Pretty Sweet: The Sentimental Image in Contemporary Art
Joyce and Edward Linde Gallery, James and Audrey Foster Galleries, Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Media Space Gallery, First Floor Lobby, Grand Staircase, Arcade Gallery, Window Gallery, Third Floor Lobby, Third Floor Restrooms, Fourth Floor Hallway Gallery, Dr. Robert L. and Alice W. DeNormandie Library
January 15 – April 17, 2005
Opening Reception: Friday, January 21, 6 – 9 pm
Pretty Sweet is a group thematic exhibition that features over 100 artworks in all media by 33 New England artists. The show will transform almost the entirety of the Museum into a refuge for the expression of the sweeter, softer, more tender emotions. Many artists in Pretty Sweet are united by their interest in popular imagery that evokes happiness, love, nostalgia, delight, innocence, comfort, the cute, the quaint, and the beautiful. Other artists adopt a campy, ironic approach to hearts and flowers, and still others attack this type of imagery in socio-political works that deal with domestic abuse, racial and gender oppression, violence, consumerism, and pornography. Taken together, the artworks in Pretty Sweet reflect the many different ways in which contemporary artists use sentimental imagery.
The visual evocation of the sweeter emotions in contemporary art involves an iconography that includes hearts, flowers, candy, birds, domestic arts and interiors, babies and children, family and antique photographs, Victoriana, kitsch, toys, jewelry, and a wide variety of decorative motifs. Formally, palettes tend toward pastel, day-glow, or sepia, textures and surfaces are soft, scale is intimate, and materials can include hand- and hobby-craft items, needlework, and found objects and photographs that imply sentimental value.
Contemporary artists approach the sentimental for three primary reasons: to celebrate the positive emotional spectrum, to evoke memory and nostalgia, and to ironically attack sentimentality as an inauthentic and damaging simplification of the human condition. Running throughout these categories is a deep ambivalence about the sentimental image, which parallels American society’s love-hate relationship with this material. On the one hand, the sentimental has been ruthlessly cast out of serious intellectual discourse since the early nineteenth century (most vehemently by Modernism), but on the other, the most successful artist working today is Thomas Kinkade, a painter of treacly landscapes whose art empire is traded on the New York Stock Exchange. The embrace of sentimental imagery may well be the most radical and avant-garde stance possible for a contemporary artist to take.
Pretty Sweet includes painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, video, new and mixed-media works, and several site-specific installations created expressly for this exhibition. DeCordova’s galleries will be a riot of pastel colors, soft textures, day-glow craft materials, and found objects redolent with “sentimental value.” And the sweet imagery addressed by the artists includes birds, babies, kitsch, Disney™, antique photos, romance novel covers, sad-eyed puppies with floppy flowered hats, coloring books, stuffed animals, toiles de Jouy, Bouguereau paintings, embroidery, a fairy house for grown-ups, the Big Bad Wolf, Barbie™, angels, and grandmas.
Pretty Sweet is organized by Curator Nick Capasso and Curatorial Fellow Alexandra Novina, and includes work by Leika Akiyama, Ilona Anderson, Robert Arnold, Doug Bell, Kathleen Bitetti, Dana C. Chandler (Akin Duro), Cynthia Consentino, Christin Couture, Maryjean Viano Crowe, Katherine Desjardins, Ben Freeman, Amy Goodwin, Michela Griffo, Judy Haberl, Lorie Hamermesh, Colleen Kiely, Catherine McCarthy, Blake Ogden, Roberta Paul, Amy Podmore, David Prifti, Claudia Ravaschiere, Kay Ruane, Neil Salley, Gail Spaien, Annee Spileos Scott and David C. Scott, Edith Vonnegut, Candace Walters and Brenda Atwood Pinardi, Ann Wessmann, Lucy White, and Maxine Yalovitz-Blankenship.
Pretty Sweet: The Sentimental Image in Contemporary Art is accompanied by a full-color catalogue, and is funded in part by Mary Levin Koch and Citizens Bank Foundation.
Programs
Pretty Sweet Members’ Day
Museum Galleries
Sunday, January 23, 1 – 4 pm
In conjunction with the opening of the exhibition Pretty Sweet: The Sentimental Image in Contemporary Art, explore DeCordova’s new exhibition, and then create your own collage or Valentine. Bring an object that has sentimental value to you. As you create a Valentine for that special someone, incorporate an image of your object into your own artwork. At 2 and 3 pm, enjoy theatrical scenes, monologues, and sonnets of sentimentality performed by Boston’s acclaimed Actors’ Shakespeare Project. RSVP by Thursday, January 20 to 781/259-3629 or membership@decordova.org.
Gallery Talks: Meet the Artists
Third Floor Lobby
Saturdays @ 3 pm
Free with Museum admission
The act of creating artwork can be just as exciting as looking at the final product. Meet New England and regional artists to discuss their work on view at DeCordova in the current exhibitions.
Candace Walters and Brenda Atwood Pinardi |
April 2 |
Christin Couture and Maryjean Viano Crowe |
April 9 |
