Thu, 6 April 2017
Episode No. 283 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features artists Liz Glynn and Nina Chanel Abney. Glynn's "Open House" is on view now in Doris C. Freedman Plaza in New York's Central Park. It was commissioned by the Public Art Fund and will remain through September 24. The work takes as its jumping off point Freedman Plaza's unusual site, the place where democratic Central Park meets corporate midtown meets the aristocratic Upper East Side. Glynn's sculpture highlights the class distinctions that separate the park from the city by referencing a Fifth Avenue interior designed by Gilded Age architect Stanford White. The exhibition was curated by Daniel S. Palmer. Glynn's work routinely engages history and the way both it and historical objects are considered in the present day. Her work has been presented or exhibited at MOCA in Los Angeles, the New Museum in New York, the deCordova Sculpture Park in Concord, Mass., the Petit Palais in Paris, LACMA, and more. This fall, MASS MoCA will present Glynn's "The Archaeology of Another Possible Future" in the museum's Building Five. On the second segment, Nina Chanel Abney discusses her work on the occasion of a 10-year survey of her work titled "Nina Chanel Abney: Royal Flush." The exhibition is at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University through July 16, when it will travel to the Chicago Cultural Center and then to Los Angeles, where it will be jointly presented by the Institute of Contemporary Art -- the institution formerly known as the Santa Monica Museum of Art -- and the California African American Museum. |
Thu, 30 March 2017
Episode No. 282 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features curator Diane Waggoner and curator Katy Rothkopf. Waggoner is the curator of "East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Photography." For several decades, the story of America's nineteenth-century photographic history has mostly run through the West. Waggoner's exhibition instead looks at how photographers looked at the region between the Mississippi River and the Atlantic Ocean. The exhibition features 175 nineteenth-century photographs, including daguerreotypes, salted paper prints, albumen prints, stereographic prints and even paintings. It's on view at the National Gallery of Art through July 16, when it will travel to the New Orleans Museum of Art. On the second segment, Baltimore Museum of Art curator Katy Rothkopf discusses Richard Diebenkorn's 1964 visit to the Soviet Union in the context of "Matisse/Diebenkorn." The exhibition, which Rothkopf co-curated with San Francisco Museum of Modern Art curator Janet Bishop, is on view at SFMOMA through May 29. Bishop discussed "Matisse/Diebenkorn" on Episode No. 266. |
Thu, 23 March 2017
Episode No. 281 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast considers federal arts and humanities funding with Los Angeles Times art critic Christopher Knight and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation executive vice president for programs and research Mariët Westermann. The National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities make up eight one-thousandths of one percent of the federal budget. Still, in the name of austerity, the Trump White House has targeted the endowments, the Institute of Museum and Library Services and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for elimination in its first budget. The endowments each received $148 million in appropriations in the federal government's most recent fiscal year, while the IMLS received $230 million and CPB $445 million. Meanwhile, the Trump budget asks for a 10 percent increase in defense spending, a single-year bump of $54 billion -- or 365 times the NEA or NEH's total annual appropriation. No American art or arts critic has written more about the role of federal arts and humanities funding and especially the national endowments over more years than Christopher Knight. He has been the art critic of the Los Angeles Times since 1989. He is a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and received the Frank Jewett Mather Award for Distinction in Art Criticism from the College Art Association in 1997. On the second segment, Mellon foundation VP Mariët Westermann discusses federal arts and humanities funding from a funder's perspective. Prior to joining Mellon in 2010, was the provost and chief academic officer of New York University Abu Dhabi; director of NYU's Institute of Fine Arts; associate director of research at the Clark Art Institute, and an associate professor at Rutgers University. As a historian of Netherlandish art, Westermann has written books on Jan Steen, Rembrandt, Vermeer and more. |
Thu, 16 March 2017
Episode No. 280 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features curators Simon Kelly and Gail Stavitsky. Along with the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco's Esther Bell, Kelly is the co-curator of "Degas, Impressionism & the Paris Millinery Trade." The exhibition melds the social history of modernizing 19th-century Paris with the ways in which painters, especially Edgar Degas, captured one the city's boomingest industries, the manufacturing and selling of hats, an industry that was a gateway into the city, employment and the bourgeoisie for tens of thousands of French women. The exhibition is at the Saint Louis Art Museum through May 7, when it will travel to San Francisco's Legion of Honor. The exhibition's superb catalogue was published by the two museums and DelMonico Prestel. On the second segment, Gail Stavitsky discusses "Matisse and American Art," her new exhibition on the impact Matisse's work has had on American artists. The show, which features 65 paintings, sculptures, prints and archival objects is on view at New Jersey's Montclair Art Museum through June 18. Stavitsky curated the show with assistance from John Cauman and Lisa Mintz Messinger. The exhibition catalogue was published by the museum. |
Thu, 9 March 2017
Episode No. 279 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features artist Dara Birnbaum and curator Julie J. Thomson. Dara Birnbaum is included in "Breaking News: Turning the Lens on Mass Media," at the J. Paul Getty Museum. The exhibition examines how artists have used newspapers, magazines and televised news programs to consider media, news and the messages included therein. The exhibition was curated by Arpad Kovacs and will be on view through April 30. Birnbaum is among the pioneers of video art. Her work often includes pointedly feminist critiques of mass media, including of entertainment and journalism. Retrospectives of her work include "The Dark Matter of Media Light" at SMAK, the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst in Ghent, Belgium, and at the Serralves Foundation in Porto, Portugal, and "Dara Birnbaum Retrospective exhibition" at the Kunsthalle Wien in Austria and at the Norrtalje Konsthall in Sweden. On the second segment, Julie J. Thomson discusses "Begin to See: The Photographers of Black Mountain College." The exhibition surveys photography made at Black Mountain College, including landscapes, documentary work (including of performance), experiments with the medium and more. The exhibition is at the Black Mountain College Museum and Arts Center in Asheville, North Carolina through May 20. |
Thu, 23 February 2017
On March 12, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles opens "Kerry James Marshall: Mastry," the artist's first retrospective. Marshall is one of the most significant chronicler's of the American experience, especially the African-American experience. For 35 years he has worked to add black people and black culture to a Western art historical canon that is mostly built of white faces and stories. The exhibition was curated by Dieter Roelstraete, Helen Molesworth and Ian Alteveer. The exhibition catalogue was published by Skira Rizzoli. |
Thu, 16 February 2017
Episode No. 276 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features historian and author Jane Kamensky and curator Anne Ellegood. Kamensky is the author of "A Revolution in Color: The World of John Singleton Copley." The book is a new biography that places one of early America's best and most important artists within the context of the political and revolutionary events of his time -- and details how Copley and his family were actors in them. Amazon offers it for $20 in hardcover and at $16 for Kindle. Kamensky is a professor of history at Harvard University and the director of the Schlesinger Library. She is a historian of early America and the Atlantic world. On the second segment, Hammer Museum curator Anne Ellegood discusses her new exhibition "Jimmie Durham: At the Center of the World." Ellegood's retrospective is the first major Durham show in the United States in over 20 years. Durham came to prominence as an artist in New York City in the 1980s. His work has consistently addressed questions of identity, colonialism and the inseparability of identity from politics in the United States. The exhibition is on view at the Hammer through May 7, when it will travel to the Walker, the Whitney and to the Remai Modern in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The show's thorough catalogue was published by DelMonico Prestel. |
Thu, 9 February 2017
Episode No. 275 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features curators Sharon Hecker and Tamara Schenkenberg and was taped live at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis. Hecker and Schenkenberg are the co-curators of "Medardo Rosso: Experiments in Light and Form," which is at the Pulitzer through May 13. The exhibition is the first broad survey of Rosso's work in an American museum in over fifty years. (In 2014-15 the Center for Italian Modern Art in New York presented this Rosso installation.) It features nearly 100 works, including sculptures, drawings and photographs. The exhibition's catalogue is available for free from the Pulitzer for a $7 PayPal-administered shipping charge. Rosso is an Italian artist who spent much of his career in France. His sculptures of heads and figures in wax, plaster, and bronze are key pivots between an era of monumental bronze sculpture, realist and impressionist sculpture and ultimately modern art. |
Thu, 2 February 2017
Episode No. 274 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features artists Sarah Oppenheimer and Richard Misrach. This weekend the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University in Columbus debuts "Sarah Oppenheimer: S-337473," an exhibition of a newly commissioned work developed for the Wexner's Peter Eisenman-designed building. Oppenheimer created her new work as a two-year-long Wexner Center Artist Residency Award recipient, during which she collaborated with OSU's Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering to develop a patent-pending pivot mechanism that allows this new work to rotate at a 45-degree angle. The exhibition opens on Saturday, February 4 and will be on view through April 16. As soon as images of the new work are available, probably on or around February 7, we'll add them to this post. Sarah Oppenheimer is an artist who creates installations that engage with both architecture and space. She's previously made work for the Perez Art Museum Miami (on view through April 30), the Kunsthaus Basel, the Rice University Art Gallery, the Queens Museum, and the Saint Louis Art Museum. A project she is developing for Mass MoCA will debut in 2019. Oppenheimer has also created a permanent installation at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Multiple views of all her installations are on her website. On the second segment, the re-airing of a 2016 segment with Richard Misrach on his "Border Cantos," a book and exhibition on which he has collaborated with Mexican composer and performer Guillermo Galindo. Since 2004, and especially since 2009, Misrach has been making pictures along the 2,000-mile-long United States border with Mexico, the latest investigation of American deserts that make up what Misrach calls his Desert Cantos series. As Misrach traveled the borderlands, he accumulated discarded objects such as water bottles, backpacks, clothing and shotgun shells and turned them over to Galindo, who made that material into instruments and who then performed on them. The book, "Border Cantos," is out from Aperture; Amazon offers it $45, a forty percent discount. |
