Mat Brinkman
Brian Chippendale
Jim Drain
Leif Goldberg
Jungil Hong
Xander Marro
Erin Rosenthal,
Pippi Zornoza
Providence, 1995 to the present. The exhibition is conceived by a group of 8 artists: Mat Brinkman, Brian Chippendale, Jim Drain, Leif Goldberg, Jungil Hong, Xander Marro, Erin Rosenthal, and Pippi Zornoza.
Providence, 1995 to the present
For the past decade, Providence, RI, has been the site of a radical underground art
scene, giving rise to a multi-faceted, unbridled aesthetic that is as distinct as it
is influential. This fall, the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design will
present Wunderground: Providence, 1995 to the present, an exhibition celebrating
Providence’s intersection of art and music.
This watershed exhibition consists of two parts, representing present and past:
Shangri-la-la-land and Providence Poster Art, 1995-2005. Organized by Judith
Tannenbaum, Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art at The RISD Museum, the
exhibition is conceived by a core group of eight artists: Mat Brinkman, Brian
Chippendale, Jim Drain, Leif Goldberg, Jungil Hong, Xander Marro, Erin Rosenthal,
and Pippi Zornoza.
“This exhibition provides an extraordinary window onto a thriving creative world
whose art is seldom-seen by mainstream museum-goers," says Tannenbaum. “We hope to
honor the non-establishment spirit of this community within the Museum’s walls."
For Shangri-la-la-land the eight artists will construct a sculptural installation
especially for the Museum’s soaring 30-foot Main Gallery, transforming it into a
fantastic landscape loosely based on the idea of a village. The artists, who work
in a range of media including video and film animation, comics, music, puppet
theater, and screen-printing, will make a winding path through eccentric buildings
and trees, with a 16-foot monster looming above.
Providence Poster Art, 1995-2005 will display, floor-to-ceiling, some 2,000
screen-printed posters—a comprehensive timeline of the signature creative activities
of the underground’s last decade. Over 200 artists created these graphic, cartoony
posters for off-the-radar venues in which Providence’s mighty “noise" music scene
was born. Headsets with recordings of live shows will pepper the galleries.
The posters date back to the summer of 1995, when two RISD students founded the
celebrated artists’ collective/rock-show venue, “Fort Thunder," in Providence. The
industrial neighborhood of Olneville provided a liberating backdrop for loud music
and legendary events. Olneyville became a haven for communal artists’ spaces,
offering that ineffable mix of possibility and freedom that breeds truly
revolutionary movements.
By 2001, Fort Thunder’s raucous interiors were featured in Nest magazine; soon
after, the resident four-artist group Forcefield was included in the 2002 Whitney
Biennial. Chippendale’s celebrated noise-music duo, Lightning Bolt, was touring
internationally, and Brinkman’s comic ‘zines were drawing critical acclaim. The
Fort itself was short-lived, but its intrepid residents and their Olneyville cohorts
persevered in new collective living spaces: notably Hilarious Attic, current site of
several former Fort Thunder artists, and the women’s art collective the Dirt Palace.
Organization
Judith Tannenbaum was named The RISD Museum’s first curator of contemporary art in
2000. In 2002, she became the Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art, the
Museum’s first endowed position. At RISD she has organized Island Nations: New Art
from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and the Diaspora (2004), Betty
Woodman: Il Giardino dipinto (2005), On the Wall: Wallpaper by Contemporary Artists
(2003), and Jim Isermann: Logic Rules (2000), among other exhibitions. From 1986 to
2000, Tannenbaum served variously as curator, associate director, and interim
director at the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania.
Publication
Wunderground will be accompanied by a full-color, illustrated catalogue with a
foreword by celebrated artist and designer Gary Panter. Two major texts, written by
Judith Tannenbaum and Providence gallerist Sara Agniel, will contextualize
Providence’s unique art scene. Artists, musicians, writers, and students who created
and witnessed it offer shorter texts providing a kaleidoscopic portrait of a time
and place. The catalogue is being produced in collaboration with the award-winning
art director Dan Nadel of PictureBox, Inc.
The RISD Museum of Art, a world-class museum in Providence, RI, was founded as part
of Rhode Island School of Design in 1877.
The RISD Museum
224 Benefit Street - Providence