WILLIAMSTOWN, MA.- The Clark Art Institute has launched a new program of year-long contemporary art exhibitions installed in its public spaces with an inaugural exhibition, Pia Camil: Velo Revelo, presenting three works by Pia Camil (Mexican, b. 1980). The program includes a site-specific installation in the Manton Research Center Reading Room and two works presented in the lower level of the Clark Center. The exhibition title combines the Spanish words for veil and to reveal, suggesting Camils interest in the tensions between private and public, opaque and transparent, domestic and institutional. The exhibition of Camils work will be on view through January 2021 and is free and open to the public.
Pia Camil, one of the most exciting artists working in Latin America today, said Olivier Meslay, Hardymon Director at the Clark. This is a wonderful collaboration that enlivens our public spaces and reminds visitors that the Clark is a place for the art of all ages, year-round.
Robert Wiesenberger organized the exhibition for the Clark, working closely with Camil. Pia Camil is the ideal artist to launch this program, given her sensitivity to architectural space, her deep engagement with art history, and the breadth of her cultural references, said Wiesenberger, the associate curator of contemporary projects at the Clark. Camil excels in many media, from ceramics to drawings to performance, but this selection shows visitors how she deals with one specific medium: using fabric alone, Camil creates works that are both beautiful and incisive, asking probing questions about craft, the body, gender, and identity.
Camil used the sheer nylon of womens pantyhose to create Velo Revelo (2020), a more than fifty-foot-long curtain that partially covers both an internal window that looks into the Clarks library and conceals a scale reproduction of a painting she selected from the Clarks collection. The sculpture modifies the formal, public, and institutional architecture of the Manton Reading Room to evoke intimacy, domesticity, and femininity. For Camil, the range of skin-toned colors used in stockings also invites questions of identity and self-presentation. She chose Giovanni Boldinis (Italian, 18421931) Young Woman Crocheting (1875), which depicts craft as leisure, to be seen through the curtain, as much for its focus on the subjectivity of the sitter as for the richly handled fabrics depicted surrounding her. The original painting is currently on view in the Clarks permanent collection galleries.
Telluride Tunic (2015) and Valparaiso Green Cloak for Three (2016), two sculptures from Camils Skins series, are presented in the lower level of the Clark Center. These monumental, garment-like forms, made of castoff fabric from textile factories, draw parallels between traditional Mexican craft and the modernist American paintings of Frank Stella. Telluride Tunic borrows its title and color from Frank Stellas 1962 Telluride, a T-shaped canvas in his Copper Paintings series. Noting the similar shape and geometric patterning of Stellas painting and garments like the poncho or serape, Camil collaborated with fashion designer Erin Lewis and seamstress Virginia Juarez to reimagine Telluride in cloth. Similar to Telluride Tunic, Valparaiso Green Cloak for Three (2016) references the methodical geometry of Stella and traditional Mexican dress but adds colorful, seemingly painterly printing errors on the fabric as a gestural counterpoint to Stellas matter-of-fact minimalism. Intentionally oversized to fit multiple people, it is also an object that implies a performance.
Research assistance for the project was provided by Mariana Fernandez, curatorial intern and graduate student in the Williams Graduate Program in the History of Art. Pia Camils work is courtesy of the artist and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo.
Pia Camil lives and works in Mexico City, and studied at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Slade School of Fine Art in London. Her practice is research-driven and collaborative, and her mediarange from found and hand-dyed fabric to ceramics, video, and performance. Camils work was recently presented in solo exhibitions at the Guggenheim Museum, Queens Museum, Museo Universitario del Chopo, Nottingham Contemporary, and Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati.