Showing posts with label contemporary art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contemporary art. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2016

Helsinki's varied art scene

It rained the whole week I was in Helsinki. While that cramped my desire to explore the city's parks and open spaces, it enabled me to visit quite a few museums of various stripes. Three art museums had the most appeal and I offer a sampling from each. More often than not the majority of works on display were of Finnish origin, which made them completely new for me. I consider this one of the more delightful perks of foreign travel.

HAM

The Helsinki Art Museum is devoted to art works that "belong to the people of Helsinki." A lovely collectivist notion.

Kitka River, Ilkka Halso
An enormous photographic print that depicts what must be a fantastically imagined landscape. It was eerily real, however.

Summer, Erno Enkenberg
This appealed because I'd been seeing similar Finnish style architecture all around the city. The title is a curiosity, but then I've never been to Finland in another season.

Moss Girl, Kim Simonsson
This was a bit reminiscent of Jeff Koons. The larger-than-life size figure was like a fairy tale figure brought to "life" as a sculpture. The title reflects not just the color but the velvety texture of the surface of the sculpture.

Robert Lucander
Somehow I missed the English title of this, which in both Finnish and German is a long one. My German is rusty but it goes something like: "I will be mixed up when I stop being reasonable." There were several similarly abstract and enigmatic paintings by the same artist.

Gym Class, Jarmo Mäkilä
While I never personally experienced this degree of dystopic environment, either as a young person in school or as an educator for 30 years, somehow this resonated.

First Day at School, Jarmo Mäkilä
There was a whole room devoted to this artist, including the large paintings as well as this one installation, which suggests that the socialization required of school attendance entails a loss of innocence. Those are teddy bears and other stuffed animals strewn out behind the building.


This is the same piece viewed from the "front."

Ateneum

The Ateneum Art Museum is one of a triumvirate of institutions comprising the Finnish National Galleries of Art. It is devoted to 19th and 20th Century international art. It was here where I found a few recognizable names, even if the art works themselves were unfamiliar...

The Bathers, Edvard Munch
... and in a few cases unlikely to be found in most major U.S. museums.

Landscape from Ringerike, Hans Gude
I discovered that the Romantic landscape--a la our own Hudson River School, so recently featured at the Milwaukee Art Museum--is also a prominent genre in 19th Century Finnish tradition.

Salon style presentation
Many of the paintings from this land of forests, mountains and lakes are indistinguishable in content and character from those of the American West.

Woman in Lichen, Eila Hiltunen
A curiously titled abstract sculpture in high relief. The lattice of welded copper covering the wire-frame figure didn't resemble lichen to me, but I found it intriguing.

Pregnant Woman, Alice Neel
Coincidentally, the major current exhibition was a retrospective of Alice Neel, who, the catalogue claims, is "one of the most significant American painters of the 20th century."

Tuberculosis Harlem, Alice Neel
Okay, I've heard of Neel and had a memory of what her painting style looked like. But these were by far the most of her paintings I've seen in one place.


My favorite work of art at this museum was "laundry" hanging in the atrium of the building, seen here from a second story window overlooking the courtyard. I couldn't locate a label for the installation and so I don't know the actual title.

Kiasma

Helsinki has a wealth of diverse museums and art galleries and I didn't manage to get to all of them. But of those I did see my favorite was the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art.

The website describes it this way, "A lively cultural centre and meeting place, Kiasma is the place for pleasure and experience. The name derives from ‘chiasm’, which stands for an intersection, particularly the crossing of optic nerves." I went on a weekday morning and found it not only lively but also family-friendly. In fact, I'm quite sure I've never seen so many young children in a museum devoted to contemporary art.

Emerging Thoughts, Anna Estarriola
The two little girls on the right are peering through an aperture in the giant knit cap where they can see that the interior is filled to capacity with over 60 life-size wigged heads.

In fact, nearly all of the most enjoyable installations, many of which took up entire rooms, were so vast and interactive that a still image will do them no justice. So, I made short videos (Ha! I can do that with my phone now! Even when my phone doesn't work as a phone, as in Finland.) So, I recommend that you ignore the still images below and click on the Youtube links associated with them. They're all short, under 1 minute.


Rubbish Video, by Nabb & Teeri: click here for video.


Kosmos, by Korean artist Choi Jeong Hwa, fills a two-story space: click here for video.


