Whitney Museum of American Art
New York
99 Gansevoort Street
212 5703676, 212 5703633 FAX 212 5704169
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Two openings at Whitney
dal 2/7/2003 al 12/10/2003
212 5703676
WEB
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Whitney Museum of American Art


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Sarah Sze



 
calendario eventi  :: 




2/7/2003

Two openings at Whitney

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

The American Effect will explore a wide range of global perceptions of America in works of art made since 1990 and the rise of America as the lone global superpower. Sarah Sze: The Triple Point of Water at Sculpture Court. Known for her astonishingly intricate site-specific installations, Sarah Sze will create a fantastical urban garden this summer in the Whitney Museum's Sculpture Court.


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The American Effect

at Emily Fisher Landau Galleries, Floor 4

The American Effect will explore a wide range of global perceptions of America in works of art made since 1990 and the rise of America as the lone global superpower. With 47 artists and filmmakers, and three collaborative groups, selected from 30 countries in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, South and North America, the show will survey works in a broad range of media, including drawing, photography, film, installation, painting, sculpture, video, and Internet art. Curated by Lawrence Rinder, the Whitney's Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator of Contemporary Art, The American Effect will be on view from July 3 to October 12, 2003.

'The timing of The American Effect is very much related to a renewed urgency about this subject, with America now increasingly coming to terms with how it is perceived abroad,' said Maxwell L. Anderson, Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney Museum. 'With this exhibition, the Whitney looks at how artists, primarily non-American, depict, imagine and respond to America and its presence in the world.'

The American Effect has been made possible by support from Ronald L. Bailey, The Mat Charitable Trust, The Rockefeller Foundation, Jeanne and Michael Klein, AFAA/'Programme Afrique en creations,' The Cultural Services of the French Embassy, and the National Committee of the Whitney Museum of American Art.

To organize the exhibition, curator Lawrence Rinder traveled widely over the course of the past year, seeking out art and artists in Australia, Brazil, China, Colombia, Croatia, Cuba, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Russia, South Korea and Vietnam, among other countries. The exhibition will include work by a number of Americans working abroad, as well as American artists documenting non-American perspectives on the United States.

Commented Rinder, 'This show carries on the Whitney's longtime commitment to illuminating the times in which we live. America has a profound influence on the daily lives of the world's citizens, and the image of the United States has come to bear almost mythological weight. The American Effect is about the ways in which America's real and imagined effects intertwine to create a compelling source of themes, images, and ideas for artists around the world.'

The works convey a range of responses, from anger and antagonism to affection, warmth, and humor. For some, America remains an embodiment of utopian dreams. Japanese artist Miwa Yanagi, for example, portrays the imagined future of a young woman in an idealized old age racing ecstatically across the Golden Gate Bridge on a motorcycle, hair streaming, a young man in sunglasses by her side. Congolese artist Bodys Isek Kingelez's fantastical sculptural model of Lower Manhattan in the year 3021 captures a sense of America as a place of extraordinary wealth, abundance, and possibility. Mark Lewis, a Canadian-born artist, presents a filmic tour around an Edenic Malibu garden in which scantily clothed adult film stars wander in alluring silence.

Others look into American history to represent episodes that proved crucial in shaping America's identity. Senegalese sculptor Ousmane Sow reinterprets America's campaign against its indigenous people in a tableau of life-size figures crafted of wire, earth, and cloth depicting the 1876 defeat of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. Yongsuk Kang's understated black-and-white photographs document the cumulative effect of 50 years of American test bombing outside the South Korean village of Maehyang.

For others, contemporary events become the theme for works in a wide variety of media. Pakistan-based artist Saira Wasim captures the ambiguities and ironies of America's paternalistic relationship to Pakistan in her series of Moghul-style miniatures representing Pakistani head of state General Pervez Musharraf and US President George W. Bush. A three-channel video work by Patricia Clark, Meira Marrero Díaz and José Angel Toirac explores the differences between Cuban and American media coverage of the Elian Gonzalez affair.

The exhibition will also include a program of feature-length documentary films and videos. Among these are works that explore the dreams and disappointments of immigrants to the U.S., such as Sandeep Ray's Leaving Bakul Bagan, Marlo Poras' Mai's America, Chantal Akerman's From the Other Side, and Sherine Salama's Wedding in Ramallah. Other works, like Stephanie Black's Life and Debt, explore America's complex influence abroad, from the impact of its economic policies, to the subtle ways America's military actions effect daily life throughout the world, as revealed in Heiner Stadler's Eat, Sleep, No Women.
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The Contemporary Series
Sarah Sze: The Triple Point of Water

at Sculpture Court

Known for her astonishingly intricate site-specific installations, Sarah Sze will create a fantastical urban garden this summer in the Whitney Museum's Sculpture Court. Presented as part of The Contemporary Series, the work, commissioned by the Whitney, will be on view from July 3 to October 9, 2003.

Mixing natural and artificial plant life with the miscellany of everyday life, the artist creates whimsical arrangements of thousands of objects, building imaginary miniature ecosystems that borrow from the visual vocabularies of archaeological sites, construction sites, and pastoral oases. At once architectural and organic, intimate and epic, her works convey a sense of wonder as plastic flowers bloom alongside forsythia, grassy knolls flourish with Astroturf, and replicas of street lamps grow out of concrete.

Sarah Sze was born in 1969. She received her BA from Yale in 1991 and an MFA from the School of Visual Arts in 1997. She has had many one-artist exhibitions, including recent ones at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis, and Bard College's Center for Curatorial Studies. Her work has been seen in numerous group shows and was featured in the 2000 Whitney Biennial.

Image: Danwen Xing, Untitled (from the series disCONNEXION), 2003

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