Showing posts with label Art Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Museum. Show all posts

12/09/25

Earthwork Exhibition @ Art Museum at the University of Toronto - Curated by Mikinaak Migwans

Earthwork 
Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective
Curated by Mikinaak Migwans 
Art Museum at the University of Toronto
September 4 – December 20, 2025

Faye HeavyShield
Clan (performance documentation), 2019 
Courtesy of Blaine Campbell

BUSH gallery
BUSH gallery 
MOMENTA 2021
Photo by Jean-Michael Seminaro 

The Art Museum at the University of Toronto presents the exhibition Earthwork, which reassesses the art historical framing of the “earthwork” popularized by the land art movement of the 1960s and ’70s, reclaiming it from an Indigenous perspective. It is curated by Mikinaak Migwans, Curator of Indigenous Contemporary Art at the Art Museum and Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at the University of Toronto.

Works by Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective

Earthwork redefines a term that until now has referred to a type of artistic practice associated within the larger conceptual framework of land art. In this exhibition, Mikinaak Migwans shifts our understanding of earthwork to refer to a way of working, rather than the making of singular objects — similar to the term “beadwork.” With a Canada-wide scope emphasizing the Great Lakes region, the exhibition takes as its starting point an understanding of ancestral earthworks less as monuments and more as sites of ongoing stewardship and care. It considers multiple layers of engagement with the land, including a history of land defense movements, medicine walks, and ancestral practices of prescribed burns, alongside contemporary artworks as creative acts of relational intervention.
“Redefining earthwork in this way helps us think about land as part of the cycles of life and death, rather than eternal monuments outside of time,” says Mikinaak Migwans. “It also helps us to see the huge labour investment that goes into maintaining relations on the land, getting away from this idea that the natural is something opposite to the human. Indigenous connections to land, especially, have been erased in colonial accounts that talk about a natural environment that is ‘virgin,’ ‘untouched,’ and in this way, unclaimed. But recent scholarship is starting to show that North America’s ecosystems were carefully cultivated and maintained by Indigenous Peoples. They’ve quite literally shaped the landscape through generations.” 
Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Central to the exhibition is photo and video documentation by Art Hunter of land stewardship practices at the ancestral Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung Historical Centre, a national historic site and one of the most significant places of early habitation and ceremonial burial in Canada located in northwestern Ontario. Art Hunter’s description of the Anishinaabe community’s controlled burn and other processes to maintain the site’s special ecology served as the inspiration point for Earthwork. 

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist.

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist

Internationally recognized artist Michael Belmore will create a new piece in his snow fence series, which will be on view from November 2025 through March 2026—following the seasonal cycle rather than the exhibition cycle. 

A new audio work by independent curator and artist Lisa Myers helps visitors think about land relations through walking and listening. 

Other featured artists are #BUSH Gallery (Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill, Peter Morin, Tania Willard), Alex Jacobs-Blum, Faye HeavyShield, Mike MacDonald, Edward Poitras, and Protect the Tract Collective

The exhibition offers visitors a printed Engagement Guide, to better connect with the works on view by sharing specific histories and information in an accessible way.

ART MUSEUM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
University of Toronto Art Centre
University College, 15 King’s College Circle, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H7

06/10/23

Los Angeles Artists @ The Broad - Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog)

Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog)
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 18, 2023 – April 7, 2024

Patrick Martinez
Patrick Martinez 
Weeping Warrior, 2022 
Stucco, neon, mean streak, ceramic, acrylic paint, spray paint, 
latex house paint, banner tarp, rope, stucco patch, ceramic tile, 
tile adhesive, engraved mirror, and LED signs on panel. 
The Broad Art Foundation 
© Patrick Martinez

The Broad presents Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog), an exhibition drawn entirely from the Broad collection, showcasing works by Los Angeles artists. Drawing its title from a piece by John Baldessari, the exhibition often oscillates between local takes on a city in flux and turmoil, and reflections outward to evolving issues of artmaking and global concerns. The exhibition includes the work of 21 artists across varying generations who were raised in the Los Angeles area, such as Doug Aitken and Lari Pittman, or relocated to the city, including Catherine Opie and Mike Kelley. 

With artworks by Doug Aitken, John Baldessari, Mark Bradford, Robbie Conal, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Jack Goldstein, Sayre Gomez, Mark Grotjahn, Elliott Hundley, Alex Israel, Mike Kelley, Toba Khedoori, Barbara Kruger, Sharon Lockhart, Patrick Martinez, Catherine Opie, Lari Pittman, Joe Ray, Ed Ruscha, Diana Thater, Jonas Wood.
“The Broad collection works selected for this show span five decades, and reflect Los Angeles’ growth as a nexus for artists and as a complex urban landscape to investigate,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director of The Broad. “The show traces the influence of earlier generations of LA-based artists on later generations and spotlights numerous artists who illuminate deep-seated social inequities and contradictions woven into our city and its myths.”
Originally the exhibition was a Spring 2020 show poised to open when the COVID-19 pandemic emerged, leaving the project unrealized. Now re-envisioned, Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog) mines the paradoxes captured in John Baldessari’s title through a more expansive, post-2020 lens featuring a wider spectrum of LA-based artists and practices in the evolving Broad collection. Including works made from 1969 to 2023 that span the mediums of abstract or photorealistic painting, photography, sculpture, and political signage, the exhibition contains fragments, attitudes, and everyday experiences absorbed and worked through in Los Angeles that reflect back on our collective present moment, and invoke alternate histories, states of mind, and futures.

The presentation highlights over 60 artworks–most of which are on view at the museum for the first time–exhibiting artists in the Broad collection whose work makes some of the city’s integral contributions to contemporary art internationally, and revealing dialogues between local artists of different generations. Even works not explicitly about Los Angeles reveal a gap between the allure and the reality of life in the city, where a sense of phantasmagoric projection contrasts against much harder, concrete realities.

The show’s title refers to John Baldessari’s monumental work Buildings=Guns=People: Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog) (1985), where “smog” nods to the city’s notorious air quality, contrasting against familiar depictions of sunshine, beaches, Hollywood, and nature. This play between an idealized expectation of LA and its gritty reality is evident in the large-scale paintings and neons of Ed Ruscha, Mark Bradford, and Patrick Martinez whose intergenerational exchanges consider global and local societal issues through a shared home.

Hung alongside John Baldessari’s work are two pieces by Mike Kelley, notably including his six-part drawing Infinite Expansion (1984), which is connected with one of his earliest performance works exploring psychedelia at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Other featured artists include Barbara Kruger, who have a gallery dedicated to her work Untitled (I shop therefore I am) (1987-2019). On view at The Broad for the first time, this work uses the parlance of political signage to probe commerce and the formation of identity. Toba Khedoori presents large-scale paper works Untitled (park benches) (1997) and Untitled (Black fireplace) (2006), both of which depict scenes of quietude or isolation, experiences often associated with the sprawling geography of Los Angeles. In two works from 2022, Diamonds and Pearls and The Whole Wide World is a Haunted House, Sayre Gomez deploys a realist style using airbrushed paint. Both of his works take on the overlooked perspective of the pedestrian, where street-level views of an abandoned strip mall and nail salon signage unambiguously embrace the complex social arrangements of a shared, sweeping metropolis.

Furthermore, on view for free in The Broad’s third-floor galleries throughout the exhibition are works by additional Los Angeles artists in the Broad collection including Charles Ray, Henry Taylor, and Robert Therrien.

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

18/04/20

Biennial Made in LA 2020 @ Hammer Museum, Los Angeles & The Huntington, San Marino

Biennial Made in L.A. 2020: a version
The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, San Marino
June 7 - August 30, 2020

The Hammer Museum and The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens have announced the 30 artists participating in Made in L.A. 2020: a version, the fifth iteration of the Hammer’s biennial exhibition highlighting the practices of artists working throughout the greater Los Angeles area. Cocurated by Paris-based curator Myriam Ben Salah and L.A.–based curator Lauren Mackler with the Hammer’s Ikechukwu Onyewuenyi as assistant curator of performance, Made in L.A. 2020: a version is presented at both the Hammer and The Huntington from June 7 through August 30, 2020. 

The biennial’s two venues create a cross-town conversation from west to east. Taking advantage of the city’s sprawling geography, the curators chose to stage the exhibition in two mirrored parts, presenting works by all the artists in both museums in addition to select locales in between.

“I continue to marvel at how different and eye-opening each iteration of Made in L.A. can be,” said Hammer Museum director Ann Philbin. “Through nearly 300 hundred studio visits, Myriam, Lauren, and Ike have assembled a group of artists who delve into fascinating and often overlooked histories, subcultures, and communities of L.A. Once again, the exhibition has illustrated the strength and vision of the here and now of contemporary art in our city.”

“With every artist represented at both The Huntington and the Hammer, visitors will have two unique experiences that comprise one whole biennial,” Huntington president Karen R. Lawrence said. “I’m particularly excited to see the ways in which the artists’ work will activate our galleries and highlight the collaborative energy that characterizes our Centennial Celebration.”

Made in L.A. 2020 will feature long-standing research projects alongside newly commissioned works and commingles a mix of practitioners—artists, writers, filmmakers, and performers. Subtitled “a version,” the exhibition will highlight conceptual threads that connect the artists’ works: entertainment both as a subject and a material; the genre and aesthetic of horror in contemporary practices; and the film and theater convention of the fourth wall, a device through which fiction is built and dismantled.

