I’ve looked up several of the artists. I’ve also talked with Bacigalupi, talked with a couple of them, and selected five (which was really hard), to feature in an article. My piece, something of a curtain-raiser, is in Friday’s Wall Street Journal, Crystal Bridges Museum Gives Underappreciated Artists a National Show.

Though Bacigalupi says there were no quotas, the 102 artists selected were spread pretty evenly around the country: 24 from the Northeast, 25 from the South, 26 from the West and 27 from the Midwest. Most have an arts education — many with advanced degrees. Most have local “support systems.” Nonetheless, Bacigalupis said, “many said it was their first studio visit.”

They picked 54 men and 48 women — even though Bacigalupi says they saw and spoke with more women artists than men. He acknowledges that “Not everyone will love everything in the show but I don’t think they should.” (A. Mary Kay’s painting is below; there are four additional artists’ works on the WSJ link.)

AMaryKay

A key question: did they avoid controversial works? He says no. “We’re not avoiding anything…but communication has to be in two directions,” he told me. Or, to cite the quote I used in my article: “We wanted work that would engage people, not push them away, so even when artists here are asking tough questions, they are doing it in a way to open a conversation, not shut it down.” I don’t ever hear that from other curators or dealers.

I didn’t get into this in my story, but the exhibition doesn’t have a theme, and the curators didn’t divide their choices into afterthought themes either. So as you might imagine, “Hanging has been a challenge,” Bacigalupi told me. “You have to make the works cohere as an exhibit, communicate what these works are about.”

He said they hung the works with an eye to “conversations, connections, resonances – but not themes.” So instead of paragraphs of text introducing a gallery, providing context, Crystal Bridges will have “pithy wall texts that will help visitors into the conversation,”  serving as “a point of departure.”

One gallery has these lines:

Human hands shape and frame the natural world.

Everyday stuff reveals grace and grit.

A stilled moment expands awareness.

Unexpected materials gain power and meaning.

Human bodies carry personal and historical significance.

Personal stories open avenues for empathy.

Another has these:

Materials and imagery can communicate heritage.

From a single image, complex tales unfold.

The stuff of daily life can reveal hidden stories.

Crystal Bridges also says that “There’s a great presence of the artists” in the didactics. In the catalogue. Bacigalupi wrote:

… one of the most meaningful things this project has presented is the opportunity to share much more about the artists themselves than a typical exhibition might. We hope that the faces of these artists, their voices and stories, the contexts and communities in which they make their art, and the intersections of their art and their lives will be rich additions to the guest experience. We want to incorporate as many of these layers as we can in our galleries, interpretive devices, and educational programs.

I imagine that some art world sophisticates will write off this show; I don’t think they should — at least not yet. I’m really looking forward to some thoughtful reviews.

Photo Credit: Courtesy of Crystal Bridges and A. Mary Kay

 

 

 

Museum-Goers Say The Darndest Things

3 El Morocco New YorkWinograndRemember the old Art Linkletter “House Party” TV show feature, “Kids Say the Darndest Things”? Linkletter would interview kids and they would provide answers that boggled the mind, either because they were funny or poignant.

I couldn’t help think of it yesterday, after a visit to the Metropolitan Museum.* Among the exhibits I visited was Garry Winogrand, which consists of “more than 175 of the artist’s iconic images, a trove of unseen prints, and even Winogrand’s famed series of photographs made at the Metropolitan Museum in 1969 when the Museum celebrated its centennial.” It’s “a rigorous overview of Winogrand’s complete working life and reveals for the first time the full sweep of his career,” the museum says. 

On my way out, I stopped to look at the book where visitors leave comments. “Good exhibit,” the last person wrote. Then I noticed that he or she had ranked the exhibit, on a scale of 1 to 10, and a 3.

My eyes went back to the comment line: “You should colorize them,” it said.

Photo Credit: © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, Courtesy of the Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

* I consult to a foundation that supports the Met.

 

“I did my best work there.”

“There” is East Hampton, Long Island, and the speaker is Robert Motherwell. The period he’s talking about is on view in an exhibition that opened on Saturday at the Guild Hall in East Hampton: Robert Motherwell: The East Hampton Years, 1944-1952.