Thu, 26 January 2017
The Museum of Modern Art is showing Tony Oursler's Imponderable (2015-16), a 90-minute film shown in an immersive, so-called "5-D" environment, as well as archival material related to the film from Oursler's own collection. The film mines Ourlser's interest in experiments in technological advancement that didn't quite work out and occult phenomena to offer a kind of alternative history of modernism. The film is richly informed by Oursler's own life history. His grandfather was Charles Fulton Oursler, a journalist and author who teamed up with Harry Houdini to campaign against fraudulent mediumship. The exhibition was curated by MoMA's Stuart Comer and Erica Papernik-Shimizu. Imponderable is at MoMA through April 16. Oursler is a multimedia and installation artist whose work often examines and uses new technologies to explore topics such as facial recognition, paranormal phenomena and the relationship between multiple personality disorder and mass media. On the second segment, historian and curator Anne Classen Knutson discusses "World War I and American Art," which is at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts through April 9. The exhibition looks at how American artists responded to and engaged with the war, both in Europe and in the United States. Knutson co-curated the show with Robert Cozzolino and David Lubin. |
Thu, 19 January 2017
Artist Stanley Whitney. |
Thu, 12 January 2017
"Francis Picabia" co-curator Anne Umland, "John McLaughlin" curator Stephanie Barron. |
Thu, 5 January 2017
MAN Podcast host Tyler Green's 2016 top ten list, curator Paul Martineau on Minor White. |
Thu, 22 December 2016
Curator and historian C.D. Dickerson. |
Thu, 15 December 2016
Artist Pipilotti Rist and historian and "North of Dixie: Civil Rights Photography Beyond the South" author Mark Speltz. |
Thu, 8 December 2016
SFMOMA curator Janet Bishop, art historian Jill Lloyd. |
Thu, 1 December 2016
Curators George Shackelford, David Breslin. |
Thu, 24 November 2016
Artist Richard Misrach |
Thu, 17 November 2016
Artist Eduardo Basualdo, recorded live at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. |
Thu, 3 November 2016
Historian and curator Henri Loyrette, documentary filmmaker Simone Estrin. |
Thu, 27 October 2016
Artist Michael Dean and curator Kaylin Weber. |
Thu, 20 October 2016
Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Keith Christiansen, author Christina Bryan Rosenberger |
Thu, 13 October 2016
Curators Lynn Zelevansky and Brian Sholis |
Thu, 6 October 2016
Artist Anthony Hernandez (retrospective now at SFMOMA), "Real/Ideal: Photography in France, 1847-1860" curator Karen Hellman. |
Thu, 29 September 2016
Artist Xaviera Simmons, recorded live at the Nasher Museum at Duke University. |
Thu, 22 September 2016
Artist Julie Mehretu. |
Thu, 15 September 2016
Artist Hamish Fulton, recorded live at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden |
Thu, 8 September 2016
"Della Robbia" curator Marietta Cambareri; "The Art of Rivalry" author Sebastian Smee. |
Thu, 1 September 2016
Artist Betye Saar. |
Thu, 25 August 2016
Podcast hosts James Cuno, Brian Alfred, Eric Marth. |
Thu, 18 August 2016
Curators Yuriko Jackall, Katharine Baetjer. |
Thu, 11 August 2016
Artists Rebecca Morris (Hammer Museum's 'Made in L.A.') and Roy Dowell (from the 2012 version of MinLA). |
Thu, 4 August 2016
"Unruly Nature: The Landscapes of Théodore Rousseau" curator Scott Allan, curator Simon Kelly. |
Thu, 28 July 2016
Hammer Museum "Made in LA" artist Rafa Esparza, artist William Pope.L |
Thu, 21 July 2016
Artist Victoria Sambunaris, 'Hesse/LeWitt' curator Veronica Roberts. |
Thu, 14 July 2016
Curator Gary Garrels and author Anastasia Aukeman. |
Thu, 7 July 2016
Aperture magazine guest editor Sarah Lewis, curator MaLin Wilson-Powell |
Thu, 30 June 2016
Artist Katharina Grosse. |
Thu, 23 June 2016
Artists Matthew Ronay and Arlene Shechet. |
Thu, 16 June 2016
Curator Antonio Sergio Bessa, artist and poet Thylias Moss |
Thu, 9 June 2016
Artists Joel Shapiro, Linn Meyers. |
Thu, 2 June 2016
Curator C.D. Dickerson III, artist Zina Saro-Wiwa. |