This one, also by Choi Jeong Hwa, completely fills a room through which visitors have to wander as if through a jungle, pushing aside the "foliage." Click here for video.


An entire floor, including this enormous space, was devoted to Brazilian artist Ernesto Neto. Click here for video.

The Ateneum was appropriately housed in a building styled in Beaux Arts tradition, while the HAM seemed quite utilitarian in a nondescript municipal structure. The contemporary mission of the Kiasma was evident even before you entered the dramatically curving and monolithic structure (which I neglected to take a picture of--sorry!)

If you missed my first (much shorter) post from Helsinki about the church in the rock, click here.

Stay tuned for the Hermitage.


Sunday, January 11, 2015

Order and disorder: The arts go long in Boston

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“Order and Disorder” is the title of a magnificent exhibit at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) featuring the peerless work of Goya. But it may as well have been a general theme for much of what we saw both there and at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA). I’ll return in a moment to Goya and the MFA.

Ito wa ito Naomi Kobayashi
From the perspective of hindsight, order seems to have ruled the day, for the most part, in the ICA’s big show called Fiber: Sculpture 1960present, the museum’s first major exhibition of fiber art in 40 years. That’s because 50+ years on we as audience have grown accustomed to fiber sculptures that don’t lay flat on the wall and because fiber artists generally hew to rigorous craftsmanship even when challenging prevailing norms. But, as this exhibit demonstrates, in 1960 that idea was a radical break from tradition. Before that time fiber art was generally known as weaving or tapestry, not sculpture.

Élément spatial (Spatial Element) Elsi Giauque
According to the show’s curators, “This radical shift in fiber from wall hanging to sculpture was played out against a backdrop of social and cultural tumult—the civil rights move­ment, the women’s movement, and antiwar activism—at a time when artists were rejecting prevailing orthodoxies.” Disorder indeed.


With over 40 artists from all around the globe, I was gratified to discover that Wisconsin was represented by Sheboygan artist Jean Stamsta (who died in 2013). Her piece, called “Orange Twist” (above), was lent by the Museum of Wisconsin Art, in West Bend. The museum’s information calls her work “folksy,” whimsical and distinct from other fiber sculptors.
Carpet Style Tilework on Canvases
Tensions between order and disorder lie much closer to the surface, literally in some cases, in the work of Brazilian artist Adriana Varejão. Considered one of Brazil’s foremost artists, much of Varejão’s work deals with race, class and ethnicity.


Polvo Portraits (three paintings) and Polvo Oil Colors deal directly with ethnic identity. Polvo is a reference to skin color. The tubes of paint in the vitrine are all shades of skin colors identified with names gleaned from individual responses to census survey questions of ethnic background. Examples include “Sapecada (flirting with freckles), Café com Leite (coffee with milk) and Queimada de Sol (sun-kissed).”

This piece, entitled Folds, is one of a series where the surface of the painting, rendered to look like tile erupts with highly realistic, three-dimensional protrusions of viscera. Again, order and disorder.

Solo Goya (Only Goya)
I couldn’t possibly do justice to the Museum of Fine Arts. Even a review of the Goya exhibit will have to be far too brief, a tease really. Like many museums, the MFA has adopted a lenient stance towards photography in most of its galleries. (We have social media and the free publicity it makes possible to thank, I’m told.) However, as expected, this doesn’t extend to special exhibits and works on loan.

Time and the Old Woman
Fortunately, much of Goya’s vast oeuvre is readily available online. These few selections were all in the exhibit, which did a good job illustrating its theme of “order and disorder.” I feel fortunate to have visited the Prado and so I was prepared to enjoy revisiting works with which I was familiar. There were plenty. But I was also pleasantly surprised to see quite a few unfamiliar works, paintings and prints.

The most unexpected treat was the side-by-side comparisons of Goya’s studies (known as “cartoons”) for tapestries and the tapestries themselves. The “cartoons” were polished paintings that invariably made the tapestries look flat and ironically cartoonish.

Order was represented primarily by the many prints and paintings that Goya did of the royal family and court, such as the famous, The Parasol.

I’ve always found Goya’s many treatments of disorder far more compelling. It is hard to imagine living through the experiences he depicts so graphically, particularly his horrific Disasters of War series. Harder still to comprehend the compulsion to not only observe the atrocities but to laboriously record them, whether through drawings, paintings or the various printmaking media he employed.

