Matthew Barney
Bernd Becher
Hilla Becher
Gregory Crewdson
Barbara Ess
Nan Goldin
Andreas Gursky
Louise Lawler
Sherrie Levine
Richard Long
Richard Misrach
Shirin Neshat
Catherine Opie
Gerhard Richter
Thomas Ruff
Cindy Sherman
Thomas Struth
Hiroshi Sugimoto
Selections from the Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company Collection. Fifty to 70 highlights will be borrowed from the Metropolitan Bank & Trust collection of about 700 photographs. This important corporate collection, particularly strong in large-scale photo-based works of art and pieces created by European and Asian artists, chronicles the striking changes in contemporary photography during the past 25 years.
Selections from the Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company Collection
South Galleries
Cleveland-based Metropolitan Bank and
Trust owns one of the largest contemporary art
collections in the U.S., and is one of the few
corporate collections devoted to photo-based works of
art. Fifty-five highlights from the banks critically acclaimed
collection will chronicle the striking innovations in technical
processes, artistic styles, and subject matter in
contemporary photography during the past 25 years in
Photography Transformed: Selections from the
Metropolitan Bank and Trust Collection at the Cleveland
Museum of Art.
The exhibition will include large-scale portraits, urban and
natural landscapes, and staged works by 54 artists, most
working in color media. They include Matthew Barney,
Bernd and Hilla Becher, Gregory Crewdson, Barbara Ess,
Nan Goldin, Andreas Gursky, Louise Lawler, Sherrie Levine,
Richard Long, Richard Misrach, Shirin Neshat, Catherine
Opie, Gerhard Richter, Thomas Ruff, Cindy Sherman,
Thomas Struth, and Hiroshi Sugimoto. Admission is free.
Metropolitan Bank and Trust Chairman and CEO Robert M.
Kaye has amassed a first-rate and innovative art collection
to enhance the banks work environment, providing
pleasure to staff and clients alike, notes CMA Director
Katharine Lee Reid. The generosity of Metropolitan Bank
and Trust has allowed this wider exposure of its marvelous
collection and we are pleased that choice selections will
be exhibited at the museum. According to Tom Hinson,
CMAs curator of photography: An exceptional artistic
ferment has changed the medium of photography during
the past quarter century. This is a wonderful opportunity
for visitors to enjoy the inventive, indeed revolutionary,
creations that have arisen out of it.
The exhibition focuses on some of the most challenging
and stimulating artists of our time. In Gregory Crewdsons
Untitled (Sewer Mystery) (1999), what appears to be a
Midwestern scene with a white house and hilly landscape
seems mysterious because of the presence of police and
firefighter vehicles and personnel. The officers and
firefighters examine steaming grates and a smoking car in a
staged tableau that in fact was created solely to be
photographed. In Shirin Neshats As yet untitled (women on
beach) (1999), a scene of dozens of black-clad women
evokes an abstract, bird-like migration to the sea; Thomas
Ruff’s Portrait (1988) of a female friend is shot like a
passport photograph of the sitter is placed against a plain
white background and stares into the camera. Musee
dOrsay 2, Paris (1989) is part of Thomas Struth’s
remarkable series of large-scale color photographs of
people visiting art museums around the world. In this
photograph (69-1/2 x 54-1/2 inches), two small figures
observe Thomas Coutures monumental painting Romans of
the Decadence (1847). Says Hinson, The large size of the
photograph emphasizes not only the expansive influence of
painting, but also the importance and impact of
photography.
The whole Metropolitan collection is known for its quality
and size - about 700 works containing some 1,300
elements. The bank’s vast collection is spread throughout
33 of its branches and loan offices, with the largest
number of works in its new corporate headquarters at
Metropolitan Plaza in Highland Hills, designed by the
Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP.
Words from Robert M. Kaye: The Metropolitan Bank and
Trust Collection
Since the 1970s, there has been increasing interest among
Cleveland businesses to collect the art of our time and to
acquire the work of local, national, and international
artists. As companies established or re-evaluated their
business strategies and corporate cultures, they
recognized the importance and value of the visual arts in
reflecting the significance of experimentation, risk-taking,
and standard setting. Works of art were meant to
stimulate, challenge, or satisfy employees and clients.
A great believer in art collecting as part of corporate
culture, and as a CMA trustee and long-time art collector
myself, I assembled this collection in consultation with
New York dealer and gallery owner Barbara Gladstone. I am
pleased to share so many great works of art with the
museum’s audience and to emphasize the importance of
art in every avenue of life.
Catalogue of Collection to Accompany Exhibition
Cleveland Museum of Art
South Galleries
11150 East Boulevard, in University Circle OH 44106-1797
Cleveland