PASADENA, CA.- The Norton Simon Museum presents Modernism in Miniature, an exhibition featuring 25 small-scale artworks by some of the most recognized artists of the early to mid-20th century, including Marcel Duchamp, Lyonel Feininger, Vassily Kandinsky, Claes Oldenburg and Pablo Picasso. While revolutionary manifestoes, huge canvases and heroic proclamations have set a standard for monumental works of modern art, this exhibition spotlights artists who have employed the miniaturewith its reduction of scale and emphasis on detailas a witting challenge to the equivalence between ambition and immensity.
Marcel Duchamp (French, 18871968) once remarked, Everything important that I have done can be put into a little suitcase. The artist brought this notion to life in his Boîte-en-valise (Box in a Suitcase), a small portable museum comprised of 68 small-scale reproductions of his early paintings and readymades, which he obsessively crafted by hand between 1935 and 1941 (a later edition of this iconic work, created in 1961, is featured in the exhibition). Miniaturizing the museum retrospective to the size of a suitcase, this little survey of the artists oeuvre bears resemblance to a salesmans sample case in a playful gesture that narrows the gap between a work of fine art and a commercial product.
Modernism in Miniature takes Duchamps compact exhibition as a model and presents a collection of small objects, all drawn from the Norton Simon collections, to explore the role of dimension in 20th-century art. Spanning German Expressionism to American Pop, the exhibition reveals the aesthetic and emotional potential of miniature works of art.
Made toward the beginning of the century is a series of toy sculptures by Lyonel Feininger (American, 18711956) and his son T. Lux Feininger (American, 19102011) that draw viewers in with their dramatized expressions. These tender works, born of Feiningers relationships with his children, set a playful tone that is carried throughout the exhibition. Flanking Duchamps Boîte at the gallerys center is Hôtel du Nord (Little Dürer) by Joseph Cornell (American, 19031972). This small assemblage features reproductions of works by the German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer, most prominently his Self-Portrait at Age Thirteen, transforming this intellectual heavyweight into a kind of collectible foible. The exhibition concludes with a comparatively small-scale assemblage by John Chamberlain (American, 19272011) that compresses the gestural vigor of his gargantuan scrap-metal sculptures to reveal a subtlety and quietness that is less obvious in his massive, industrial works.
Together, this little collectionpresented in the Museums most intimate galleryreveals a counter-history of 20th-century art. Against the demands imposed by increasing monumentality, this is a tradition of whimsy, humor and intimacy at the heart of modernism.
Modernism in Miniature is organized by Frances Lazare, who served as the Museums Graduate Intern during the 202122 academic year. It is on view in the Museums focus gallery on the main level from August 12, 2022 through January 9, 2023. A video tour of the exhibition will be available on the Museums website.