Cantor Arts Center
Stanford
Stanford University 328 Lomita Drive and Museum Way
650 7234177 FAX 650 7250464
WEB
Go Figure!
dal 31/8/2010 al 4/8/2012
Wed-Sun, 11 am - 5 pm, Thurs until 8 pm

Segnalato da

Anna Koster, Cantor Arts Center



 
calendario eventi  :: 




31/8/2010

Go Figure!

Cantor Arts Center, Stanford

On show 25 figurative paintings and sculpture


comunicato stampa

The Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University announces new displays of contemporary art. When the art museum at Stanford reopened in 1999 as the Cantor Arts Center, the top floor of its new wing was devoted to art of the past four decades. Since then, more than 750 works of European and American art in diverse media have been added to the modern and contemporary collection, expanding it to 2700 objects and extending it into the 21st century. Selections from this enhanced collection open in four galleries.

“Go Figure!” begins September 1, 2010. Although recent art is often equated with abstraction, many important artists of the last 50 years have explored the human figure in their paintings and three-dimensional work. “Go Figure” includes 25 figurative paintings and sculpture, including witty examples by Karel Appel, Richard Shaw, Richard Stankiewicz, Viola Frey, and Roger Brown; politically charged works by Robert Arneson and Terry Allen; and traditional approaches to the human form by Robert Graham and Martin Blank. This overview includes works from each decade since the 1950s, presented in three adjacent spaces: the Oshman Family Rotunda, the H. L. Kwee Galleria, and the McMurtry Family Terrace.

“Go Figure!” continues through August 5, 2012. “Extreme Makeover” continues indefinitely with occasional changes. In addition, the Center presents works from the early-20th-century modern collection in the Marie Stauffer Sigall Gallery. This accounts for five of the Center’s 24 galleries, with the remaining spaces dedicated to special exhibitions and collections spanning 4000 years, from ancient China, Egypt, Greece, and Rome to 19th-century Europe and America.

Outdoors, the Center offers an impressive array of sculpture. Andy Goldworthy’s 128-ton “Stone River,” made in 2001, rests in a grove in front of the museum’s historic 1894 building. The Rodin Sculpture Garden is on the Center’s grounds, with Auguste Rodin’s “Burghers of Calais” nearby on campus. Contemporary works by 35 artists, including Joseph Albers, Alexander Calder, Joan Miró, Henry Moore, Beverly Pepper, and George Segal, are placed throughout campus. The Papua New Guinea Sculpture Garden contains 40 works.

Contact Margaret Whitehorn at 650-724-3600 or email mmwhite@stanford.edu

Image: Viola Frey
Aquarium Man (detail), 1981
Polychrome glazed whiteware
Gift of Ross and Paula Turk, Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, 2005.72

Opening September 1, 2010

Cantor Arts Center
Stanford campus, off Palm Drive at Museum Way
open Wednesday – Sunday, 11 am - 5 pm
Thursday until 8 pm
Admission is free

IN ARCHIVIO [37]
Sympathy for the Devil
dal 19/8/2014 al 30/11/2014

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede