Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts

11/09/25

Robert Therrien @ The Broad, Los Angeles - "Robert Therrien: This is a Story" - The largest museum exhibition of the artist’s work to date

Robert Therrien: This is a Story
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 22, 2025 – April 5, 2026

Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (folding table and chairs, dark brown), 2007
Painted steel and aluminum, fabric, and plastic 
Courtesy of Glenstone Museum 
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

The Broad presents Robert Therrien: This is a Story, the largest museum exhibition of the late artist’s widely-adored work to date. Therrien’s meditations on scale and material are a deeply influential and well-known approach within the field of contemporary sculpture, significant to The Broad’s own identity as a museum, and long admired by visitors of all ages. The installation will showcase Therrien’s personal vocabulary of images and symbols—from enormous tables, chairs, and dishes, to intimate drawings of snowmen, birds, and chapels—as they become a language of continuous creation and transformation for the artist over time. Featuring more than 120 works spanning five decades, the exhibition offers unprecedented access to the artist’s exploration of scale, memory, and perception, just miles from the downtown Los Angeles home and studio space he operated out of for close to thirty years beginning in 1990. Many of the works on view, including those created just before Robert Therrien’s untimely death in 2019, have never been featured in museum exhibitions and will offer new avenues of understanding his practice.
“Robert Therrien has longstanding ties to The Broad and was one of the very first L.A.-based artists to enter the Broad collection decades ago, in its first, formative years. His massive sculpture Under the Table has captivated visitors to our museum’s galleries since the day The Broad opened in 2015, as a surreally enlarged wooden table offering layers of the artist’s intellectual and art historical inquiry within an aura of domestic familiarity,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director and President of The Broad. She added, “For our visitors who know and love Under the Table, this ambitious show will reveal a deeper and wide-lens look into the completely unique world Therrien created–a Los-Angeles-based body of work that reshaped contemporary sculpture.”
Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (bent cone relief), 1983 
Lacquer and wax on wood 
Courtesy of The Broad Art Foundation
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (black witch hat), 2018 
Carved Delrin plastic
Courtesy of Robert Therrien Estate.
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

Robert Therrien (1947–2019) was born in Chicago and relocated to Los Angeles in the 1970s to complete an MFA at the University of Southern California. Despite the prominence of conceptual and minimalist practices at the time, he developed his own adjacent artistic vernacular that saw the infinite potential of ordinary objects across basic forms and their three-dimensional counterparts, varying in size, color, and detail. A single Robert Therrien gesture can expand, contract, change materially, or seamlessly transform into other images entirely. A chapel will become an oil can; the oil can will become a pitcher; the pitcher, a cone, then morphing into a witch hat. At the heart of Therrien’s practice is a sense of artistic animation, by turns fun, playful, and serious.
“Los Angeles has been and remains a historically important place to make sculpture and Robert Therrien is vital to that story” said Ed Schad, Curator and Publications Manager at The Broad. “From his handmade and intimate responses to Minimalism in the 1970s, to his early involvement in what would become a golden age of L.A. fabrication, Therrien made important contributions to many of sculpture’s central conversations for over forty years. However, the most important thing to know about Therrien is that he can evoke a sense of wonder. What starts in Therrien’s personal and closely guarded memories and passions, becomes a mysterious place in which a viewer can think about and dwell in one’s own.”
Visitors will be able to walk under and around large tables and chairs, approach enormous hanging beards, and navigate around large, stacked dishes designed to appear to be in motion and alter one’s sense of balance. In addition, a special collaboration with the artist’s estate will expose visitors to partial reconstructions of Therrien’s studio environment, including his project tables, drawings, and tools, to full-sized rooms full of surprises and encounters that are a hallmark of the artist’s practice. Therrien’s living and working space in Downtown L.A. remains pivotal to his understanding of space and size.

In addition to being the largest solo museum presentation of his work to date, Robert Therrien: This is a Story places his legacy within the broader arc of contemporary sculpture in Los Angeles and beyond. An exhibition catalog published by DelMonico Books will develop these connections further, edited by curator Ed Schad and featuring texts by Kathryn Scanlon, Richard Armstrong, and Darby English, as well as reflections from Vija Celmins, Vicky Arnold, Jacob Samuel, Christina Forrer and more.

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

09/08/25

Kosmos Klee. The Collection @ Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern - Permanent Exhibition with some 80 changing works from the collection

Kosmos Klee. The Collection
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern 
Permanent Exhibition

Paul Klee and Lily Klee Photograph
Paul and Lily Klee with the cat Bimbo, 
Kistlerweg 6, Bern, 1935
Photo: Fee Meisel

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Ohne Titel (Villa am Langensee) 
[Untitled (Villa at the Langensee)], 1896
Watercolour on paper, 9,9 × 15 cm
Private collection, Switzerland, 
deposit at the Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Ohne Titel (Rückenakt) [Nude from Behind], 1902
Pencil on paper on cardboard, 32,5 × 28,5 cm
Private collection, Switzerland, 
deposit at the Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern

The dynamic permanent exhibition devoted to Paul Klee invites visitors to immerse themselves in the life and work of this important modern artist. With some 80 changing works from the collection, Kosmos Klee offers a chronological survey of Klee’s artistic career. Biographical and archival material provide an insight into his life and time. In addition, the ‘focus room’ offers a space for smaller exhibitions devoted to individual aspects of Klee’s work, or contributions to the artist’s global reception.