The exhibit opened with selections from Los Caprichos, including his most famous from that satirical series about human folly and foible, The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (top) and, tellingly, a self-portrait. Inadvertently no doubt, the exhibit also closed with what I can’t help thinking Goya would have interpreted as a contemporary example of Los Caprichos: As always in today’s hyper-marketed world, we had to “exit through the giftshop.”

In a first-ever comprehensive retrospective the MFA demonstrates that Jamie Wyeth’s professional career followed a perhaps not so surprising trajectory from order to disorder, in my opinion if not the curator’s. While the evidence for my opinion seemed manifest in the works of art, I admit I am speculating about what I interpreted as increasingly disorderly psychological states. Perhaps I was simply over-sensitized by the Goya show. In any case, Jamie, third in a distinguished line of artists, began as a chronicler of the hip and famous, including J. F. Kennedy, Andy Warhol, and (here) Nureyev.

Gluttony
While never renouncing the realism that may have been genetically inherited, his late works display a far looser, more painterly approach. His cycle of paintings depicting the Seven Deadly Sins using seagulls as his allegorical subjects have emotional power that transcends realism. It was a thought-provoking show.

There were Sunday Mornings
It wasn’t a complete surprise but it was certainly intriguing how seamlessly Shinique Smith’s work translates considerations of order and disorder into her distinctive contemporary style. I’ve enjoyed seeing the variety of her output over time but many of the works in this show were newer or unfamiliar.

The Power to See
The show, called BRIGHT MATTER, “surveys 30 key works from the past decade while debuting more than a dozen new pieces, including painting, sculpture, full-room installation, video, and performance.”
Breath and Line
Maybe this is a stretch, but I couldn’t help thinking that if Goya were alive today his work might look something like Smith’s.

Finally, a few random artworks that not only caught my eye and interest, but also suggest a connection with the theme of order and disorder. At least for me.

Pedro Reyes crafted a musical instrument by soldering together steel parts of weapons confiscated and destroyed by Mexican authorities.

Jeremy Deller created a spectacular video installation for the 2013 Venice Biennale. It addresses British society—its people, icons, folklore and history—conflates events from the past, present and an imagined future. I wish I could share a link to the video but the two that a Google search found had been removed from their respective sites (one being Deller’s own website.)

Okay, I suppose if Goya were alive today his work is far more likely to resemble something Anselm Kiefer would make. As with Goya, disorder tends to win out in most of Kiefer’s work. This one, called Rising, Rising, Falling Down, is a curious mix, not only of characteristically unusual materials but of disorderly content neatly framed in a glass case like one might see in a natural history museum.

This is the second in a pair of reviews from my recent trip to Massachusetts. To read the first, about MASS MoCA, clickhere.

Monday, December 30, 2013

3 good art shows in Chicago usher in a Happy New Year!

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It’s the time of year when critics wax nostalgic about what’s happened during the past 12 months, often choosing to list the “best of…” the year. I have enjoyed doing this myself in the past. However, Mary Louise Schumacher’s best of the year list was published yesterday in Art City and I can’t improve on it.

Aten Reign, James Turrell
Before I get to Chicago, I will simply add three outstanding art experiences I feel fortunate to have been able to travel to see in 2013. My favorite was the mesmerizing James Turrell exhibit at the Guggenheim in New York. I wrote about it in August. In Santa Fe I saw and wrote about a surprising and excellent installation of 3-dimensional video work by Peter Sarkisian at the New Mexico Museum of Art. And there was art galore in London (of course!)

Peter Sarkisian with one of his 3D videos
But I was in Chicago over the weekend where I saw three good shows in three distinct museums, one of which—at the Museum of Contemporary Art—could easily make it onto my top ten list.

McCormick House, detail
I’ll begin where I began, a small museum in Elmhurst, a suburb about 15 miles due west of Chicago’s loop. The centerpiece of the Elmhurst Art Museum is one of only three houses in the US designed by Mies van der Rohe. The McCormick house, built in 1952, was moved from its residential neighborhood to the park setting of the museum campus. Although the interior has mostly been repurposed for office space—except for the living room, which was renovated for the public to get a sense of the space—the exterior massing and detail is intact. It’s a gem.

