EXHIBITION CALENDAR 2016–18 Rachel Eggers Manager of Public Relations [email protected] 206.654.3151 The following information is subject to change. Prior to publication, please confirm dates, titles, and other information with the Seattle Art Museum public relations office. 2 SEATTLE ART MUSEUM – NOW ON VIEW Graphic Masters: Dürer, Rembrandt, Hogarth, Picasso, R. Crumb Seattle Art Museum June 9–August 28, 2016 Representative pieces by seven important artists—whose work spans the last 500 years—feature in Graphic Masters: Dürer, Rembrandt, Hogarth, Goya, Picasso, R. Crumb, a groundbreaking exhibition for SAM. Our first-ever major show devoted to the graphic arts (two-dimensional works relying on line as a way to create visual impressions) displays a variety of print types, including woodblock, engraving, etching, and aquatint, as well as pen and ink drawings. More than 400 artworks will introduce visitors to revered historical artists, while connecting their work to the innovations of modernism and today’s thriving culture of graphic novels and comics. Printmaking and drawing allowed artists the room to experiment and to express personal sentiments, and the messages they carry are as remarkable as the virtuosic skill they display. They were made to teach and satirize, to inspire and titillate, to share dramatic narratives and visualize profound emotions. Though the featured artists are also known for painting, graphic arts were central to their careers and legacies. From the earliest artist, German Renaissance master Albrecht Dürer, to the latest, contemporary comic legend R. Crumb, Graphic Masters explores how some of the best-known artists in history have used the graphic arts to give form to their ideas. Exemplary works from the past half-millennium offer a new perspective on the lasting value of this overlooked art form. 3 Light and Space Seattle Art Museum August 15, 2015–November 6, 2016 Historically, Los Angeles and New York have had their differences when it comes to artistic legacies. The post-war flourishing of American painting centered largely on New York City where a concentration of artists and critics also shaped the discussion of contemporary art. Working in a different context, a number of artists in and around Los Angeles began experimenting with new ideas and materials focused on color and light in the 1960s. Their sculptures and paintings explored reflective surfaces, translucent materials, prism effects, and color gradations that create subtle and varied optical effects. Concurrently—in New York— a number of artists made serial or modular structures, which were designed to engage the viewer’s perception of space. Donald Judd was one of the New York artists whose work defined the parameters of Minimal Art early on. His serial structures in this gallery make volume and space measurable. Side-by-side, the works of Judd and the West Coast artists reveal surprising affinities in their embrace of light and color. In Marfa, Texas, Judd created an installation of aluminum boxes inside a hangar illuminated by natural light. Our sense of volume and weight shifts dramatically depending on the changing light conditions at that site. 4 Go Tell It: Civil Rights Photography Seattle Art Museum April 30, 2016–January 8, 2017 The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s saw major gains in the struggle to end segregation and discrimination against African Americans, as well as many other marginalized groups, including Native Americans, homosexuals, and women. While landmark pieces of legislation during that decade officially outlawed racial discrimination, the realities of social and institutional inequity continued well past these watershed years—and the "foot soldiers" of the movement continued their efforts to confront them. This exhibition features major works from the collection by artists including Dan Budnik, Danny Lyon, Roy deCarava, Robert Frank, Gary Winogrand, Marion Post Wolcott, and others. Whether capturing the inequalities of Jim Crow-era segregation, documenting keystone moments and leaders of the movement, or exposing the racial injustices that continued long after desegregation, these artists used documentary photography as a tool for activism and to bear witness to the battle for equality. As a contemporary counterpart to these historical works, the exhibition features the work of two artists who examine the racial injustices that persist today, despite the many victories of the Civil Rights Movement. Joseph Norman’s sympathetic portraits of gang members in the 1990s question the continued disenfranchisement of young black men, and Shikeith examines the personal, societal, and emotional obstacles faced by black men today through video. 