MINNEAPOLIS, MN.- This summer, the
Minneapolis Institute of Art celebrates the arrival of major works by artists working in Chicago primarily from the 1960s through the 1980s with the exhibition New to Mia: Art from Chicago. The presentation features approximately 30 recent gifts of paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints, including several from the late critic Dennis Adrian, champion of many generations of Chicago artists. Works on view are by artists Roger Brown, Leon Golub, Wadsworth Jarrell, Gladys Nilsson, Suellen Rocca, and Karl Wirsum, among others. Presented in Mias Cargill Gallery from August 25, 2018, through January 6, 2019, the exhibition is organized by Robert Cozzolino, PhD, Mias Patrick and Aimee Butler Curator of Paintings.
The exhibition is presented as part of Art Design Chicago, an initiative of the Terra Foundation for American Art focused on examining the art and design movements that were born and nurtured in Chicago, and their relationships to other artistic developments throughout the world. It aims to help people in Chicago and around the world experience, understand, and enjoy the citys extraordinary artistic legacy. Mia is one of more than 60 participating organizations.
Chicagos recent contributions to the field of art history remain under-known, though the artists represented in this exhibition made important contributions to American art and continue to inspire younger artists today, Cozzolino said. Chicago has long been a hotbed of creativity across the arts, yet its artists are still underrepresented in museum collections outside their home city. Our installation marks the first time some of these artists have exhibited here and the first entry of their work into Minnesota collections.
Added Cozzolino: Mia is enormously grateful to Dennis Adrian, who did more in his lifetime than nearly any other writer to promote the work of Chicago artists. Additional gifts include those by from art historian Richard Born, Adrians partner, and Kiyoko Lerner, the widow of photographer Nathan Lerner, as well as those from the artists Ted Halkin and Linda Kramer.
For much of Chicagos modern art history, artists resisted stylistic trends and instead pursued new ways of seeing and working. Many artists included in Art from Chicago took inspiration from the political climate of the 1940s through the 1960s. They also embraced source material beyond the fine art world, preferring to draw at the Field Museum of Natural History, find inspiration from the Maxwell Street Flea Market, and seek stimulation in the visual cacophony of their neighborhoods. Additionally, many in this generation considered comics a folk art and took as much inspiration from them as they did from any other artistic source.
Matthew Welch, PhD, Mias deputy director and chief curator, said: At the beginning of 2016, Mia held few works by artists whose careers had significant ties to Chicago. By the time of this exhibition, Mia will have added major works by two dozen artists with close ties to Chicago who were not previously represented in its collection. The broader aim in growing Mias collection is to expand the canon of who is viewed and studied to show works that elucidate the sources and affinities in global art.
Artists featured in Art from Chicago include: Robert Barnes (b. 1934), Roger Brown (19411997), Sarah Canright (b. 1941), Dominick Di Meo (b. 1927), Ed Flood (19441985), Leon Golub (19222004), Ted Halkin (b. 1924), Philip Hanson (b. 1943), Richard Hull (b. 1955), Miyoko Ito (19181983), Wadsworth Jarrell (b. 1929), Thomas Kapsalis (b. 1925), Linda Kramer (b. 1937), Paul Lamantia (b. 1938), June Leaf (b. 1929), Nathan Lerner (19131997), Gladys Nilsson (b. 1940), Suellen Rocca (b. 1943), Karl Wirsum (b. 1939), and Ray Yoshida (19302009). Their work plays with conventions of gender and sexuality, buzzes with comic book references, and is charged with psychologically fraught imagery.
Featured highlights:
Wadsworth Jarrells 1972 screenprint Revolutionary, a portrait of Angela Davis that in recent years has become an iconic presence in major surveys of the Black Arts Movement. Jarrell was a founding member of AfriCOBRA in Chicago.
Roger Browns 1971 oil painting Skyscraper, which incorporates themes of Chicago architecture combined with his love of cinema and film noir, evidenced in the viewers ability to spy suggestive silhouettes in the buildings windows.
Ed Floods Kick Me and Seymour Rosofskys Daley Machine, made for protest exhibitions in the wake of the notorious events of the 1968 Democratic National Convention in which Mayor Richard J. Daley authorized police to attack protesters.
Collaborative comic books and individual artworks by three members of the late-1960s group the Hairy WhoGladys Nilsson, Suellen Rocca, and Karl Wirsumwho with their cohorts James Falconer, Art Green, and Jim Nutt will be the subject of a retrospective this fall at the Art Institute of Chicago, marking the 50th anniversary of the last Hairy Who show in Chicago.
Works donated by monster roster artist Ted Halkinpart of a group of artists who created deeply psychological works that drew on classical mythology and ancient artand Linda Kramer, founding member of Artemisia Gallery, a feminist cooperative gallery founded in 1973.
Miraculous Matriarch (1980), a major work by Ray Yoshida, who was also an enormously influential teacher at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1960s90s.
Two oil paintings by Japanese-American Miyoko Ito, Untitled #107 (195658) and Gorodiva (1968), highlighting her distinctive approach to abstraction.
The installation also includes video interviews of artists from Leslie Buchbinders Pentimenti Productions film Hairy Who and the Chicago Imagists.
Added Cozzolino: Many conversations that have echoed in Chicagos art world will have a particular resonance in Minneapolis: the debates about whether to stay or leave; the relationship of big teaching personalities in art departments and art schools to the influence on their students; and the importance of art traditions in American cities outside New York City and how they impact the national scene. Like many cities, Chicago has been left out of the New Yorkdominated histories, but in recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in what its artists did that ran contrary to this overshadowing narrative.