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
In den Häusern v. St. Germain 
[ In the Houses of St. Germain], 1914, 110
Watercolour on paper on cardboard
15,5 × 15,9/16,3 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Tunesische Scizze [Tunisian Sketch], 1914, 212
Watercolour and pencil on paper on cardboard
17,9 × 12,2 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Ohne Titel (Fabrikanlage) 
[Untitled (Factory Plant)], 1922
Watercolour and pencil on paper on cardboard
10 × 8,9 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee


Zentrum Paul Klee: The collection

The Zentrum Paul Klee is the world’s most important centre for research into Paul Klee’s life and work, and has one of the most significant collections of the artist’s drawings, watercolours and paintings. Paul Klee was primarily a draughtsman, which is why 80% of the collection of the Zentrum Paul Klee consists of works on paper, matching the collected works. Because of the fragility of the works as well as the large size and diversity of the collection, only parts of it can be displayed at once. Paul Klee enjoyed experimenting, not only in terms of content and form but also technically, using light-sensitive paints, inks and papers. For that reason the works need periods of rest between periods on display.


Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Karneval im Gebirge 
[Carnival in the Mountains], 1924, 114
Watercolour on primed paper on cardboard
24 × 31,3 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Fische im Kreis [Fishes in a Circle], 1926, 140
Oil and tempera on primed muslin on cardboard
42 × 43 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Nordzimmer [North Room], 1932, 17
Watercolour on paper on cardboard
37 × 55 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern

Kosmos Klee

With Kosmos Klee. The Collection the Zentrum Paul Klee offers visitors the opportunity to immerse themselves in Paul Klee’s life and work, as well as in the unique collection of the institution. Some 80 rotating and chronologically organised works provide an overview of Klee’s artistic development, from the highly detailed early works via tendencies towards abstraction and the discovery of colour, to the reduced pictorial language of the later work. Each decade of Klee’s artistic career is identified by a colour in the exhibition, allowing visitors to find their way intuitively around the space. Brief introductory texts, biographical photographs and films give deeper insights into the different phases of the work and Paul Klee’s engagement with the people around him.

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Doppel gesicht [Double face], 1933, 383
Coloured pastel and pencil on paper on cardboard
33 × 21 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee

Paul Klee Art
Paul Klee
Spätes Glühen [Late Glowing], 1934, 29
Pastel on damask on cardboard
26,8 x 32,5/34,3 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, donation of Livia Klee

Aside from his works, the Zentrum Paul Klee also preserves the artist’s archive. In the dynamic permanent exhibition, different treasures from the archive are presented, revealing the various aspects of Paul Klee’s life. His love of music is reflected in his record collection and the scores that Paul Klee, a gifted violinist, played from. Klee’s favourite music can be heard as part of a podcast in the exhibition. Parts of the artist’s collection of natural materials, including shells, stones and pages from herbariums, display Klee’s close relationship with nature and natural processes. Other objects include his watercolour box, his schoolbooks, scribbled over with drawings, as well as letters.

Curator: Fabienne Eggelhöfer

And Cover Star Klee, Paul Klee Artworks on Book Covers Exhibition, Through September 14, 2025.

ZENTRUM PAUL KLEE
Monument im Fruchtland 3, 3006 Bern 

24/07/25

Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classivo / The Forms of Classicism @ Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice

Robert Mapplethorpe 
Le forme del classivo / The Forms of Classicism
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venezia
The Rooms of Photography, Venice
Through 6 January 2026

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe
Self Portrait, 1975 
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe
The Sluggard, 1978
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe
Derrick Cross, 1983
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe
Dennis Speight, 1983
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Le Stanze della Fotografia / The Rooms of Photography in Venice hosts a major exhibition dedicated to one of the most influential – and still, in many ways, provocative – figures in international photography: ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE (New York, 1946 – Boston, 1989). Curated by Denis Curti, Artistic Director of Le Stanze della Fotografia, Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classivo is organised and promoted by Marsilio Arte and the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, in collaboration with the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation.

This retrospective marks the first chapter in a broader trilogy dedicated to the study and exploration of Mapplethorpe’s work. Two further exhibitions will follow in 2026. Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del desiderio [The forms of desire], to be held at Palazzo Reale in Milan, will present a comprehensive retrospective of the artist’s most iconic, powerful, and daring images, focusing on the most intense aspects of his practice. Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme della bellezza [The forms of beauty] will be shown at the Museo dell’Ara Pacis in Rome and will centre on Mapplethorpe’s reflections on beauty as classical ideal, featuring direct comparisons and a special section devoted to a number of significant photographs taken in Italy, now exhibited for the first time.

