RISD Museum of Art
Providence
224 Benefit Street
401 4546500 FAX 401 4546556
WEB
Circus
dal 31/7/2014 al 21/2/2015

Segnalato da

Matthew Berry



 
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31/7/2014

Circus

RISD Museum of Art, Providence

The spectacle of the American and European circus takes center stage in this glimpse into the visual world of this phenomenon during the height of its popularity, 1850 to 1960. About 40 paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, and posters by artists such as Alexander Calder, Marc Chagall, Henri Matisse...


comunicato stampa

The circus presents human and animal bodies in their extremes, juxtaposing grace, strength, and elegance with the wonderous and grotesque. These characteristics extend to the visual culture of the circus, from ephemeral advertisements designed by now-unknown artists to monumental canvases executed by critically acclaimed painters.

The artists whose works are featured in this exhibition delve into both the imagery of the circus and its wider cultural connections, exploring popular entertainment as subject matter and a times using it as a tool for cultural critique.

The first modern circus was performed in London in 1768 at Philip Astley’s equestrian school, with the first American incarnation debuting in 1774 in Newport, Rhode Island, with Christopher H. Gardner’s performance of equestrian acts.

Between 1850 and 1950, the circus grew to include animal acts, acrobats, and the sideshow, giving rise in the U.S. to Barnum & Bailey’s “Greatest Show on Earth” and the Ringling Brothers Circus, Zirkus Sarrasani and Zirkus Hagenbeck in Germany, the Cirque Fernando (later Medrano) and the Cirque d’Hiver in Paris, and dozens of smaller troupes throughout Europe and the United States.

The spectacle of the Am erican and European circus takes center stage in this glimp se into the visual world of this phenomenon during the height of its popularity, 1850 to 1960. About 40 paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, and posters by artists such as Alexander Calder, Ma r c Chagall, Henri Matisse, James - Jacques - Joseph Tissot, and Henri de Toulouse - Lautrec delve into life under the big top and its wider connections to culture and society.

The rise of the circus was closely tied to the industrialization of the United States and Europe. An increasingly pervasive railroad system enabled touring to small towns as well as large urban centers. The manufacture of circus posters—typically made with woodcut until the 1870s—changed dramatically as widespread use of the technology of lithography enabled poster designers to make more complex and graphically dynamic images in greater quantities. For its audiences, the circus served as both entertainment and education, providing many circus-goers with their first exposure to cultures from around the world, shaping knowledge while simultaneously reinforcing Western rule of, and cultural dominance over, colonized lands.

Circus is made possible by the generous support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Harlan & Amy Korenvaes Family Foundation

Image: James Tissot, Ladies of the Chariots, ca. 1883-1885. Gift of Mr. Walter Lowry.

Press contact:
Lani Stack
Senior Publicist 401 454 6506 lstack@risd.edu
Matthew Berry
Marketing Assistant mberry@risd.edu 401 709 8513

Design the Night celebration: August 21, 5-9 pm, FREE!

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

IN ARCHIVIO [9]
Drawing Ambience
dal 23/4/2015 al 1/8/2015

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