CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- The Harvard Art Museums have unveiled a new, one-of-a-kind installation designed by contemporary American sculptor Arlene Shechet. Disrupt the View: Arlene Shechet at the Harvard Art Museums presents recent work by the artist alongside historical German, Japanese, and Chinese tableware and figures from the museums collections, encouraging visitors to look anew at works of porcelain and other objects. The multiyear installation is on view through July 6, 2025, in Gallery 1510 (Level 1).
Disrupt the View was organized by Lynette Roth, Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum; Jessica Ficken, Cunningham Curatorial Assistant for the Collection in the Division of Modern and Contemporary Art; and Gabriella Szalay, former Renke B. and Pamela M. Thye Curatorial Fellow in the Busch-Reisinger Museum (201820).
In Disrupt the View, Shechets creative take on hundreds of years of porcelainfrom its initial Asian manufacture to European imperialist imaginings of life in Asiaencourages visitors to see these objects with fresh eyesas handmade and industrially manufactured and as painterly and sculptural. The installationdisplayed inside one of the museums outdoor-facing glass-walled galleriesincludes 24 works made by Shechet during her 201213 residency at the Meissen Porcelain Manufactory in Saxon, Germany, which respond to the factorys history of porcelain production in a playful, disruptive blurring of the binaries between historical and contemporary, production and final product, and utilitarian and decorative. These works, as well as a recent sculpture, Grammar (2020), are intermingled with 64 examples of historical porcelain figures and tableware, ranging from the 12th through the 20th century, and from the Meissen, Höchst, Fürstenberg, and Nymphenburg manufactories in Germany, as well as from artisans in China and Japan.
Arlene Shechet has breathed new life into an extensive yet overlooked part of the Busch-Reisinger Museum, namely its 18th-century porcelain collection, said Roth. With a sculptors sensitivity, she attends to the formal, material qualities of these historical objects, but also to the sociopolitical context of their making, thereby transforming themalmost magicallyfor todays audiences.
The allure of spending time inside a functioning factory [was] extremely compelling, said Shechet. As a child in New York, I used to tell my parents there were two things I wanted to be when I grew up: a farmer or a factory worker. Thinking about that in recent years as I work in my studio, I realize that being an artist is, in many ways, like being both a farmer and a factory worker. Im growing things and generating a vision. Im not completely in control and am always aware of a process thats bigger than me.
Decorative arts are typically displayed in museum galleries dedicated to the same culture and period, often in isolation from other media. In Disrupt the View, however, Shechet mirrors her approach to artmaking in the curatorial process by playing with display conventions. She creates sculptural arrangements in narrow custom-made rectangular vitrines placed in the middle of gallery and in wall nooks where the works are upended, stacked, and pushed up against each other, as though colliding. Two constellations of platesfrom 17th-century blue-and-white ware produced in China, to 18th-century colored enamel plates adorned with scenes based on the European graphic arts, to Shechets own inventive sculptureshang from the gallery ceiling, emphasizing the unique material qualities of plates as sculptural design. Shechet also incorporated Woman with Animals (c. 1912), a large, rare surviving stained-glass work by German artist Max Pechstein from the Busch-Reisinger Museums collection, thereby connecting to a related tradition in the applied arts. The positioning of these works in a gallery with three walls of glass allows natural light to filter in and for visitors to view the installation from outside the building. Detailed information for many of the individual objects in the installation is available online and accessible through QR codes placed on the gallery walls.
To realize the unusual installation, Shechet worked very closely with the curatorial team and with many other Harvard Art Museums staff. Members of the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies and the Collections Management department made recommendations on the overall layout of the gallery, designed the metal armatures for the plate constellations, and created the custom mounts needed for each of the artworks. Conservation staff advised on and tested a unique adhesive method used to safely attach each delicate plate to the constellation armatures.
Arlene Shechet is a multidisciplinary sculptor living and working in New York City and the Hudson Valley.
A major, critically acclaimed survey of her work, All At Once, which The New York Times called some of the most imaginative American sculpture of the past 20 years, and some of the most radically personal, was on view at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, in 2015, with an accompanying monograph. Shechets work also includes historical museum installations. Porcelain, No Simple Matter: Arlene Shechet and the Arnhold Collection was on view at The Frick Collection, New York (2016); and From Here On Now at The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C. (2016). An ambitious large-scale public project by the artist, including monumental porcelain and mixed-media sculptures, opened in September 2018 at Madison Square Park in New York.
Shechet was featured in PBSs Art 21 (2014) as well as in the Metropolitan Museum of Arts The Artist Project (2016). She is the recipient of numerous awards, including a John S. Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship Award (2004), the Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Grant (2010), and the 2016 CAA Artist Award for Distinguished Body of Work.
Shechets work is held in many distinguished public collections, including the Brooklyn Museum, New York; CCS Bard Hessel Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; the Jewish Museum, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among others.