Museum Contemporary Photography
Chicago
600 South Michigan Avenue, Illinois 60605
312.344.8067 FAX 312.344.8067
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This Land Is Your Land
dal 31/1/2008 al 21/3/2008

Segnalato da

Audrey Michelle Mast



 
calendario eventi  :: 




31/1/2008

This Land Is Your Land

Museum Contemporary Photography, Chicago

A group exhibition of work by seven artists - two of whom are American, and five of whom are not - offering diverse perceptions of the United States. Their artwork touches upon some of the most current American concerns as well as some of its most enduring stereotypes. They use current events, personal observations, and often humor to comment on the political, religious, and cultural climate of this country.


comunicato stampa

In February 2008, the MoCP will open a group exhibition of work by seven artists—two of whom are American, and five of whom are not—offering diverse perceptions of the United States. Their artwork touches upon some of the most current American concerns as well as some of its most enduring stereotypes. They use current events, personal observations, and often humor to comment on the political, religious, and cultural climate of this country. In their work they demonstrate that our nation’s character is not tribal, but rather it is a constantly shifting confluence of traditions, stereotypes, and opinions, as understood from both within the country and from the outside. MoCP curator Karen Irvine titled the show after Woody Guthrie’s 1940 song, written in response to what he felt was the overzealous glorification of the country in the lyrics of Irving Berlin’s song “God Bless America,” widely released in 1938. Guthrie was reacting to what he believed was a disconnect between the exalted adoration of the country in Berlin’s song and the reality of social problems such as the extremely unbalanced distribution of wealth that existed at the end of the Great Depression.

Sixty-seven years later, “This Land is Your Land” has become one of the most popular patriotic songs of all time. But what seems to be patriotic, even positive, on the surface is not always what it seems, and the works in this exhibition reflect the polarizing issues our nation faces today: the complicated and messy War on Terror, as well as battles over immigration, security, abortion, and economics. However, Irvine says that “perhaps these fissures are indicators of patriotism in its higher form – the questioning of one’s country in a desire to make it better.”

MoCP curator Karen Irvine titled the show after Woody Guthrie’s 1940 song, written in response to what he felt was the overzealous glorification of the country in the lyrics of Irving Berlin’s song “God Bless America,” widely released in 1938. Guthrie was reacting to what he believed was a disconnect between the exalted adoration of the country in Berlin’s song and the reality of social problems such as the extremely unbalanced distribution of wealth that existed at the end of the Great Depression. 67 years later, “This Land is Your Land” has become one of the most popular patriotic songs of all time. But what seems to be patriotic, even positive, on the surface is not always what it seems, and the works in this exhibition reflect the polarizing issues our nation faces today: the complicated and messy War on Terror, as well as battles over immigration, security, abortion, and economics. Yet, says Irvine, “perhaps these fissures are indicators of patriotism in its higher form – the questioning of one’s country in a desire to make it better.”

Image: Greg Stimac, Still from Peeling Out, 2007

Press contacts
Audrey Michelle Mast
Web/PR/Marketing Administrator P: 773.459.5777 F: 312.344.8067 audrey.m.mast@gmail.com

Jeffrey Arnett
Manager of Development and Marketing P: 312.344.7779 F: 312.344-8067 jarnett@colum.edu

Museum Contemporary Photography
600 South Michigan Avenue - Chicago

IN ARCHIVIO [8]
Building Pictures
dal 2/4/2008 al 30/5/2008

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