Made in L.A. 2020 Artists

● Mario Ayala (b. 1991, Los Angeles, CA)
● Aria Dean (b. 1993, Los Angeles, CA)
● Hedi El Kholti (b. 1967, Rabat, Morocco)
● Buck Ellison (b. 1987, San Francisco, CA)
● Niloufar Emamifar
● Christina Forrer (b. 1978, Zürich, Switzerland)
● Harmony Holiday (b. 1982)
● Patrick Jackson (b. 1978, Los Angeles, CA)
● Larry Johnson (b. 1959, Lakewood, CA)
● Kahlil Joseph (b. 1981, Seattle, WA)
● Ann Greene Kelly (b. 1988, New York, NY)
● Jacqueline Kiyomi Gordon (b. 1982, Long Beach, CA)
● Nicola L. (b. 1937, Mazagan, Morocco; d. 2018, Los Angeles, CA)
● Brandon D. Landers (b. 1985, Los Angeles, CA)
● SON. (Justen LeRoy) (founded 2016)
● Ligia Lewis (b. 1983, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
● Monica Majoli (b. 1963, Los Angeles, CA)
● Jill Mulleady (b. 1980, Montevideo, Uruguay)
● Diane Severin Nguyen (b. 1990, Carson, CA)
● Alexandra Noel (b. 1989, Columbus, OH)
● Mathias Poledna (b. 1965, Vienna, Austria)
● Umar Rashid (b. 1976, Chicago, IL)
● Reynaldo Rivera (b. 1963, Mexicali, Mexico)
● Katja Seib (b. 1989, Dusseldorf, Germany)
● Ser Serpas (b. 1995, Los Angeles, CA)
● Sonya Sombreuil / COME TEES (b. 1986, Santa Cruz, CA)
● Jeffrey Stuker (b. 1979, Fort Collins, CO)
● Beyond Baroque by Sabrina Tarasoff (b. 1991, Jyväskylä, Finland)
● Fulton Leroy Washington (aka MR. WASH) (b. 1954, Compton, CA)
● Kandis Williams (b. 1985, Baltimore, MD)

Some artists will create new site-specific works for Made in L.A. 2020.

● Jacqueline Kiyomi Gordon will construct a series of rooms inhabited by loudspeakers and live performers presenting a durational performance at the Hammer for the length of the exhibition. In concert with one another, the devices and the vocalists will reconsider public speech through an assemblage of voices and sound. The creation of this work is made possible by a generous contribution from VIA Art Fund.

● For both the Hammer and The Huntington, Ser Serpas will display ephemeral sculptures sourced directly from the surroundings of each exhibition venue and placed in the space through an intimate performance, an index of the artist’s movements.

Performances will be staged by artists at both venues, concentrated around three weekends during the exhibition run: June 12–14, July 17–19, and August 14–16.

● Dancer and choreographer Ligia Lewis will present a recurring performance of dancers “dying” continually and competitively in the galleries to consider the larger notion of the “deadpan” in performance and beyond.

● Artist, archivist, filmmaker, and dancer Harmony Holiday will write and direct a one-man play entitled God’s Suicide, about the five rarely acknowledged suicide attempts by writer and thinker James Baldwin.

● Artist and writer Aria Dean will build an ambitious sculptural installation of two-way mirrors within the galleries as a set for a play, which will unfurl in three episodes during the course of the summer. Each episode will be recorded and broadcast on screens in the installation when it is not activated by the performance.

Several of the artists in Made in L.A. 2020: a version reanimate archival materials in their presentations.

● Through a series of paintings presented at the Hammer and an archival installation conceived specifically for The Huntington, Mario Ayala explores the legacy of the cult publication Teen Angels, which documented Cholo culture in the 1980s and 1990s and featured the artworks, poems, dedications, photographs, and essays of Chicanos, particularly those who were gangaffiliated or in prison.

● Writer and curator Sabrina Tarasoff—whose recent research project has been focused on the work of the 1980s “poetry-gang” that gathered at Beyond Baroque literary center for Dennis Cooper and Amy Gertsler’s Wednesday night poetry series—will revitalize this living archive through a haunted house installation, as well as a series of programs and performances.

● Painter Monica Majoli will present a series of large-scale watercolor woodcut paintings whose imagery is pulled from the pages of Blueboy magazine. Focusing on the early years of the periodical, Monica Majoli lusciously presents a vibrant era of the magazine and gay life right before the devastation of the AIDS epidemic. At The Huntington, Monica Majoli will present an installation of archival materials from the magazine alongside studies for her paintings.

Additionally, several projects will happen off site.

● After spending four decades investigating the inherent contradictions between the glossy surfaces and underlying cynicism of American culture, especially in Los Angeles, Larry Johnson will show new works on five commercial billboards throughout the neighborhood of MacArthur Park. The presentation is coproduced with The Billboard Creative.