Thu, 26 May 2016
Curator Ruth Fine. |
Thu, 19 May 2016
Artist Richard Misrach and curator Alexis Belis. |
Thu, 12 May 2016
Artists Penelope Umbrico, Vincent Fecteau |
Thu, 5 May 2016
Artists Kerry James Marshall, Katy Grannan (late-breaking bonus segment!) |
Thu, 28 April 2016
Curators Jodi Hauptman, Lynne Ambrosini. |
Thu, 21 April 2016
Art historian Frances Terpak, artist Catherine Opie |
Thu, 14 April 2016
Artist Frank Stella. |
Fri, 8 April 2016
Artist Robert Irwin. (Corrected audio issue that was experienced by some users.) |
Thu, 31 March 2016
Artist Louise Fishman, conservator Luuk Hoogstede. |
Thu, 24 March 2016
Artist Marilyn Minter |
Thu, 17 March 2016
Curator Katharine Baetjer and author Nancy Princenthal. |
Thu, 10 March 2016
Artist Robert Adams. |
Thu, 3 March 2016
Artist Wolfgang Staehle, writer Kristine McKenna |
Thu, 25 February 2016
Curator Helen Molesworth, art historian Jennifer Raab. |
Thu, 18 February 2016
Artist Edward Burtynsky |
Thu, 11 February 2016
Curator and historian Judith Mann, artist Hito Steyerl |
Thu, 14 January 2016
Curators Diane Waldman and Toby Kamps, art historian Yve-Alain Bois and critic Roberta Smith |
Thu, 7 January 2016
Curator Gavin Delahunty, artist Joyce Pensato. |
Thu, 31 December 2015
Artist Phyllida Barlow, CBE, recorded live at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas. |
Thu, 24 December 2015
Artist Catherine Opie from May, 2015. |
Thu, 17 December 2015
Artist Frances Stark, host Tyler Green's 2015 top ten list |
Thu, 10 December 2015
Curators Ruth Fine, Rebecca Morse. |
Thu, 3 December 2015
Curator Ann M. Wolfe, artists Michael Light and Mark Klett. |
Thu, 26 November 2015
Artist Barbara Kruger |
Thu, 19 November 2015
Artist Eija-Liisa Ahtila and curator Tyler Cann |
Thu, 12 November 2015
Artist Odili Donald Odita, curator Luis Pérez-Oramas |
Thu, 5 November 2015
Curator George Shackelford, conservator Zahira Véliz-Bomford. |
Thu, 29 October 2015
Curator Ronni Baer, conservator Tricia O'Regan. |
Thu, 22 October 2015
Curators Stephanie Barron (LACMA) and Olaf Peters (Neue Galerie) |
Thu, 15 October 2015
Curator/historian Emily Braun, arts administrator Abby Subak. |
Thu, 8 October 2015
Artist Howardena Pindell, organizer Max Geller |
Thu, 1 October 2015
Curator/historian David C. Ward, critic Jillian Steinhauer. |
Thu, 24 September 2015
Artist Zina Saro-Wiwa |
Sat, 19 September 2015
Curator Alison de Lima Greene, artist Melvin Edwards |
Thu, 10 September 2015
Curators Ann Temkin and Anne Umland, curator Tamara Schenkenberg. |
Thu, 27 August 2015
Author Nato Thompson, artist Richard Misrach |
Thu, 20 August 2015
Agnes Martin biographer Nancy Princenthal, artist David Maisel. |
Thu, 6 August 2015
Artist Liz Deschenes |
Thu, 30 July 2015
Artists Mark Bradford, Sarah Oppenheimer |
Thu, 23 July 2015
Artist Arlene Shechet and curator Mari Carmen Ramirez. |
Thu, 16 July 2015
'Joachim Wtewael' co-curator Arthur Wheelock. |
Thu, 9 July 2015
Art historian Lynette Roth. |
Thu, 2 July 2015
'Bingham's Rivers' curator Nenette Luarca-Shoaf. |
Thu, 25 June 2015
'Noah Purifoy' co-curator yael Lipschutz, curator Anne-Lise Desmas. |
Thu, 18 June 2015
Artists Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler; curator Audrey Lewis |
Thu, 4 June 2015
Artist Phyllida Barlow, taped live at the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas. |
Thu, 28 May 2015
Artist Catherine Opie |
Thu, 21 May 2015
Artist Charles Ray, author Ben Davis |
Thu, 14 May 2015
Critic Christopher Knight, LACMA director Michael Govan, Hauser, Wirth & Schimmel partner Paul Schimmel; artist Mariam Ghani |
Thu, 7 May 2015
Artist Marilyn Minter, art historian Constance Lewallen |
Thu, 30 April 2015
Artist Liz Larner, curator Tamara Schenkenberg |
Thu, 16 April 2015
Historian Luisa Elena Alcala, curator Ilona Katzew |
Thu, 9 April 2015
Artist William Pope.L, historian Miles Orvell |
Thu, 2 April 2015
Artist Hans Haacke |
Thu, 26 March 2015
Curators Michelle White and Hannah Segrave |
Thu, 19 March 2015
Curators Gabriel Ritter and Yasufumi Nakamori |
Thu, 5 March 2015
Artist Robert Barry, curator James Merle Thomas |
Thu, 26 February 2015
Artist Mel Chin. |