WASHINGTON, DC.- The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden has announced Artists in Quarantine, an ambitious global initiative to capture the responses of contemporary international artists to the COVID-19 pandemic in their own voices. Museum Director Melissa Chiu commissionedthe artist Theaster Gates, a Hirshhorn board member, to spark the ongoing investigation of the monthslong quarantine on almost 100 fellow artists. This growing archive, to be released as a series of short, diary-style videos across the museums social-media channels and website, will become part of the Hirshhornsrecord of the impact of the global pandemic on artists, their art-making practices and their views of the world.
The project launches April 23 with five submissions from Gates, Shirin Neshat, Christine Sun Kim, Ragnar Kjartansson and Tony Oursler, with additional contributions from artists including Marilyn Minter, Kent Monkman and Hank Willis Thomas. With the deep insight artists can offer, Gates and his community will also explore the personal impact of quarantine. Artist diaries will be released on a twice-weekly basis through the Hirshhorns Instagram (@hirshhorn) and YouTube channels and housed on the museums website as part of #HirshhornInsideOut.
Art is one of the worlds great unifiers, and in times like these, it is the mission of the national museum of modern art to look to our artiststhose creating, at this very moment, the works that will live on and become a part of our collective memory, Chiu said. My colleagues and I are proud to launch this important platform, and we hope that these entries will inspire, challenge, comfort and galvanize.
The goal of the project is to collect insights during a time when artists, like billions around the world, have had their daily lives and routines disrupted in extreme ways, Gates said. Artists in Quarantine will give the public unique insights into artists, art making and artists perspectives.
Artists in Quarantine is part of #HirshhornInsideOut, an ongoing effort to share the Hirshhorns artworks, expertise and public programing at a time when the Museums campus is temporarily closed.