While in East Hampton, Motherwell lived and worked in a house and studio designed by Pierre Chareau, the inimitable French architect. A show devoted to the paintings Motherwell made during those remarkable years has never been mounted. Focusing on two dozen important works from seventeen major museums and five private collections, Robert Motherwell: The East Hampton Years, 1944-1952 will surprise even those who think they know this pioneering American abstractionist’s art well.

TheVoyageFull disclosure: the curator is a friend, Phyllis Tuchman. But even if she weren’t, I’d say she has done a terrific job of borrowing works from those major museums, which include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney, the St. Louis Art Museum, the High Museum of Art, the Jewish Museum, the Wadsworth Athenaeum, the Kemper (among others). Such loans are always hard to get unless a museum has chips (other pictures) to lend in return, and though the Guild Hall has a permanent collection, it’s unlikely that those museums will find much to borrow from it.

Phyllis set out to “explore the contributions that Motherwell made to the Abstract Expressionist movement in the context of our East End artist’s community,” and the works on view (about 14 paintings) — In Beige with Sand (1945), The Red Skirt (1947), Barcelona (1950), Interior with Pink Nude (1951), to name a few — do the trick. Phyllis thinks the star of the show is MoMA’s The Voyage (1949), and thinks The Red Skirt is a “real sleeper.” It’s a portrait of Motherwell’s first wife, if I recall the label correctly. 

Which brings me to the labels. I wish I had taken a few photos of them — they’re a model of informative information written in real English, as opposed to artspeak (example — up at the Guggenheim on Friday, a label in the Futurism show ends with the word “praxis.” Why not “practice”?)

Two other informative elements: In the last gallery are 13 photosgraphs taken by Alistair Gordon of Motherwell’s home and studio in East Hampton, demolished in 1985. We all love to see how artists work, and how they live.

Finally, the website has links to a video of him explaining his childhood attraction to abstraction, a 1977 interview with Motherwell at the New School, and his oral history interviews (1971-74) at the Archives of American Art. Anyone who wants to know Motherwell and his work can certainly start with this exhibition.

 

 

Ask The Curator: The Secret Life Of Cezanne’s Apples

So far, The World Is an Apple: The Still Lifes of Paul Cézanne, a “ground-breaking” special exhibition at the Barnes Foundation, has been getting good reviews. The Wall Street 51ihKduSOJLJournal‘s review called it “small but select” and concluded:

Although it offers only a taste of the bountiful feast Cézanne’s paintings as a whole at the Barnes provide, “The World Is an Apple” allows one to scrutinize the artist’s still lifes in illuminating isolation from the work of his peers, and to appreciate how the artist’s powerful, painterly sensations could trump even the most traditional subjects he depicted. After viewing the exhibition, Cézanne’s inimitable touch and tenacious presence in all of his art at the Barnes becomes even more apparent, and his pre-eminence as a modern painter undeniable. Somewhere, the curmudgeonly collector is smiling.

Meanwhile, The New Criterion said:

Cézanne’s depictions of simple objects are novel in their focus on materiality, giving the intensely modelled subjects a subtle power: they were nothing short of Cézanne’s manifesto on painting itself.

I haven’t yet traveled to Philadelphia to see it, but hope to before it closes on Sept. 22 (before moving to the Art Gallery of Hamilton, in Ontario, Canada, beginning Nov. 1).

However, I do have a copy of the catalogue, a beautiful tome edited by Benedict Leca, the show’s key curator, now Director of Curatorial Affairs at the Hamilton gallery (previously at the Cincinnati Art Museum). Rather than review it here, I decided to ask Leca a couple of questions and print his responses.

What’s the one takeaway you want people to have after they peruse the catalogue?

Contrary to received views of still life as literally dead (nature morte), as the traditional “silent life” of objects that are inert and devoid of meaning save for the symbolic (as per the 17c Dutch still life tradition, for example), Cezanne’s still lifes—in their bright coloring, dynamic surfaces, distorted spaces and allusive juxtapositions–present objects that mean differently than what has traditionally been assigned to them as still life objects in the art historical record.