5 African Renaissances Seattle Art Museum May 6, 2016–July 16, 2017 Things Fall Apart may be the title of a famous novel about Nigeria, but it also sums up a mistaken notion that the African continent is afflicted with only bad news. This installation offers a realistic vision by recognizing cultural leaders who preside over kingdoms and live in thriving communities and cities. Regalia and furnishings that were originally seen in the courts of the Benin, Asante, Kom, and Kuba kingdoms are on view. Many of these kingdoms faced extreme domination by colonial powers in the early 20th century but reestablished their own power during the last half of the century. In addition, art created by Maasai, Fulani, and Ndebele women declares their views of the world. Finally, art provided by a musical leader living in Seattle contributes a sense of how things are coming together for a 21st-century futurist renaissance. 6 Emblems of Encounter Seattle Art Museum January 23, 2016–ongoing Looking back 500 years, one can see the late 15th century as a major turning point in history. When Portuguese navigators first arrived on the shores of West Africa, the two continents of Europe and Africa began interacting in new ways. After a very brief period of mutual respect and commercial exchange, European traders quickly moved to exploit the region’s natural resources— including human labor—which became the basis for the massive slave trade that eventually affected twenty million Africans. The ten works of European and African art in this gallery, dating from the end of the 15th century to the end of the 20th, have been selected from SAM’s collection as examples of these interactions over time. Bringing them together in this context reminds us that works of art contain multiple meanings and associations that can be viewed through different perspectives. Even small works connect us with a long and complex history that has shaped many aspects of our world today. 7 SEATTLE ART MUSEUM – COMING SOON Native American Installation Seattle Art Museum Opening summer 2016 In 1969, SAM benefactor John H. Hauberg traveled to the remote First Nation village of Gwaysdams on Gilford Island, British Columbia, to purchase a rare set of four monumental interior houseposts from what remained of a traditional Kwakwaka’wakw cedar plank house. Those posts were lent to the Pacific Science Center, where a replica house was constructed and used for Northwest Coast Native exhibits and educational programs. For seventeen years, millions of visitors enjoyed learning about the art and culture of Kwakwaka’wakw First Nations. After their years at the Science Center, they were given by Hauberg to the Seattle Art Museum where they have been prominently on view since 1991. For the opening celebration of the Pacific Science Center’s Seamonster House in 1971, Gwaysdams carver Sam Johnson, was commissioned to create twelve masks representing supernatural creatures associated with the Animals Spirits Dance, which were used in a dance performance. Sam Johnson (Musgamawagw Dzawada'enuxw band; died 2007) was a community leader and carver who inspired many younger carvers at a time when the art-making traditions had been waning due to colonial practices that forbade the potlatch and the dislocation of children from their homes to residential schools. In 2006, the masks were transferred to SAM and in 2016, they will be on view for the first time. The interpretation and context for the masks are being defined though a collaboration with community members. The colorful, boldly carved masks represent a modern interpretation of the principles of Kwakwaka’wakw art and the dramatic nature of the dance privilege associated with them. The twelve masks—representing mouse, raccoon, deer, wolf and others—and a commissioned button blanket to adorn one of the masks, will be installed in July, 2026, accompanied by a video of the masks being danced in 1971. This display compliments the interactive video component about the history of the houseposts that will be installed in an adjacent gallery. 