Tag: Art
Roald Nasgaard/Lori Walters & Christopher Varley collections in summer exhibition
#ThisIsMyHamOnt
Exit Strategy: McMaster’s Graduating BFA Student Exhibition
Slow Art Day at McMaster Returns April 9: Register Now!
SHIFT: Reception Pics & A Closer Look at Prints Video
Wellness on Campus: Panel Discussion February 25 at 6 pm
Museum Acquires Rare 1937 ‘Degenerate Art’ Exhibition Guide
Opening Reception: Thursday January 14, 6-8 PM
SHIFT: Environmentally Responsible Print Practice Exhibition
Presenting ‘Art of Peace’ by Six Nations Artist Elizabeth Doxtater
Takao Tanabe Gives Six Works of Art to McMaster
PICTURING WELLNESS: Exhibitions and Events
PANEL DISCUSSION: The Unvarnished Truth
McMaster’s Collection on Tour – Living Building Thinking: Art and Expressionism
Talk: Artist John Scott & Curator Ann MacDonald
Museum’s 1920 Novel in Woodcuts Conserved for Exhibition
Extraordinary Replica of McMaster’s László Moholy-Nagy
Walking Tour of Exhibit with Researcher Brandi Lee MacDonald
Museum partners with Supercrawl to present John Dickson’s art
Presenting The Unvarnished Truth: Exhibition and Events
John Scott – Installation week photographs
The McMaster presentation of Dark Commander includes 20 works by Governor General Award winning artist John Scott. The powerful exhibition prompted one opening-day visitor to comment, the “menacing images and ideology reflect on the progress of the 20th and 21st century…human quest and conquest.”
We invite you to see the exhibition, join us for the Public Reception on September 17, 6-8 pm and attend the Artist’s Talk October 29, 6 pm. All events are free (note: seating is limited)
DARK COMMANDER: The Art of John Scott
The Golych Collection of Inuit Art Gifted to McMaster
What a Week…of Creativity!
Art on Campus Beyond the Museum
Grad Student ‘Week of Creativity’ Events
Museum in a Minute: exhibition inspires 3 new videos
McMaster’s Moholy-Nagy loaned to Santa Barbara Museum of Art
Francisco Gazitua’s sculpture a diary of bridges, ships and public art
Celebrating & Exploring the Arts
Waking the Magicians 2015 and Magiciens de la Terre 1989
Waking the Magicians, 2015
In addition to his solo exhibition at the Museum this summer, Artist/Curator Brad Isaacs has selected two works from McMaster’s collection―one by Carl Beam and the other by Richard Long―for the installation in the adjacent gallery. The works are intended to renew questions about land, place, relationships to nature in an art historical context, and the space for indigenous art within the broader contemporary art world. His title for the installation, Waking the Magicians, is a reference to the controversial juxtaposition of works by Richard Long and the Yuendumu language group (Northern Territories), Australia in the 1989 exhibition Magiciens de la Terre at the Centre Georges Pompidou curated by Jean-Hubert Martin. Waking the Magicians continues until August 15, 2015.
Magiciens de la Terre, 1989
“An exhibition loved and hated in equal measure, Martin curated the show to address the fact that there were, as he put it, “one hundred percent of exhibitions ignoring 80 percent of the earth.” He attempted to engage critically with certain aspects of neo-colonial mentality in the West, particularly a resurgent interest in ‘primitivism,’ which Martin felt aestheticized exotic cultures without destablilizing western definitions of fine art, modernism, or identity. The exhibition included works by 100 artists (50 from the so called ‘West’ and 50 from the ‘margins’), attempting to show all on equal footing.” 1
For the 1989 exhibition, Richard Long’s Red Earth Circle was installed beside Yuendumu community’s Yam Dreaming. On this juxtaposition, art historians Ivan Karp and Fred Wilson wrote:
“The sand painting…in front of [Long] left you with the feeling that here were two artists from extraordinarily different places trying to reproduce the elements of the world. But for Long, the elements are base materials themselves, and for the Australian Aboriginal painting, they’re visible signs of the hidden world.” 2
Here is a video of the Yuendumu community installing their work in Magiciens de la Terre
Magiciens de la Terre, 1989 (7′ 50″ clip) from Marco di Castri on Vimeo.
And here is Richard Long installing his work in Magiciens de la Terre
1 “Magiciens De La Terre.” FORMER WEST. BAK, n.d. Web. 20 May 2015. <http://www.formerwest.org/ResearchLibrary/MagiciensdelaTerre>.
2 “CONSTRUCTING THE SPECTACLE OF CULTURE IN MUSEUMS” Ivan Karp and Fred Wilson
This text is drawn from the lecture series ‘Art in context: rethinking the New World,’ sponsored in the Fall
of 1992 by the Atlanta College of Art Gallery and Continuing Education Department. It was originally
published in Artpapers, 17:3 (May–June 1993), pp. 2–9.
http://www.jinavalentine.com/archiving/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Wilson-Karp-Museums.pdf