To accompany the trilogy, a single major catalogue will be published by Marsilio Arte, gathering all three exhibitions into one comprehensive volume. Featuring 257 works, it will offer a sweeping look at Mapplethorpe’s entire output and the evolution of his visual language.
«The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation is delighted to collaborate with Marsilio Arte, Denis Curti, and his colleagues on these upcoming exhibitions devoted to Mapplethorpe, which will be beautifully presented in three outstanding venues and institutions. Denis Curti’s thoughtful curatorial approach will offer visitors a unique experience, tailoring each show to its location and highlighting different facets of Mapplethorpe’s art. While the exhibitions will share certain themes, each will adopt a distinct perspective on his work. Venice has not hosted a major Mapplethorpe retrospective since 1992, when Germano Celant’s iconic international show was presented at Palazzo Fortuny. We eagerly anticipate Mapplethorpe’s return to Venice after 33 years, as well as the exhibitions planned for Rome and Milan», said Michael Ward Stout, President of the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation.
Robert Mapplethorpe
Patti Smith, 1986
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Robert Mapplethorpe
Isabella Rossellini, 1988
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Robert Mapplethorpe
“Flowers” Purple Callas, 1987
Photo © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

Featuring over 200 photographs, some of which are on view in Italy for the first time, Robert Mapplethorpe. The Forms of Classicism at Le Stanze della Fotografia pays tribute to the great American artist and picks up the thread laid out by curator Germano Celant in his 2005 exhibition Between Ancient and Modern. An Anthology (Turin), placing Mapplethorpe’s work back into the wider context of mid-20th century American art and culture. It is this classical dimension of Mapplethorpe’s photography – particularly emphasised in Venice through direct comparisons with images of ancient statuary – that renders his portraits so striking. These bodies, captured in their sculptural beauty and form, appear timeless: age-old yet contemporary expressions of desire, shaped by the geometry of light and transfigured into eternal, almost divine icons that remain deeply, unmistakably human.

The exhibition draws attention to Mapplethorpe’s pursuit of a perfect curvature, a sensual, almost sacred roundness, evident in the depictions of both male and female bodies, as well as in his magnificent photographs of flowers. These are laid bare in all their delicacy, forming poetic, ambiguous compositions. As curator Denis Curti notes, «Mapplethorpe uses photography to reinterpret and renew classical aesthetics, heightening the dialogue between the living body and ideal sculpture. The comparison reveals his ability to transpose the grace and perfection of classical form into contemporary photography, through meticulous attention to detail and light. Statues, governed by an incomplete sexuality, remind us of the importance of flesh in the language of seduction. Mapplethorpe dissolves their marble limbs, allowing a sensual beauty to emerge from beneath layers of rigidity, breathing new life into them».

The exhibition opens with Mapplethorpe’s earliest collages and ready-mades from the late 1960s, many of which have never been shown before. Created using original drawings, cuttings from homoerotic magazines and objets trouvés, these early pieces reflect his search for identity and his fascination with experimentation from the outset of his career, layering disparate elements into bold visual statements.

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

These are followed by portraits of his companion, friend, and muse Patti Smith, captured in intimate, iconic poses that convey both her androgyny and vulnerability; and by images of bodybuilder Lisa Lyon, which explore strength, endurance and femininity while transcending conventional notions of gender. Mapplethorpe depicts her sculpted body with classical precision, celebrating power and beauty through an aesthetic grounded in antiquity.

Unsettling self-portraits reveal his ongoing exploration of identity as something fluid and mutable. Through carefully constructed poses and provocative symbolism, Mapplethorpe presents himself both as artist and subject, examining the boundaries between the private self and public persona.

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Throughout the exhibition, male nudes take centre stage as odes to classical perfection, emphasising strength, sensuality and symmetry through refined lighting and composition. These works navigate desire and eroticism while openly challenging traditional social norms. Similarly, the female nudes on display in Venice reveal Mapplethorpe’s elegant, minimalist approach: a play of curves, folds and lines that evokes what art historian Arthur C. Danto described as «self-aware women with an almost regal power».

Also on view are portraits of figures such as Truman Capote, Glenn Close, Richard Gere, Keith Haring, David Hockney, Annie Leibovitz, Yoko Ono, Robert Rauschenberg, Isabella Rossellini, Susan Sarandon, Susan Sontag, Andy Warhol and many others. For Robert Mapplethorpe, portraiture was never simply an intimate encounter between two individuals, but rather a kind of visual altar, where the subject’s physical presence becomes transfigured, enmeshed in a subtle game of desire and possession.

Robert Mapplethorpe
Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice
Exhibition View. Photograph by Matteo de Fina

Among the most iconic works in the exhibition are his photos of flowers – calla lilies, orchids, and tulips – captured at the precise moment they seem to become taut with energy, transformed into pulsing muscle. These works strike a delicate balance between stately reverence, achieved through subtle monochrome tones, and the vibrant dynamism of colour. Throughout, ancient statuary provides a powerful point of comparison: defined by an unresolved sexuality, these classical forms underscore the centrality of flesh in Mapplethorpe’s seductive visual language.

Thanks to the Mapplethorpe Foundation, exceptional vintage ephemera are on display. The archival items include two original Patti Smith audio cassettes, a 45 rpm record, gallery and museum exhibition invitations, posters, a limited edition, signed, and leather-bound copy of Rimbaud's A Season in Hell, illustrated with Mapplethorpe gravures, magazines, handwritten letters from Mapplethorpe to his mentor and lover Sam Wagstaff, and the memorial card from Wagstaff's funeral.