8 Big Picture: Art After 1945 Seattle Art Museum Opening July 23, 2016 Big Picture: Art After 1945 features significant works of abstract painting and sculpture from SAM’s collection, held in the museum’s third floor galleries. Tracing landmark artistic developments in the decades following World War II, the installation reveals how abstraction established itself as a dominant force to be reckoned with. Big Picture will highlight works from the Virginia and Bagley Wright Collection given to the museum, such as Mark Rothko’s No. 10 (1952), Jasper Johns’ Thermometer (1959), and Eva Hesse’s No Title (1964). It will also feature key loans from other local collections, reflecting the depth and commitment of private collectors in Seattle. Virginia and her husband, Bagley Wright, who passed away in 2011, are longtime visionary leaders and legendary arts patrons of SAM and Seattle. The Wrights have donated extraordinary works to the museum for decades but within the past two years, Virginia Wright gave a large part of her and her husband’s collection to the museum. These works have transformed SAM’s modern and contemporary collection, elevating it to national status. In addition, Big Picture includes select contemporary works that point to the continuity and resonance of these ideas today, such as X (2015)—a painting recently acquired by the museum—by Gwendolyn Knight | Jacob Lawrence Prize-winner Brenna Youngblood. Also on view will be five videos that highlight the physical act and process of painting; the selection includes works by Kazuo Shiraga, Yvonne Rainer, and Margie Livingston—as well as Hans Namuth’s famed work that shows Pollock performing his drip-painting technique. Following the opening on July 23, additional installments are planned for August 20 and then again on November 19. The August installment addresses varying modes of portraiture, while November introduces works by European artists such as Joseph Beuys, Anselm Kiefer and Katharina Fritsch. In subject and materiality, these works are grounded in the post-war European experience and address different concerns from the American works. 9 Yves Saint Laurent: The Perfection of Style Seattle Art Museum October 11, 2016–January 8, 2017 "I am no longer concerned with sensation and innovation, but with the perfection of my style." – Yves Saint Laurent The Seattle Art Museum (SAM) presents Yves Saint Laurent: The Perfection of Style, showcasing highlights from the legendary designer’s 44-year career. Drawn from the collection of the Fondation Pierre Bergé—Yves Saint Laurent, the exhibition features new acquisitions by the Foundation that have never been shown publicly before. With a selection of 100 haute couture garments, SAINT LAURENT rive gauche clothing and accessories, photographs, drawings, films and other multimedia elements from the Foundation’s vast archive, the exhibition creates a visually rich environment for visitors to witness the development of Saint Laurent’s style and recurring themes throughout the designer’s career. The multifaceted exhibition is curated by independent Parisian curator and fashion expert Florence Müller in collaboration with Chiyo Ishikawa, SAM’s Deputy Director of Art and Curator of European Painting & Sculpture. The exhibition is organized by the Seattle Art Museum in partnership with the Fondation Pierre Bergé - Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. 10 Jennifer West November 19, 2016–May 7, 2017 Seattle Art Museum Jennifer West lives and works in Los Angeles and creates experimental films and installations. At a time when analog film has become largely obsolete, she is buying old film stock and uses everyday household materials from hot water, bleach, vanilla, coffee and vinegar to nail polish and more to paint and erode the film emulsion and create colored splotches, patterns and chance effects. When digitized and re-screened her deconstructive films have the most surprising and beautiful visual effects. Details of her installation for the Seattle Art Museum coming soon. 11 Seeing Nature: Landscape Masterworks from the Paul G. Allen Family Collection Seattle Art Museum February 16–May 23, 2017 Co-organized by the Seattle Art Museum, the Portland Art Museum and the Paul G. Allen Family Collection, Seeing Nature explores the development of landscape painting from a small window on the world to expressions of artists’ experiences with their surroundings on land and sea. The exhibition begins with Jan Brueghel the Younger’s allegorical series of the five senses. These exquisite, highly detailed paintings provide a platform for visitors to explore the exhibition by considering their own experience with the world through sight, touch, smell, sound and taste. The next section of the exhibition demonstrates the power of landscape to locate the viewer in time and place—to record, explore, and understand the natural and man-made world. Artists began to interpret the specifics of a picturesque city, a parcel of land, or dramatic natural phenomena. This collection features a stunning group of evocative Venetian scenes by Canaletto, Édouard Manet, Claude Monet, and J.M.W. Turner, among others. The exhibition also features a rare landscape masterpiece by the Austrian painter Gustav Klimt, Birch Forest of 1903. The final section of the exhibition explores the paintings of European and American artists working in the complexity of the 20th century. In highly individualized ways, artists as diverse as Georgia O’Keeffe, Edward Hopper, David Hockney, Gerhard Richter, and Ed Ruscha bring fresh perspectives to traditional landscape subjects. 12 Denzil Hurley Seattle Art Museum May 20–November, 2017 Denzil Hurley was born in Barbados and is Professor in the School of Art at the University of Washington. Hurley is dedicated to abstraction and his work has centered on the tension between formal elements—either a series of elements within a single painting--or the relationships between paintings and their surrounding architecture in a constellation. In earlier works, his paintings showed traces of the artist’s process, layers of additions and subtractions that remained visible in each finished piece. In his exhibition at SAM, we will be featuring his most recent body of work, which introduces entirely new ideas and hovers between painting and sculpture. His monochrome black canvases have been modified with broomsticks, poles and other found objects, some of them reminiscent of protest signs. At times clustered, they become unyielding signs without specific message. Although abstract, they allude to larger social and political events and a culture of protest. If the black monochromes read as abstract signs, his canvases in the shape of frames literally mark a void and create a boundary for the empty space of the wall. Taken together, these works continue a conversation with the history of abstraction—Malevich’s black square is a distant relative. Yet as modified objects mounted on sticks and poles they are no longer static objects but suggest a different history and use and read as metaphors for a culture of protest that unfolds in the streets. 13 Yayoi Kusama Seattle Art Museum June 29–September 10, 2017 Spanning over five decades, Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors focuses on the evolution of the Japanese artist’s immersive, multi-reflective Infinity Mirror Rooms. The exhibition takes as its point of departure Kusama’s original Infinity Mirror Room—Phalli’s Field, 1965, in which she displayed a vast expanse of redspotted, white tubers in a room lined with mirrors, creating a jarring illusion of infinite space. The show explores how the interiority of the early infinity nets paintings and the multiplication into a unique world of “self-obliteration” shifts from a strategy of political liberation during the Vietnam War to a shared condition of harmony in the present. Grounded on a kaleidoscopic perception and the transience of reflection and light, the infinity rooms invite the viewer to experience a myriad of dualities, for example utopic/dystopic, private/public, unity/isolation, obsessive/detached, irrational/rational, and life/death. While Kusama’s infinity nets, dot paintings, and sculptures have been widely exhibited, this project will be the first to focus exclusively on the phenomenological impact of the infinity rooms over the scope of her career. Historically inspired by the opto-kinetic work of the Zero group, whose exhibitions Kusama participated in, and working contemporaneously with Allan Kaprow’s environments and happenings in New York, Kusama’s interest in the use of mirrors, electric lights, and kinetics lies both in optics as well as in participatory art practices. By examining the early unsettling installations alongside more recent ethereal atmospheres, the show attempts to historicize this body of work amidst the resurgence of experiential practices within the global landscape of contemporary art. 14 Andrew Wyeth: In Retrospect Seattle Art Museum October 19, 2017–January 15, 2018 Just announced! More information coming soon. 15 A Broad and Luminous Picture: Edward S. Curtis and the North American Indian Seattle Art Museum June 14–September 9, 2018 Just announced! More information coming soon. 16 ASIAN ART MUSEUM – NOW ON VIEW GOLD: Japanese Art from the Collection Asian Art Museum April 9-October 9, 2016 The Golden Pavilion, gold tea house, golden Buddha hall, golden screens, and kimonos embroidered with gold thread, lacquerware decorated with gold…the list is endless. Gold has long been used as a luxurious material for architectural features, sculpture, painting, textiles, and many other forms in Japanese art, universally coveted for its rich color and enduring value. It has come to symbolize power, strength, wealth, eternity, and religious sanctity. Here is a gallery gleaming with all that glitters. Selected from the museum’s Japanese collection, these objects provide a glimpse of exceptional works that use gold. Buddhist paintings, shrines and accoutrements, monk’s robes and temple runners—all demonstrate gold’s sacred symbolism in Buddhism; while gold leaf on paintings, gold decorations on lacquer boxes and inros, and gold threads in kimonos and obis, all impart a luminous layer to the artworks. 