The current show, coincidentally, is the first ever comprehensive viewing of the permanent collection. Entitled, appropriately enough, Inventory_The EAM Collection, the work is installed salon style throughout the museum. There are only a few familiar names, as varied as Eakins, Remington and Dalí, and a significant proportion of the work seemed to be from the local and greater Chicago vicinity. Far from being a limitation, I found that refreshing. I truly enjoyed seeing good work by artists who haven’t risen to national attention. It’s a hopeful sign, I think, that the art itself, and not the celebrity of the artist, is being valued.
Blanket Statement, Mary Dritschel (detail)
Vertigo, Mike Love
If you ever find yourself on the west side of Chicago with some time to spare, this is a worthwhile stop. The current show closes on January 5, but the next one sounds good: Spotlight opens Jan. 18 and will feature light-based sculptures, installations, and videos.

from 8 Natural Handstands, R. Kinmont
Next we went to the Smart Museum of Art at the U of Chicago in Hyde Park. Unlike EAM, I’d been to the Smart before and knew the quality of the permanent collection, which boasts an impressive number of unfamiliar works by familiar names. But we went there to see a traveling exhibit called, State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970. The exhibit is billed as the “first in-depth survey of conceptual art in California” and it is indeed a comprehensive show. It demonstrates, as the curators intended (according to wall text), the significance of California to the conceptual art movement at this crucial moment in its development. Major players, like John Baldessari, Paul McCarthy, the Ant Farm collective and Ed Ruscha are among the over 50 artists represented.
Yellow Room (Triangular), Bruce Nauman
Pure conceptual art, with its disdain for the physical object, its quirky, often self-referential themes and anti-aesthetic stance, often leaves me cold, I must confess. When it works, it can be profoundly moving or amusing or both. The scope of this show brings together a little of everything, which I found interesting for its historical significance.

Paul Kos, Untitled (the sound of ice melting)
State of Mind is also nearing the end of its run at the Smart. It closes Jan. 12. But, again, if you’re in the vicinity before then, I recommend checking it out.

Copperheads, M. Davey (detail)
The real find and the best of this trio of fine shows is at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The Way of the Shovel: Art as Archeology explores the role of historical research in art during the past decade. Archeology, while not necessarily foremost in the minds of the artists when they created the works, has been used by curator Dieter Roelstraete as a metaphor for the ways artists examine the past.

Copperheads, Moyra Davey (detail)
Some Boarded up Houses, J. Koester
The exhibit, which sprawls throughout the entire top floor galleries of the museum, is loosely divided into themes with titles like On Narrating and Storytelling and On the Crisis of Memory. Some of the individual works are as conceptual as anything I’d just seen at the Smart. Many, as the exhibit rationale indicates, clearly required an impressive amount of historical research. A few are more straightforwardly phenomenological.

Concerning the Dig, Marc Dion
Photography, videography and sculpture are the dominant, but by no means exclusive, mediums of expression. Although much of the art has European origins, there is also a strong local component devoted specifically to Chicago and the MCA itself. The latter is a special section titled, Shifting Grounds: Block 21 and Chicago’s MCA.

Plot (still from video), Derek Brunen
In fact, in my opinion, the jewel in the crown of what is overall an excellent exhibit, is an elaborate multifaceted installation by Chicago native son Michael Rakowitz. Entitled The Invisible Enemy Should Not Exist, its subject matter is derived from the looting of the National Museum of Baghdad in the aftermath of the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. The installation includes drawings and a musical component as well as the centerpiece: a series of elaborately reproduced artifacts that were stolen or otherwise went missing that have never been recovered.

The sculptures are made from colorful packaging from Middle Eastern food products and Arabic language newspapers. Each is presented with identifying labels such as would have accompanied the original museum displays. However, the labels also include poignant or ironic statements made by a wide variety of experts and Iraq War players. I’ll cite just two examples. Donald Rumsfeld is quoted: “It’s untidy, and freedom’s untidy, and free people are free to make mistakes and commit crimes and do bad things. They’re also free to live their lives and do wonderful things, and that’s what’s going to happen here.” Someone named Polk, referring to the artifact that is reproduced in newsprint, says simply, “And today it is no more.”

I have good news! Unlike the other two shows, you have plenty of time to get down to Chicago to see this one, which runs through March 9. I highly recommend it. In fact, it might make your list of top ten shows of 2014.