The Old, Weird America: Folk Themes in Contemporary Art
Joyce and Edward Linde Gallery, Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Media Space, Arcade Gallery, Dewey Family Gallery, James and Audrey Foster Galleries, Fourth Floor Hallway Gallery
June 6 – Sept 7, 2009
Opening Reception:
Saturday, June 6
Members' Preview: 6 — 7 pm
Public Reception: 7 — 9 pm
FREE
The Old, Weird America was the recipient of a prestigious award from the International Art Critics Association: Best Thematic Museum Show Nationally, 2008. This exhibition will also be the largest in the history of DeCordova, filling all of its indoor galleries.
The Old, Weird America will feature eighteen artists who explore native, idiomatic, and communal subjects from America’s past: Eric Beltz, Jeremy Blake, Sam Durant, Barnaby Furnas, Deborah Grant, Matthew Day Jackson, Brad Kahlhamer, Margaret Kilgallen, David McDermott and Peter McGough, Aaron Morse, Cynthia Norton (a.k.a. Ninny), Greta Pratt, David Rathman, Dario Robleto, Allison Smith, Kara Walker, and Charlie White. Covering the period from the first Thanksgiving in 1621 to the beginning of the Space Age in 1957, their representational paintings, sculptures, drawings, photographs, installations, and videos reconsider important legends and figures in United States history. Indians, Pilgrims, Founding Fathers, cowboys, Civil War widows, bobby soxers, and Depression-style drifters are among the Ur-American characters populating storytelling works that —like all good folklore —recklessly combine myth and fact to suggest an alternative national history.
During times of change and social stress, cultures look to their master narratives. For example, in the United States, Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton, and other artists in the Regionalist movement of the 1930s and 40s rejected abstract, European Modernism and turned their attention to depicting rural and domestic life in realist styles, in part as a reaction against the horrors of that continent’s First World War. Similarly, says exhibition curator Kamps, “in this post-9/11 America of high-emotion and sweeping change, artists naturally look for inspiration in the forgotten and unresolved relics of our nation, the volatile and mercurial old, weird America of folk history.”
To be included in the exhibition are renowned works, such as: Kara Walker’s animated, Balinese-style shadow-puppet video, 8 Possible Beginnings or: The Creation of African-America, a Moving Picture by Kara E. Walker (2005), a fearless satire of black origin myths and white racism in outrageous vignettes featuring slave ships, gay master-and-slave sex, and dancing cotton-boll babies; Sam Durant’s sculptural installation Pilgrims and Indians, Planting and Reaping, Learning and Teaching (2006) restages two amateurish dioramas from the defunct Plymouth National Wax Museum in Massachusetts juxtaposing two radically different versions of how the Jamestown Colony came to celebrate the first Thanksgiving in 1621; Margaret Kilgallen’s installation Main Drag (2001) depicts, in a playful, cartoon-like style, a low-rent town of the imagination inhabited by surfers, hobos, juvenile delinquents, and dames in beehive hairdos; Barnaby Furnas’s paintings and watercolors express the chaos and confusion of battle, and works on view such as John Brown (2005) feature glowing blood, explosions, and tracer bullets as well as representations of time-lapse movement reminiscent of film and videogame special effects; Jeremy Blake’s digitally composed video Winchester (2002), inspired by the labyrinth-like house of rifle heiress Sarah Winchester, morphs vintage photographs of the house, mysterious cowboy shadows, and Blake’s own abstract “digital paintings” to create a lush, engulfing image of a uniquely American form of madness.
The Old, Weird America has been made possible by the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston patrons, benefactors, and donors to its exhibition fund. This exhibition has been made possible by generous support from Union Pacific and Nina and Michael Zilkha. Its appearance at DeCordova is made possible by Trustee and Overseer support of DeCordova’s Fund for the Future.
The exhibition is accompanied by a 162-page, full-illustration catalog published by the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston that will provide a cultural and historical context for the artworks. The publication will include essays by Kamps, the show’s curator; Colleen Sheehy, Director of Education at the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum and art historian at University of Minnesota in Minneapolis; and Michael Duncan, a critic and curator based in Los Angeles. It will also contain reproductions of the exhibited work, as well as biographical and bibliographical information on each artist. This catalogue was made possible by a grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc.
The Old, Weird America Public Programs:
During the exhibition please visit the Process Gallery on the 3rd floor to learn more about some of the themes addressed in this exhibition, as well as various artists' creative processes and inspirations. Additional programming includes the following:
Free Friday Nights in July!
Admission is FREE after 5 pm
July 3, 10, 17, 24, + 31 from 5-9 pm
Gallery Talks:
Artist Dario Robleto: Saturday, June 6 at 3 pm
Senior Curator Nick Capasso: Saturday, July 11 at 3 pm
Artist Matthew Day Jackson: Saturday July 25 at 3 pm
Panel Discussion:
American Perspectives in the Arts, with exhibiting artists Barnaby Furnas and Matthew Day Jackson
Thursday, June 25 at 6:30 pm
Preview Screening:
The Banjo Project with Filmmaker Marc Fields
Saturday, June 13 at 3 pm
Workshop Series:
Americana Sculpture with Dario Robleto
Saturday, June 6 + Sunday, June 7
Register through the DeCordova Museum School at 781/259-0505
Eye Wonder Family Program:
Dario Robleto
Sunday, June 7 from 1 —3 pm
On view in the Museum School Gallery:
Juried Student Exhibition: America
May 9 —June 28, 2009
Reception: Sunday, June 28, 2 —3 pm
This exhibition will take a cue from the Museum exhibition, The Old, Weird America, and will explore contemporary perspectives of America. Whether it's a Lincoln landscape, a commentary on our "weird" history, or an editorial on the recent election, this exhibition will cover it all!
Barnaby Furnas
John Brown (2005)
urethane and dye on linen,
72 x 60 inches,
Private Collection, New York;
Courtesy the Artist