My essay argues for Cezanne’s highly personal, subjective mobilization of still life—for his own self-definition—this in a genre that has historically been conceived in terms of an absence of a human subject. Paul Smith’s essay shows us that far from the flatly symbolic or indeed purely material interpretations, Cezanne used his still life as vehicles for highly scientific color experimentation that sought to account for the contingencies of vision, that is, of motion and mobile colors—specifically through things that have historically been conceived as static and inert.

In short, Cezanne explodes the narrow range of meaning given to still lifes and their objects. The book—and I say this humbly—offers the most sustained discussion of Cezanne’s still life anywhere, and both supports the exhibition and offers alternative, in depth reading.

Would people who go to the exhibit get the same message?

I would hope that any lay viewer would register Cezanne’s oddness (in his still lifes), that something is amiss, and that he or she would in turn intuit that these pictures depart from the “silent life” of things. The didactics (which were a communal effort) emphasize the whimsy, the open pictorial structures, the invitation to imagination that trespasses beyond the traditional, more-or-less fixed symbolic meanings attached to such things as apples and skulls.

Cezanne’s still lifes are at bedrock an invitation to imaginative leaps that would join ours with his. Together, the book and the show demonstrate the many ways one might read Cezanne’s still lifes.

Do you have a favorite Cezanne still life?

Certainly, among the show pictures I would isolate the cover image Apples and Cakes—a rarely seen masterpiece shown at the 3rd Impressionist exhibition of 1877—for its beautiful coloring and dynamically touched surface. One would be mistaken, meanwhile, to not pay particular attention to the famous, late Three Skulls on a Patterned Carpet. Cezanne evidently conceived this picture as a sort of manifesto. Its overloaded surface and the highly suggestive arrangement is a testament to Cezanne’s quest to record and communicate his “sensations,” but also to his contingent painting style, which capitalizes on oddities, visual puns, and plays of forms that arise during the act of painting. Again, in that sense, Cezanne offers us not a world of things, but a world of actions—of movement instead of stasis.

Will the exhibition be the same in Ontario as it is at the Barnes? Installed the same way?

There are indeed a couple of Cezannes that for various reasons were ‘Barnes Only.’

However, the iteration of the show in Hamilton will have two added components missing from the Barnes Foundation presentation: a ‘contextual’ early years section to open the show, and a so-called ‘coda’ section to end it. That is, when Cezanne arrives on the scene in Paris in the early 1860s, he looks at & is influenced by realist, Chardin-infused still lifes that have a considerable impact on his early still life production. I’m talking about dark-toned, rustic kitchen scenes by the likes of Theodule Ribot, Antoine Vollon and Philippe Rousseau.

As it happens, the AGH has a number of outstanding representative examples of just such realist still lifes by these very artists, and so the AGH version of the show will open with a brief ‘backgrounder’ of 4 realist still lifes tightly hung, so that people can glimpse right from the get-go how Cezanne departs from convention and prevailing modes of still life. On the other end—as fully explicated in Joe Rishel’s Cezanne and Beyond exhibition of 2009 in Philadelphia—Cezanne was highly influential for his peers and the next generation of still life painters. Thus the AGH show will close with three still life paintings by artists who looked to Cezanne: van Gogh, Still Life with Ginger Jar (1885), Emile Bernard, Nature Morte a la Tasse (1886)—both from the McMaster University Museum of Art (Hamilton, ON)—and a Georges Braque, Nature Morte (1926) from the AGH collection (we know, for example, that Braque owned a Cezanne apple painting).

—

The catalogue sells for $54.95.

 

 

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About Judith H. Dobrzynski

Now an independent journalist, I've worked as a reporter in the culture and business sections of The New York Times, and been the editor of the Sunday business section and deputy business editor there as well as a senior editor of Business Week and the managing editor of CNBC, the cable TV

About Real Clear Arts

This blog is about culture in America as seen through my lens, which is informed and colored by years of reporting not only on the arts and humanities, but also on business, philanthropy, science, government and other subjects. I may break news, but more likely I will comment, provide

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