Felix Gonzales-Torres
Patty Chang
Maureen Connor
Olafur Eliasson
Jeroen Jacobs
Jeff Koons
Christian Marclay
Donna Neild
Alyson Shotz
Carrie Yamaoka
Jane Simon
Mirror Mirror, MASS MoCA's exhibition opening October 5, brings together ten works of contemporary art that use mirrors as their primary media. Installed in the Michael and Agnese Meehan Gallery and the Prints and Drawings Gallery, the exhibition is curated by Jane Simon, a student in the Williams/Clark Graduate program in the History of Art.
Mirror Mirror
Features Reflective Contemporary Work
Exhibition opens October 5
(North Adams, Massachusetts) Mirror Mirror, MASS MoCA's exhibition opening
October 5, brings together ten works of contemporary art that use mirrors as
their primary media. Installed in the Michael and Agnese Meehan Gallery and
the Prints and Drawings Gallery, the exhibition is curated by Jane Simon, a
student in the Williams/Clark Graduate program in the History of Art.
The "mirror stage" when children first recognize themselves is widely
understood as a critical phase of human development. Mirrors, both
symbolically and practically, are the fulcrum within that development, and
this exhibition features artworks that use mirrors to re-examine the concept
of a unitary "self". The mirrors in the exhibition are cracked, wrapped in
swirling baroque forms, faceted, inserted into a television set, interwoven
with transparent glass, and used to create a sparkling insect costume. In
each case, the artists have used the physical material of the mirror to
undermine its spiritual or symbolic connotations.
Examples include: Felix Gonzales-Torres' poignant Untitled (Orpheus Twice)
in which two full-sized mirrors are displayed side by side. When the viewers
stand in front of one they see only themselves, with no reflection in the
other. (Orpheus, the lyre-player of Greek mythology, tried but failed to
free his dead wife from the underworld with music; so too does
Gonzales-Torres seem to speak to his longing for an absent lover.)
In a video installation, Fountain, Patty Chang tackles another Greek myth.
Like the beautiful youth Narcissus, Chang sees her reflection in a fountain,
falling so in love with herself that she tries to lap up her image,
humorously slurping the water. If asked "Who is the fairest of them all?"
few viewers of this video would nominate Chang.
In the image: 'Fountain', Patty Chang, C-print, 1999.
Other artists include Maureen Connor, Olafur Eliasson and Jeroen Jacobs,
Jeff Koons, Christian Marclay, Donna Neild, Alyson Shotz, and Carrie
Yamaoka.
The exhibition is made possible by the Clark Art Institute in support of the
Williams/Clark Graduate program in the History of Art. The Sterling &
Francine Clark Art Institute has been placing interns from its graduate art
program in the curatorial department at MASS MoCA since well before MASS
MoCA opened. Mirror Mirror is the seventh in a continuing series of
exhibitions organized by graduate students at MASS MoCA.
MASS MoCA, housed on a 13-acre campus of restored 19th-century factory
buildings, is the largest center for contemporary art in the country. MASS
MoCA is located on Marshall Street in North Adams, Massachusetts.
Through October 31, MASS MoCA's galleries are open 10 AM - 6 PM.
Admission is $9 for
adults, $3 for children 6-16, free for children under 6, and free for
members at all times. After November 1, the galleries are open from 11 AM-5
PM and closed Tuesdays.
Admission after November 1 is $7 for adults, $5 for
seniors and students, $2 for children 6-16, and free for children under 6
and members. For additional information, call 413 662 2111 or visit the web site
For Immediate Release
Contact Katherine Myers
(413) 664-4481 x8113
katherine@massmoca.org
Lenora Farrington
Marketing Assistant
MASS MoCA
1040 MASS MoCA Way
North Adams, MA 01247
413-664-4481 ext. 8111
FX: 413-663-854