Also on view in the exhibition are two short films directed by Robert Mapplethorpe: Still Moving: Patti Smith from 1978 and Lady with Lisa Lyon from 1984.

LE STRANZE DELLA FOTOGRAFIA
Venice, Island of San Giorgio Maggiore

Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme del classico, 10 April 2025 – 6 January 2026 
Le Stanze della Fotografia, Venice, Island of San Giorgio Maggiore 

06/03/25

Saul Leiter @ Foam, Amsterdam - Retrospective Exhibition "An Unfinished World"

Saul Leiter
An Unfinished World
Foam, Amsterdam
Until 20 April 2025

Saul Leiter, Harlem, 1960
SAUL LEITER
Harlem, 1960
© Saul Leiter / Saul Leiter Foundation
“Photographs are often treated as important moments, but really they are fragments and souvenirs of an unfinished world.”  – Saul Leiter  
Foam presents a major retrospective exhibition of the celebrated American artist SAUL LEITER (1923–2013). Saul Leiter is seen as one of the most important photographers of the 1950’s in the United States, and a pioneer of colour photography. This exhibition brings together over 200 works, consisting of photography, both black-and-white and colour, as well as his abstract paintings. His eclectic oeuvre reveals a practice using shadow, light, and reflections to craft layered compositions.

For nearly sixty years, Saul Leiter photographed daily, capturing everyday moments of New York City life. With various techniques and mediums, and the use of telephoto lenses, Saul Leiter would enhance the painterly quality of his images and transform seemingly mundane street scenes into visual poetry. New York, a symbol of modernity in the 1950s, became the backdrop for Leiter’s aesthetic discoveries. 

By shooting in the rain and snow, and using windows and other reflective surfaces, he created abstract images. A red umbrella, a green traffic light, or the yellow flash of a passing taxi add an unexpected play of colour to his photographs. In the 1940s and 1950s, Saul Leiter was virtually the only non-commercial photographer to work in colour. The use of aged or damaged film allowed him to include surprising compositions with shifts in light and colour. Once lost to obscurity, his work was rediscovered in the mid 2010s for its ground-breaking role in the emergence of colour photography. 

Saul Leiter was a self-taught photographer whose strong sense of curiosity made him a lifelong student. He maintained his experimental and spontaneous approach throughout his career, which is evident in both his street photography and fashion work. 

Upon his death in 2013, Saul Leiter left behind a remarkable collection of approximately 15,000 black-and-white prints, at least 40,000 colour slides, a similar number of black-and-white negatives and over 4000 paintings, only a handful of which have been seen publicly. The exhibition An Unfinished World offers visitors the chance to admire the endless poetry of Saul Leiter’s artistic practice through his paintings, photography and unique view on the world around him. 

SAUL LEITER (1923–2013) began painting and photographing in his teenage years, gaining an early recognition for his paintings. After moving to New York in 1946, he turned to photography as a profession while continuing to paint. His abstract forms and groundbreaking compositions possess a painterly quality that distinguishes them from the works of other photographers of that era. His work significantly contributed to the emergence of what is now known as the New York School of photography. 

In 1957, he began working for major publications like Esquire and Harper’s Bazaar, balancing his commercial success with his personal passion for street photography in his Manhattan neighborhood. Saul Leiter's groundbreaking work in colour photography gained widespread acclaim with the release of his first book, Early Color (2006). By the time of his death in 2013, Saul Leiter had achieved international recognition, with his work featured in numerous museum exhibitions and publications worldwide. 

The exhibition is organised in collaboration with Les Rencontres d'Arles and diChroma photography and curated by Anne Morin.

FOAM - AMSTERDAM
Keizersgracht 609, 1017 DS Amsterdam

Saul Leiter: An Unfinished World
FOAM, Amsterdam
24 January 2025 – 20 April 2025

22/08/24

Staatsgalerie Stuttgart: This is Tomorrow - The 20th / 21st Century Collection: New Presentation

THIS IS TOMORROW
The 20th / 21st Century Collection:
New Presentation 
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
19 July 2024 – 31 December 2025

Ulrike Ottinger
ULRIKE OTTINGER
Maison clouée du papillon, 1965
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
Acquired in 2021 with funds from the
Museumsstiftung Baden-Württemberg
© Ulrike Ottinger

Spreading out in six major rooms devoted to the display of the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart collection, the presentation THIS IS TOMORROW features contemporary pieces side by side with prominent examples of twentieth century art. Representing a wide range of mediums, they are works that take a critical look at the body, examine identity issues and social coexistence, explore the relationship between nature and artificial intelligence, process experiences of war and violence, and more. With its abundance of installations, paintings, media artworks, sculptures, and works on paper—more than 100 objects in all—, the new presentation is intended to spark discourse on themes of especial relevance for society today.