Kahlil Joseph will present the most ambitious installation to date of BLKNWS, a conceptual news program taking the form of a two-channel installation connected to a newscast that blurs the lines between art, reporting, entrepreneurship, and cultural critique. BLKNWS will be broadcast at sites across Los Angeles, with a focus on South Los Angeles and black-owned businesses. This iteration of BLKNWS aims to bring the work to its largest audience yet, reaching people in their everyday environments. Sites will be announced ahead of the exhibition opening. The presentation is coproduced with LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division).

SON., a platform founded in 2016 by Justen LeRoy, will create a podcast series for Made in L.A. visitors to listen to during the drive from one museum to the other. Recorded from SON.’s headquarters at the South Central barbershop Touched by An Angel, the episodes will feature conversations, cultural commentary, music, and special guests. 

Catalogue and companion publication

Made in LA 2020 Catalogue

The exhibition catalogue will draw inspiration from historical artist magazines and will become an additional venue for the show, showcasing newly commissioned interventions made by artists specifically for the pages. Furthermore, there will be a companion publication published after Made in L.A. 2020 to include programs, conversations, and other records of the work comprising the biennial. Both publications are designed by Studio Ella and distributed worldwide by DelMonico Books•Prestel.

The presenting sponsor for the exhibition is Bank of America.

THE HAMMER MUSEUM
10899 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90024
hammer.ucla.edu

THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY, ART MUSEUM, AND BOTANICAL GARDENS
1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, CA 91108
huntington.org

25/02/07

Singapore Architectural Design Competition for a New National Art Gallery

Singapore Launches Architectural Design Competition for a New National Art Gallery

Architects around the world invited to ceonceptualise a design for the Art Gallery, to be housed in two iconic heritage buildings set in the heart of Singapore's Civic District, City Hall and the former Supreme Court building

The heart of Singapore’s city centre is set to become even more vibrant in the Civic District area, with a new National Art Gallery (working title) to be completed around 2012. Minister for Information, Communications and the Arts, Dr Lee Boon Yang, announced on 13 February 2007 that Singapore will launch the Architectural Design Competition for the National Art Gallery this month for local and international architects to develop the best design concept for the new National Art Gallery.

The Art Gallery will be housed in two historically significant 20th century monuments situated in Singapore’s Civic District – City Hall and the adjacent former Supreme Court building. The Art Gallery is envisioned to be dedicated to the presentation, collection and study of Southeast Asian and Singaporean visual arts, and the examination of how the art of this region connects with developments in the rest of the international art world. Today, Southeast Asian art makes up two-thirds of Singapore’s national collection of some 7,500 pieces of artworks.

A unique opportunity to work with civic monuments of such scale and historical importance, this project will add a new dimension to the cultural and art spaces in Singapore.

Dr Balaji Sadasivan, Senior Minister-of-State for Information Communications and the Arts (MICA) and Foreign Affairs, who also chairs the Steering Committee for the National Art Gallery said, “A new National Art Gallery is timely at this juncture in Singapore’s transformation to become a global city of the arts. This architectural competition is just the first step, towards building a national institution that will be owned and valued by the community, and one in which all Singaporeans will be proud of.”

Since 1992, both buildings have been gazetted as national monuments, and are subject to preservation guidelines under the authority of the Preservation of Monuments Board. They were vacated in 2005, and have since been used occasionally, for example, in 2006 as one of the exhibition venues for the Singapore Biennale 2006 and as a registration centre for delegates of the International Monetary Fund/World Bank meetings. Architects participating in the competition will be provided with the preservation guidelines but are encouraged to develop innovative ideas.

This architectural competition is organised by MICA in association with the Singapore Institute of Architects.

The competition will be conducted in two stages. The first stage, an open ideas competition, will look for initial design ideas, and be judged on design philosophy and task appreciation. Entries at Stage I are kept anonymous and competitors’ identities will be revealed to the jury after they have been shortlisted for the second stage. Shortlisted competitors will move to Stage II, a design development competition, where they will be asked to develop their initial concepts and demonstrate the workability of their proposals against a budget. At the end of the two-stage competition, the jury will select not more than three winners, where one winner may be commissioned in end 2007 to design and build the National Art Gallery.

Extending an invitation to architects from Singapore and around the world to come forward with bold and creative ideas, Dr Balaji said, “The competition presents an exciting and unique opportunity for top talents from Singapore and around the world to not only shape the Civic District but to also steer Singapore to the forefront of global cities and define our presence as a visual arts hub.”

The competition brief for Stage I, terms and conditions will be available on the website at www.nationalartgallery.sg from 23 February 2007 onwards. The closing date for Stage I is 13 April 2007.