H. C. Westermann
Jack Kirby
William Copley
Christina Ramberg
Gary Panter
Elizabeth Murray
Alternative Figures in American Art, 1960 to the Present. An history of figurative painting, sculpture, and vernacular image-making from 1960 to the present that has been overlooked and undervalued.
What Nerve! traces a history of figurative painting, sculpture, and vernacular imagery that has been largely overlooked and undervalued relative to modernist abstraction and conceptual art. Since the 1960s, many artists working outside New York developed idiosyncratic forms of figuration, unsettling the strict rationales of dominant visual and theoretical trends. When confronted with a system that might seem impenetrable, outsiders often band together, and four important regional gatherings of artists across the nation generated powerful ripples in the art world and beyond.
At the heart of What Nerve! is a re-creation of these four crucial exhibitions, happenings, spaces, and groups: Hairy Who in Chicago, Funk in San Francisco, Destroy All Monsters in Ann Arbor, and Forcefield in Providence. These installations are linked together by six influential or intersecting artists who similarly grappled with figurative and expressive interests. Radiating outward as spokes of connection, these artists—William Copley, Jack Kirby, Elizabeth Murray, Gary Panter, Christina Ramberg and H.C. Westermann—were markedly influenced by, or a crucial influence on, the four artist groups or hubs at the core of the exhibition.
All of the artists in What Nerve! ran against the modernist grain and its emphasis on theory. Rather than attempting to compete with mainstream modernism, their influences ran towards comics, folk art, and vernacular signage—as well as the vulgar, profane, and out-of-bounds. Instead of distancing their art through irony or institutional critique, they seized imagery and ideas from vernacular sources as diverse as comics and pottery, pulling and reshaping material from their environments to tackle a variety of subjects with equal doses of satire and sincerity.
Featuring more than 180 paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, and videos—as well as ephemera, posters, and other materials featured in reconstructed installations—What Nerve! and its accompanying book represent the first historical examination of the circumstances, relationships, and works of this increasingly important lineage of American artists, and the exuberance, humor, and politics of their artworks remain powerfully resonant.
What Nerve! is supported by a grant from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Programs & Events
Critical Encounters with Body, Place, and Time
Friday, September 19, 2014 | 1-4 pm | free
Gallery conversations with artists, curators, and art historians explore key issues emerging from What Nerve!
Screenings: Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists
Sundays, September 21 and October 12, 2014 | 2-4 pm | free
Image: Christina Ramberg, Probed Cinch, 1971. Copyright estate of Christina Ramberg
Press contacts:
Lani Stack
Senior Publicist 401 454 6506 lstack@risd.edu
Matthew Berry
Marketing Assistant mberry@risd.edu 401 709 8513
Design the Night opening celebration, September 18, 5-9 pm
Free, all welcome
RISD Museum
20 North Main St (also enter on 224 Benefit Street) Providence, RI 02903
Hours:
Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 am–5 pm
Thursdays, 10 am–9 pm
closed Mondays, and January 1, July 4, Thanksgiving Day, and December 25.
Admission
Members: free
Adults: $12
Senior citizens (age 62+): $10
Youths (ages 5–18): $3
Children under 5: free
College students with valid ID: $5