Works by such artists as Eleanor Antin, Marcel Duchamp, Katharina Fritsch, Hannah Höch, Käthe Kollwitz, Jeff Koons, Joseph Kosuth, Maria Lassnig, Yoko Ono, and Andy Warhol enter into dialogue with numerous new acquisitions and gifts of the past years, including examples by Nobert Bisky, Burhan Doğançay, Teresa Margolles, Ulrike Ottinger, Cindy Sherman, Hito Steyerl, Haegue Yang, and many others. Works by Clément Cogitore, Simone Leigh, Anys Reimann, Deborah Roberts, and Ben Willikens on loan from the ScharpffStriebich Collection, the Mercedes-Benz Art Collection, and the Weishaupt Collection further enhance the selection.

STAATSGALERIE STUTTGART
Konrad-Adenauer-Str. 30, 70173 Stuttgart

03/04/24

Kim Conaty, Chief Curator @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City

Kim Conat named Chief Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Kim Conaty
Kim Conaty 
Photograph by Bryan Derballa

The Whitney Museum of American Art has named Kim Conaty the Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator. In this new role, effective April 8, Kim Conaty will serve on the Museum’s senior leadership team and participate in shaping its mission and vision. She will oversee the Museum’s curatorial, publications, and conservation departments and assume responsibility for the Museum’s scholarly and artistic program while managing the development of the Museum’s permanent collection and exhibitions.

Kim Conaty has worked at the Whitney since 2017 as the Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints and recently curated the landmark exhibition Edward Hopper’s New York (2022), one of the most popular and critically acclaimed exhibitions in the Museum’s history. Other Whitney exhibitions include Mary Corse: A Survey in Light (2018), Nothing Is So Humble: Prints from Everyday Objects (2020), and Ruth Asawa Through Line (2023), the first survey of Asawa’s drawing practice. Conaty’s latest exhibition Survival Piece #5: Portable Orchard featuring a major example of 1970s environmental art, opens June 29, 2024, at the Whitney.

In addition to developing leading exhibitions and best-selling catalogues, Conaty also co-directed the development of the Whitney’s Collection Strategic Plan (CSP), a multi-year research initiative to comprehensively assess the Museum’s collection of more than 26,000 works and set priorities for its future. In 2023, with the CSP in place, the Whitney acquired 286 works, including 57 new artists, with a focus on underrepresented areas. As Curator of Drawings and Prints, Conaty has stewarded the Whitney’s holdings of over 15,000 drawings and prints, led the programming of the Whitney’s Sondra Gilman Study Center for prints, drawings, and photographs, and steers the Museum’s Acquisition Committee on Drawings and Prints. She currently serves on the Board of Directors at the Print Council of America (PCA) and plays an active role on its DEAI Committee.

With this appointment following an international search, Kim Conaty joins the Museum’s senior leadership team, led by Alice Pratt Brown Director Scott Rothkopf. Other members include Deputy Director I.D. Aruede, Chief Operating Officer Amy Roth, and Chief Strategy Officer Andrew Cone.
“Kim brings to the role of Chief Curator an extraordinary range of talents. Her brilliance as an exhibition maker is matched by her deep scholarly expertise across the range of the Whitney’s program and collection from 1900 to the present,” said Scott Rothkopf, Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney. “Beyond the Whintey, Kim has contributed generously to the entire museum field as a colleague and mentor, while demonstrating great care for our staff, artists, and audiences. I am thrilled to partner with her—and the entire curatorial team—on the artistic vision for the Whitney’s future.”

“It’s a great honor to take on this leadership role at the Whitney, an institution that has long held a special place for me,” said Kim Conaty. “I’m excited to guide and empower our stellar curatorial team as we continue to shape the Whitney’s collection in meaningful ways and develop dynamic and rigorous exhibitions that tell stories, ask questions, and engage deeply with artists and audiences.”
Kim Conaty’s Whitney exhibitions have traveled nationally and internationally, including the 2019 presentation of Mary Corse: A Survey in Light at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and the first-ever exhibition of Edward Hopper’s work in Korea, Edward Hopper: From City to Coast (2023), organized in conjunction with Seoul Museum of Art. Ruth Asawa Through Line was co-organized with the Menil Collection, where the exhibition is currently on view. Earlier in her career, Conaty also served as Biennial Coordinator for the 2008 Whitney Biennial and as a curatorial intern and researcher at the Whitney.

Prior to the Whitney, Kim Conaty was Curator at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, where she oversaw the museum’s renowned permanent collection of modern and contemporary art and led the curatorial program of special exhibitions, collection installations, and related programming. There, she organized several exhibitions, including Sharon Lockhart I Noa Eshkol (2016) and David Shrigley: Life Model II (2016); commissioned the major site-specific installation Tony Lewis: Plunder (2017); and served as coordinating curator for the first U.S. solo museum exhibition of Joe Bradley, Joe Bradley: A Survey (2017). While at the Rose, Conaty also curated an exhibition for Art + Practice, Los Angeles, Fred Eversley: Black, White, Gray (2016), a focused examination of the artist’s critically important monochromatic sculptures of the 1970s, which opened at A+P and traveled to the Rose.

Before joining the Rose, Kim Conaty served as the Sue and Eugene Mercy, Jr., Assistant Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. There, she curated Abstract Generation: Now in Print (2013) and served as curatorial assistant on the exhibition Print/Out (2012), both of which proposed a new range of approaches to contemporary print practice. At MoMA, she also collaborated on several exhibitions of postwar and contemporary art, such as Marcel Broodthaers: Retrospective (2016), Contemporary Art from the Collection (2010), Fluxus Preview (2009), and In & Out of Amsterdam: Travels in Conceptual Art, 1960–1976 (2009), among others. In addition to growing the collection with works by artists including Daniel Joseph Martinez, Janice Kerbel, and Pope.L, Conaty led a project team dedicated to MoMA’s Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus Collection and was an active member of the cross­ departmental research initiative C-MAP (Contemporary and Modern Art Perspectives in a Global Context).

Kim Conaty has also held positions at the Clark Art Institute; the Grey Art Gallery, NYU; the Guggenheim Museum; and the Harvard Art Museums, where she organized an exhibition on Marcel Breuer's bent-plywood furniture from the 1930s (2002). A former instructor on modern and contemporary art for MoMA Courses and contributor to several publications, Conaty has authored texts for, among others, the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, LACMA, MoMA, and the Whitney, and has published and lectured on a variety of topics, including Joe Bradley, Wade Guyton, Nadia Kaabi-Linke, Stanley Whitney, and Avalanche magazine, the subject of her Ph.D. dissertation. A recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to Germany in 2003 and a Clark Art Institute Summer Fellowship in 2014, Conaty earned her B.A. from Middlebury College, M.A. from Williams College, and Ph.D. from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts.

Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY 10014

26/12/23

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha, Qatar - Text + Photographs

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha, Qatar

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Exterior
Architect: Jean-François Bodin
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Exterior
Architect: Jean-François Bodin
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Exterior
Architect: Jean-François Bodin
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

The Museum offers a welcoming, vibrant environment that invites evolving discussions about modern art in the region and beyond. Home to a permanent collection that offers a distinctively unique comprehensive overview of modern and contemporary art from North Africa and the Middle East, Mathaf ("museum" in Arabic) also performs a vital role as a centre for dialogue and scholarship and a resource for fostering creativity. 

Mathaf was opened in 2010 by Qatar Museums in partnership with Qatar Foundation (QF) and is located in Education City. It is located in a former school building in Qatar Foundation’s Education City, which was transformed by French architect Jean-François Bodin. The Museum was founded by H.E. Sheikh Hassan bin Mohammed bin Ali Al Thani, who began collecting in the 1980s with the acquisition of works by Qatari artists. 

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Interior
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Interior
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Interior
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
Buidlding Interior
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Sheikh Hassan later broadened his focus to include works by 20th-century artists throughout the Middle East, North Africa, and the Arab Diaspora and objects that inspired many Arab modern artists, such as pre-Islamic works from ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. An initial group of works assembled by Sheikh Hassan was donated to the public institution. 

Over the past decade, Mathaf has hugely contributed to research and debate around modern art contemporary art, made available to scholars and audiences through the Mathaf Encyclopedia of Modern Art and the Arab World. The Museum made itself a meeting point for scholars from across the region around education programmes, conferences, and publications. It has served as a dynamic platform for artists by facilitating the creation and exploration of contemporary works.

Mathaf presents a world-class temporary exhibition programme each year, featuring internationally acclaimed modern and contemporary artists whose work plays an important role in opening conversations on the social and political shifts in the history and contemporary life of the Arab world, investigating the way societies are structured, and interrogating the role art plays in our local and regional contexts. Since opening in 2010, the museum has held solo exhibitions of artists including Adel Abdessemed, Etel Adnan, El Anatsui, Dia Al-Azzawi, Yto Barrada, Cai Guo-Qiang, Huguette Caland, Mona Hatoum, M F Husain, Fateh al-Moudarres, Shirin Neshat, Raqs Media Collective, and Wael Shawky. 

Abdellah Karroum
Abdellah Karroum
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Abdellah Karroum was the director of Mathaf from june 2013 through 2021.

Zeina Arida
Zeina Arida
Photo Courtesy of Qatar Museums

Zeina Arida is the director of Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art. An expert in the arts, culture and heritage of the Arab world with a focus on photography, archives and modern and contemporary art, Zeina Arida reopened the Sursock Museum in Beirut after a ten-year renovation and expansion project, initiating local and international partnerships, presenting exhibitions, public programmes, and library and archives programmes, turning the museum into a local and international landmark. After the museum was damaged by the Beirut blast in 2020, she raised more than $2.5 million for the reconstruction of the building and the restoration of the artworks. From 1997 to 2014, Zeina Arida was the director of the Arab Image Foundation (AIF), where she co-initiated Middle East Photograph Preservation Initiative (MEPPI), a strategic multi-year programme designed to raise awareness of the importance of preserving the region’s photographic heritage. 

MATHAF: ARAB MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
Education City, Doha, Qatar

11/11/23

Hortensia Herrero Art Centre, Valencia - CAHH - Centro de Arte Hortensia Herrero

Hortensia Herrero Art Centre, Valencia, Opening
11 November 2023

After more than five years of work and preparation, the CENTRO DE ARTE HORTENSIA HERRERO (CAHH) Hortensia Herrero Art Centre opens its doors with the aim of providing a new window on contemporary art and bringing it closer to those who live in or visit Valencia. Located in the heart of the city, the building, with 3,500 square metres of exhibition space, will house a selection from the private collection of Hortensia Herrero, vice president of Mercadona and president of the foundation that bears her name.