17 Mood Indigo: Textiles From Around the World Asian Art Museum April 9–October 9, 2016 Mood Indigo: Textiles From Around the World honors the unique ability of the color blue to create many moods in cloth. Drawn primarily from the Seattle Art Museum’s global textile collection, the exhibition illuminates the historic scope of this vibrant pigment. Mood Indigo features a set of tapestries from Belgium, a silk court robe from China, a vast array of kimonos from Japan, batiks and ikats from Indonesia and Africa, and ancient fragments from Peru and Egypt. An immersive installation devoted to indigo by contemporary artist Rowland Ricketts will be accompanied by a soundtrack by sound artist Nobert Herber that unveils the musical nuances indigo can suggest. From the sultry darkness of midnight to the vitality of a bright sky, come let the myriad blues in their multiple forms surround you. The exhibition is organized by the Seattle Art Museum. 18 ASIAN ART MUSEUM – COMING SOON Tabaimo Asian Art Museum November 11, 2016–February 26, 2017 Tabaimo is an acclaimed Japanese artist known for her immersive and thoughtprovoking video installation works. This is the first exhibition that Tabaimo is curating. It includes Tabaimo’s existing and new works, as well as works from SAM’s collection that she has selected for their close connections with her own work. The core concept of this show is “utsushi,” which literally means copying or paying homage to. Tabaimo is fascinated with the ways in which artists of different time communicate with each other through art works, a mute but yet very expressive channel over time and beyond time. 19 OLYMPIC SCULPTURE PARK – NOW ON VIEW Victoria Haven: Blue Sun Olympic Sculpture Park April 2, 2016–March 5, 2017 Seattle native Victoria Haven’s process could be described as a form of mapping. Her abstract drawings, prints, and videos are markers of time and place that connect us—by way of association—to history and lived experiences. Haven's dramatic wall drawing Blue Sun is inspired by a recent video project where the artist filmed the radical transformation of South Lake Union from her studio window, over a ten-month period. At certain times during the year, the camera recorded unusual optical effects that made the sun appear as a blue dot. These were not natural phenomena that a viewer could see when looking at the landscape—they were effects created by the optical apparatus, resulting from the light reflected on the camera lens. As the arc of the sun progressed from winter into spring and summer, other patterns emerged from the reflections of the sun on nearby buildings in the city, creating an imaginary geography. These observations form the basis for the design of the wall drawing, which consists of a cluster of bold crystalline forms that traverse the entire length of the east wall of the Olympic Sculpture Park's PACCAR Pavilion. The forms register as sculptural structure, creating a dynamic dialogue with other sculptures at the park. 20 Tamiko Thiel: Anthropocene Gardens Olympic Sculpture Park June 25, 2016–October 2017 Tamiko Thiel’s summer project at the Olympic Sculpture Park imagines a near future for the earth as it enters the Anthropocene—a new epoch in which global warming will lead to conditions similar to the Cretaceous period 100 million years ago. Using the native plant life of the park as a starting point, Thiel will create an augmented reality installation in which virtual plants grow and mutate in response to the earth’s changing conditions, changing the landscape as we know it. As the artist describes this transformation, “native species will change to forms better adapted to increasingly tropical temperatures, their characteristic flowers, leaves, berries transforming into fantastic sculptural forms.” Visitors will be able to immerse themselves in this Anthropocene environment through their own smart devices, seeing the landscape shift and mutate around them as they move through the park. Thiel is known for her site-specific virtual and augmented reality installations which explore issues of place, cultural identity, and the environment. She grew up in Seattle, and is currently based in Munich. 