A new film by ScanLAB Projects reveals the transformation of The Bartlett’s home at 22 Gordon Street as it was refurbished between 2014 and 2017.
Exhibition. Feb 16–May 5, 1992. Allegories of Modernism: Contemporary Drawing provocatively explores developments in drawing since the mid-1970s. Following Drawing Now, the Museum’s pioneering exhibition of 1976 that documented the emergence of drawing as a major and independent means of expression, Allegories of Modernism records the important and multifaceted role of drawing in art today. The exhibition includes some 200 works by more than forty artists from the United States and Europe. It is installed in the Rene d’Harnoncourt Galleries on the Museum’s lower level, the third-floor Drawings Galleries, the Garden Hall and Projects Gallery, and throughout several of the Museum’s “public” spaces. Many artists today are engaged in questioning the nature and the limits of drawing. Using a wide and often adventurous array of materials and techniques, they ask not only what drawing is, but what differentiates drawing from other activities. Indeed, as Bernice Rose writes in the publication accompanying the exhibition, “the formal purity of drawing is not an issue, nor is it of much concern to artists Although increasingly an independent mode, [drawing] has also become inextricably mixed with other mediums, with painting and painterly devices, with color, and with paint itself. Distinctions between painting and drawing—and printing—have become blurred…A new language of the visual arts has thus emerged in the last two decades based on an expanded field of operations for each of its disciplines…” This “expanded field of operations” is evident in the wide array of works in the exhibition, and in the issues they raise. The relationship of art to mechanization and technology—an issue that is germane to so much art today—is raised by Nancy Spero and Christopher Wool’s rubber-stamped pieces, which inhabit the region between drawing and printmaking, and by Jonathan Borofsky’s site-specific installation, in which he uses a technique known as rotoscoping to translate drawing into video. Postmodernism’s preoccupation with the fragment, the “unfinished” artwork, is evident in both Bruce Nauman’s photocollage and Francesco Clemente’s installation of individual pastel drawings, which places the fragment into a new context. The once commonly held distinction between drawing and painting is brought into question by works on canvas by Julian Schnabel, Richard Prince, and others. The relationship of art to its surroundings is explored in room installations by Allan McCollum, Stephen Prina, Mike Kelley, and Sigmar Polke, for whom, as Rose writes in the accompanying book, “the exhibition has become a form of discourse.” Included as well are examples of more traditional drawings, some in the form of notebooks and study drawings, by Tom Otterness, Robert Longo, Terry Winters, Martin Puryear, and others. Also exhibited are works by Martin Kippenberger, Jannis Kounellis, Sherrie Levine, Ellen Phelan, Tim Rollins + K.O.S., and Susan Rothenberg, among others. An allegorical approach that is expressed in the contemplation of the self, the body, society, the limits of modernism, and drawing’s relation to its own past at once unites the diverse works in Allegories of Modernism and makes them paradigms of the concerns and possibilities being probed by so many artists today.
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Shown drawing in her Manhattan studio and performing on stage at the Umeå Jazz Festival in Sweden, Joan Jonas describes her approach to drawing and its role within her overall practice.
Graphite pencil on vellum, 7.5 x 13.5 in. each. Installaton view at 31st International Symposium of Contemporary Art of Baie-Saint-Paul, Auguest 2013 On 4 December 2011, an American drone was captured by Iranian forces near the city of Kashmar in northeastern Iran. The Iranian government announced that the UAV (drone) was brought down by its cyber...
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