Well known for her commitment to art and culture, the president of the Hortensia Herrero Foundation has been the driving force behind this project, and her vision and dedication have been crucial in making it a reality. Between the restoration of the building and the various interventions, both architectural and artistic, the cost of the project has come to 40 million euros.
“This is a wonderful day for me. Seven and a half years has been a long period of my life, a long period of work for the architects, for Carlos Campos, Carlos Barberá, the Mercadona team and my colleagues in the Hortensia Herrero Foundation, led by Alejandra Silvestre. At last this art centre is a reality”, began Hortensia Herrero. “One of the objectives of my foundation is to care for the city’s heritage, to bring to light the beauty of buildings that are our history and are in ruins. With this restoration I think that objective is being fulfilled. Add to that my art collection and I think we’re creating a cultural focus in Valencia for both residents and visitors to enjoy.”
On the building, Hortensia Herrero wanted to express her gratitude for “the work of the team of architects, and especially my daughter Amparo for the loving care and the hours she has put into this project. They’ve managed to adapt the unique features of the building, its nooks and crannies, its passages… to house great works. This is a little jewel in the heart of Valencia and they’ve brought out the very best in it.”
She gave an account of how her relationship with art began. “I’ve always enjoyed painting, art in general, handicrafts. I visited galleries, museums… and bought the odd picture, becoming a collector without realising. One day, Elena Tejedor, my fantastic project initiator at the Foundation, introduced me to Javier Molins while visiting Andreu Alfaro’s studio. With Javier we arranged the purchases so that everything was harmonious and made sense. That’s how we got involved in the world of galleries, fairs like Arco, Basel, Frieze, biennials like Venice. What with all this, we have some 50 artists represented in this art centre, some of them bought in Valencia galleries, thanks to Abierto València. In addition, we have six site-specifics. We selected six artists to make us specific installations for this centre, so that they would develop their creativity by embellishing it.”
Hortensia Herrero ended by thanking “my husband, because without the results he obtains from his company, it would not have been possible to make this happen. Thank you all from my heart. I hope you like it as much as I do.”

CAHH: A private collection of contemporary art

Hortensia Herrero has always has a special sensitivity to art and has been collecting artworks for more than ten years. The Hortensia Herrero Art Collection has a clear international orientation, with contemporary artists of recognised stature that can be found in the collections of museums such as MoMA, the Tate or the Pompidou Centre, among many others. The first presentation of this collection, with which the Hortensia Herrero Art Centre will open its doors tomorrow, Saturday 11 November, includes over 100 works by more than 50 artists.

Names like Andreas Gursky, Anselm Kiefer, Georg Baselitz, Anish Kapoor, Mat Collishaw, Cristina Iglesias, Manolo Valdés, Michal Rovner, Ann Veronica Janssens, Eduardo Chillida and Tony Cragg are just some of the more than 50 artists whose work will be represented in one of the seventeen exhibition rooms in the Hortensia Herrero Art Centre. They are accompanied by internationally renowned figures such as David Hockney, El Anatsui and Peter Halley, and the Spanish artists Miquel Barceló, Blanca Muñoz, Julio González, Antonio Girbés, Juan Genovés and Joan Miró.
Javier Molins, artistic director of the Hortensia Herrero Art Centre, is the collection’s adviser: “Not only have we brought in a series of outstanding names in contemporary art, but we’ve brought in the best work by these artists, because there’s been a high degree of involvement on their part. In many cases they’ve been asked to do something specifically for the art centre or we’ve waited for some time to find the piece that best fitted into the collection.”

Javier Molins began working on this collection with Hortensia Herrero a decade ago: “The collection and the centre that houses it are the product of two quite distinct yet complementary passions: on the one hand, the passion that Hortensia Herrero has always felt for art, which has prompted her to collect and put together a set of works of high quality, and on the other, her passion for the city of Valencia, which has led her to acquire one of its most representative buildings, restore it, bring to light a whole series of archaeological remains of the history of the city and open it to the public with her contemporary art collection. In this way, a very interesting dialogue is set up between the history of the city, starting in the Roman Empire, with its circus, part of which we can see in the subsoil of the building, and the most international contemporary art.”