21 OLYMPIC SCULPTURE PARK – COMING SOON Spencer Finch Olympic Sculpture Park Opening Spring 2017 Just announced! More information coming soon. 22 Image credits: Installation view of Graphic Masters: Dürer, Rembrandt, Hogarth, Goya, Picasso, R. Crumb at the Seattle Art Museum. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Installation view of Light and Space at the Seattle Art Museum. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Mark Woods. Installation view of Go Tell It: Civil Rights Photography at the Seattle Art Museum. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Installation view of African Renaissances at the Seattle Art Museum. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Installation view of Emblems of Encounter at the Seattle Art Museum. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Grizzly Bear Mask, ca. 1970-71, Sam Johnson, Kwakwaka’wakw, born ca. 1930, wood with enamel paint, 9 1/8 x 8 in., Gift of the Pacific Science Center. Cross Section, 1956, Franz Kline, American, 1910 –1962, Oil on canvas, 53 1/2 x 63 in. (135.9 x 160cm), Seattle Art Museum, Promised gift of the Virginia and Bagley Wright Collection, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum, T98.84.34, © Artist or Artist’ sEstate, Photo:Paul Macapia. Yves Saint Laurent, Cocktail dress. Homage to Piet Mondrian. Fall-Winter 1965 haute couture collection. ©Fondation Pierre Bergé – Yves Saint Laurent, Paris / Alexandre Guirkinger. Exploded Film Quilt, 2015, Jennifer West, American, 70mm filmstrips treated with dye, bleach, oysters, vanilla, Plexiglas, thread, 96 x 42 1/8 inches. ©Jennifer West, image courtesy of the artist. Birch Forest, 1903, Gustav Klimt, oil on canvas, 43 ¼ x 43 ¼ in. Paul G. Allen Family Collection. Installation view of the artist’s studio. © Denzil Hurley, Photo: Catharina Manchanda. Installation view of Infinity Mirror Room–Phalli’s Field at Castellane Gallery, 1965 ©Yayoi Kusama. Braids, 1979, Andrew Wyeth, American, 1917– 2009, tempera on panel, 16 1/2 x 20 1/2 in., Private Collection. An Oasis in the Badlands – Sioux, 1905. Hooded cape, 19th century, Japanese, Wool cloth, silk cloth, leather, and gold gilt, 40 3/4 x 31 3/4 in., Gift of the Christensen Fund, 2001.422. Installation view of Mood Indigo at the Asian Art Museum, 2015. © Seattle Art Museum, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Crows, early 17th century, Japanese, pair of six panel screens; ink and gold on paper, 61 9/16 x 139 5/16 in., Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection, 36.21.2. Installation view of Blue Sun, 2016, Victoria Haven, American, b. 1964, acrylic, 57 x 14 ft., Seattle Art Museum, 2016 Commission, Photo: Natali Wiseman. Tamako Thiel: Concept sketch for Anthropocene Gardens, 2016, Tamiko Thiel, American, born 1957. ©Tamiko Thiel, image courtesy of the artist. Spencer Finch: Installation detail of Following Nature, 2013, at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Spencer Finch, American, born 1962. ©Spencer Finch, image courtesy of the artist. ABOUT SEATTLE ART MUSEUM As the leading visual art institution in the Pacific Northwest, SAM draws on its global collections, powerful exhibitions, and dynamic programs to provide unique educational resources benefiting the Seattle region, the Pacific Northwest, and beyond. SAM was founded in 1933 with a focus on Asian art. By the late 1980s the museum had outgrown its original home, and in 1991 a new 155,000-square-foot downtown building, designed by Robert Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates, opened to the public. The 1933 building was renovated and reopened as the Asian Art Museum. SAM’s desire to further serve its community was realized in 2007 with the opening of two stunning new facilities: the nine-acre Olympic Sculpture Park (designed by Weiss/Manfredi Architects)—a “museum without walls,” free and open to all—and the Allied Works Architecture designed 118,000-square-foot expansion of its main, downtown location, including 232,000 square feet of additional space built for future expansion. From a strong foundation of Asian art to noteworthy collections of African and Oceanic art, Northwest Coast Native American art, European and American art, and modern and contemporary art, the strength of SAM’s collection of more than 25,000 objects li305es in its diversity of media, cultures and time periods.
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