On the matter of abstraction (figs. A & B), a dynamic installation of art from the permanent collection; the installation Walead Beshty: Untitled; a series of painterly videos by the British artist Sam Jury.
Opening on February 13, the Rose Art Museum will present On the
matter of abstraction (figs. A & B), a dynamic installation of art from the permanent collection
organized by Los Angeles-based artist Walead Beshty in collaboration with Rose director Christopher
Bedford, and the installation, Walead Beshty: Untitled.
Also opening on the 13th will be Sam Jury: Coerced Nature, a series of painterly videos by the British
artist shown both at the Rose and in public spaces on campus.
On view through June 9, the exhibitions are free and open to the public.
Artist Walead Beshty collaborated with Christopher Bedford, Henry and Lois Foster Director of the
Rose, to create On the matter of abstraction (figs. A & B). Comprised of post-war non-figurative works
drawn from the Rose’s permanent collection, the exhibition takes the architecture of the museum’s
original building (Max Abramovitz, 1961), and uses it to structure two parallel narratives. The entry
level, a terrazzo clad room with floor to ceiling windows, features works in the tradition of analytic
abstraction by Ellsworth Kelly, Sol Lewitt, Robert Mangold, Kenneth Noland, Agnes Martin and Judy
Chicago, among many others. Downstairs, the materially laden objects on display demonstrate a
contrasting investment in the unruly. With works by Mark Bradford, Jessica Stockholder, Ana Mendieta,
Helen Frankenthaler, Robert Rauschenberg and Charline von Heyl, among others, the lower level focuses
not only on the gesture and body of the artist but also on the cultural detritus of the world at large. Beshty
describes the visitor’s descent to the lower floor as a movement from “the cathedral to the cave... both
existing as traditional sites of ritual, contemplation and communion.” here re-imagined as a passage from
“line to stain.”
Within the same space, Beshty created a separate work, a mirror and glass floor that runs throughout both
levels of the building: Untitled (Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University: Waltham, Massachusetts,
February 12 – June 9, 2013). According to Bedford, “While Beshty’s floor is not part of the exhibition
on the surrounding walls, it does function as a physical armature for the viewing experience, straddling—
perhaps even collapsing—the dialectical concept that structures On the matter of abstraction’s two parts.
But while Beshty’s floor may lack an image of its own, it absorbs the world around it through reflection,
becoming by virtue of context a highly representational device. Over time and through use, the surface
cracks as a result of visitors’ movements, subsequently taking apart the images of the objects we see in it,
until finally that reflected world is nothing more than a dense matrix of fractured images and jagged
lines.”
Sam Jury: Coerced Nature is a series of video installations presented in the newly renovated Lee
Gallery and on campus. Jury’s subjects are as specific as the fraught relationship between human beings
and our environments, natural and architectural, and as general as the psychological impact of screen-
based technologies on our perception of what is real. She melds staged, fragmented performances with
eerily familiar yet unrecognizable places, creating impossible, emotionally layered scenes. The work
hovers outside a specific time, location or even artistic genre while feeling utterly contemporary.
On view are works newly created for the exhibition, such as The Approach 4 (2012) and Three Parts
Against (2013), as well as earlier pieces, including Over for the Day (2009) and About Nowhere (2010),
projected onto sculptural forms, walls, windows, and small boxes, with some work intervening on
Brandeis’ public spaces. In addition to installations proportioned to specific gallery spaces, a large
projection appears in a window of the Shapiro Campus Center, and tiny screens surprise in unexpected
nooks of the university libraries.
According to curator Dabney Hailey, “While Jury’s body of work includes painting, photography,
performance and video, Coerced Nature focuses on her video installations, which marry elements of all
these mediums. The artist refers to her video work as sitting between ‘trauma and rapture,’ between
passive and active gazes, and between isolation and voyeurism. These ambivalences—which in many
ways characterize the digital age—cohere in Jury’s charged, entrancing works of art.”
ARTIST TALKS
Walead Beshty will present a 3-part lecture series on Thursday, February 7 at 7:00 pm (Brandeis
University Admissions Building Presentation Room), Monday, February 11 at 7:00 pm (Brandeis
University Admissions Building Presentation Room), and Wednesday, February 13 at 4:00 pm at the
museum, preceding the 5:00 pm opening.
Sam Jury will give a gallery talk on Thursday, February 14 at 5:00 pm.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Walead Beshty (b. 1976, London, UK) is an artist and writer working in Los Angeles, and Associate
Professor in the Graduate Art Department of Art Center College of Design. Recent solo exhibitions
include, Travel Pictures at Thomas Dane Gallery, London; Securities and Exchanges at Ullens Center for
Contemporary Art, Beijing; A Diagram of Forces at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden / CA2M, Madrid; and
PROCESSCOLORFIELD at Regen Projects, Los Angeles; among others. Beshty’s work is included in
many public collections including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Guggenheim Museum,
New York; The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and
The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among others. Monographs on his work include,
Walead Beshty: Selected Correspondences 2001-2010 (Damiani Editore), and Walead Beshty: Natural
Histories (JRP|Ringier). As a writer, he is a regular contributor to Texte zur Kunst and Afterall Journal,
and has written for Artforum, Aperture, Art Review, and Art on Paper, among others. Beshty is
represented by Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Thomas Dane Gallery, London; and Galerie Rodolphe
Janssen, Brussels.
Best known for her hauntingly beautiful photography-based work and video portraits in light, Sam Jury
was the Rose Art Museum’s 2011 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist in Residence. Recent solo
shows include forever is never at the Herbert F Johnson Museum, Cornell, and Still and Still Moving at
the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, where she was artist in residence. Earlier residencies and
exhibitions were in Sharjah, UAE, and Beijing, China. Jury graduated with an MFA in painting from
Cornell University followed by a two year Fellowship at the Royal Academy Schools, London. She has
lived and worked in the USA and Middle East and is now based in the UK, where she was born. Sam
Jury is represented by Stephen Haller Gallery, New York.
ABOUT THE ROSE ART MUSEUM, BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY
Founded in 1961, the Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, is an educational and cultural institution
dedicated to collecting, preserving and exhibiting the finest of modern and contemporary art. The
programs of the Rose adhere to the overall mission of the university, embracing its values of academic
excellence, social justice and freedom of expression. The museum’s permanent collection of postwar and
contemporary art is unequalled in New England and among the best at any university art museum in the
United States.
Located on Brandeis University’s campus at 415 South Street, Waltham, MA, the museum is free and
open to the public Tuesday through Sunday, noon – 5:00 p.m.
For more information, visit www.brandeis.edu/rose/ or call 781-736-3434.
Press contact:
Nina Berger tel 617 5431595 nberger@brandeis.edu
Opening Reception: February 13, 5-8 p.m.
Rose Art Museum
Brandeis University
415 South Street MS 069 Waltham MA 02453
T 781 7363434