Six site-specifics at the CAHH

The space that accommodates this exhibition, the former Palacio de Valeriola, has been restored by the ERRE Architecture studio. Moreover, the beauty of a unique historical space containing the whole history of the city has been enhanced by specific interventions in six corners of the art centre. These are six site-specifics, created by artists of international stature, that merge with the building. Jaume Plensa, who visited the CAHH during the restoration process, has intervened in the apse, which connects the mansion to the garden. The “navel” of the building — melic in Catalan, as Plensa himself dubbed it — now has its walls inundated with letters and symbols in various alphabets from all over the world. Tomás Saraceno has created an installation comprising six clouds composed of irregular tetrahedrons and dodecahedrons and covered with iridescent panels, which completely fill the sixteen-metre-high entrance hall. Sean Scully has intervened in the former chapel of the Palacio, filling the space with colour. Scully suggested carrying out a comprehensive transformation of the chapel that would include both the windows in the walls and the glass in the dome. His intervention was completed with one of his paintings from the Landline series, characterized by horizontal stripes in various colours. Cristina Iglesias has transformed the connection between the main building and the annex, so that visitors will be able to feel they are inside her work. Olafur Eliasson has brought to life another of the passages in the building, creating a tunnel with two quite distinct perspectives: the view at the entrance, in which we can see 1,035 pieces of glass, each with a different design and position, containing all the colours of the rainbow, and the view looking back from the exit, where we see a black tunnel. Finally, there is Mat Collishaw, whose work is characterized by treating classical themes from art history with modern technology. Hortensia Herrero was fascinated by the video Sordid Earth created by Collishaw for Rod Arad’s curtain (which Hortensia Herrero herself brought to Valencia in the summer of 2022), so she commissioned him to produce a video specially for the art centre. She slipped in the idea that it could be inspired by the Fallas of Valencia, another of this patron’s great passions.

In short, they are six interventions that not only enter into a dialogue with the space but end up being integrated into the building itself and further enhancing its uniqueness. All these works will remain in the art centre permanently, enriching its architecture and investing this building with soul.

Supporting the Valencian art ecosystem: the Abierto València room

As the art centre is situated in Valencia, Hortensia Herrero was determined not to forget the city’s more emerging art and its gallery ecosystem. As Javier Molins explains, the Valencian patron “first started collecting in her own city by acquiring artworks by the artists who exhibited in its galleries for her own enjoyment in the privacy of her own home. It is a practice that she has continued over time and has institutionalized through the acquisition prize she awards every year as part of the event known as Abierto València (Open Valencia), with which the galleries of Valencia launch the September season. From 2014 to 2022, twenty-one works by sixteen artists have been added to the Hortensia Herrero collection through this acquisition prize, and two rooms in the CAHH have been fitted out to show a selection of these works acquired in the galleries of Valencia.”

CAHH: A unique space

As if the selection that forms this first exhibition were not enough, its container, the actual building that houses the Hortensia Herrero Art Centre, is a work of art in itself. It is located in the former Palacio de Valeriola, an iconic construction in a Baroque style which encapsulates the history of the city, from Roman, Visigothic and Islamic times to the Christian era: a space like few others in Valencia in which to see and admire the past. Moreover, a fragment of the Roman circus of the ancient city of Valentia has been found in the subsoil.

The site was part of Muslim Balansiya between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries, and remains of two fountains belonging to an Islamic patio have been found in it. One of them has survived in good condition and can be viewed by visitors to the art centre. This eight-pointed fountain, and the other, which is more damaged, stood at either end of the pool in a large courtyard with a border of plants, framed by channels around the perimeter and rotundas at the corners, through which water circulated.

This courtyard belonged to the large Islamic house of Haçach Habinbadel. It also constitutes the last vestige of the Jewish quarter, as can be seen in an alley that lies within the art centre and has also been recovered for visitors to enjoy. Later on, the construction of the Palacio de Valeriola became a showcase for the opulence of Valencian Baroque society.

The restoration of the building, which was in a very advanced state of dereliction when Hortensia Herrero acquired it, was undertaken by the ERRE Arquitectura studio. Amparo Roig, one of its three partners, also took part in the presentation of this new exhibition space:
“We fell in love with this building, even though it was a ruin. A ruin that was lucky enough to catch the eye of Hortensia Herrero, with unstinting investment of time, cost and loving care. And in order to breathe life into the building, ensuring its continuity over time. From the outset we aimed to recover the original character of the existing building, reinforcing the most damaged parts, of which there were many. We’ve brought out the original atmosphere of the seventeenth-century palacio while achieving an exhibition space with the modern facilities it deserves. We hope and wish that this new chapter in the history of the Palacio de Valeriola, from now on the Hortensia Herrero Art Centre, will serve to promote contemporary art of the highest level and to highlight the great value of Valencia’s architectural heritage”, explained Amparo Roig.
The exhibition area is organized around seventeen rooms distributed on four levels. One of the main challenges of the project was to design a continuous walkthrough that would offer visitors a pleasant and comfortable experience throughout an area of over 3,500 square metres. This walkthrough follows an ascending course in the Calle del Mar building and descends in the second section, adjacent to Calle de San Cristóbal, connecting with it via the building situated in the garden. The complex is completed with a landscaped courtyard, as well as a basement, where the remains of the ancient Roman circus of Valencia found during the archaeological excavations can be visited. This Roman circus was the most imposing structure in the city in the second century AD, with an area equivalent to more than three football pitches (350 metres long and more than 70 metres wide). During the excavations, several sections of the thick five-metre-wide wall of the western tiered seating area were located, another three transverse walls serving as braces, and seven buttresses on the outside of the wall. These finds have been preserved and will be open to visitors to the centre.

The restoration work has taken over five years, during which the aim has been to recover as far as possible the historical character contained in the Palacio de Valeriola, and at the same time to turn it into a leading contemporary art centre, with all the technological requirements that this entails.

CENTRO DE ARTE HORTENSIA HERRERO, VALENCIA
HORTENSIA HERRERO ART CENTRE, VALENCIA
Calle del Mar, 31 – 46003 València

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