VIRGINIA BEACH, VA.- The
Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (Virginia MOCA) announced Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Natures Underworld, a major new traveling exhibition of the internationally renowned and closely linked artists. Featuring approximately 30 large-scale paintings and sculptures created by Dion and Rockman between 1990 and 2021, the exhibition surveys three decades of avid exploration and engagement with the natural world. Journey to Natures Underworld offers a timely examination and cautionary vision of our present ecological moment, inviting viewers to voyage with the artists to the threatened yet alluring depths of our environmental terrain. On view February 9 through June 9, 2024, the exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts and guest curated by Suzanne Ramljak along with Virginia MOCA site curator Heather Hakimzadeh.
Both Dion and Rockman have achieved widespread acclaim for their probing commentary on the fraught relationship between humans and nature. Among the first artists to investigate the realities and consequences of environmental devastation, the two developed unique visual vocabularies and trajectories in the contemporary art world. Rockman produces monumental, meticulously detailed landscape paintings, at once densely populated with living creatures and devoid of human presence; Dion creates elaborate sculptural installations that often resemble taxidermy displays or cabinets of curiosities. Their distinctive styles similarly explore the cultural and behavioral forces shaping our landscape, raising alarm about the future of our planet while celebrating its lasting wonder and untamed beauty.
Since they first met in New York in the late 1980s, the artists have embarked on joint expeditions to the Central and South American tropics; bonded over their shared childhood fascination with natural history and outdoor exploration; co-edited the 1996 book, Concrete Jungle, on anthropogenic ecosystems; and propelled each others commitment to art, environmentalism, and preservation. Yet never before have the artists exhibited together in a shared survey highlighting their artistic allegiances and mutual love of the natural world. A new collaborative piece entitled American Landscape, created specially for the exhibition, marks this unprecedented journey through the artists 30-year creative union.
Journey to Natures Underworld speaks to an enduring reality of our region and our worldthe fragility of nature, said Virginia MOCA Director and CEO Gary Ryan. The work of Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman is a passionate appeal to take care of our planet. The beautiful and devastating voicings of their concerns about the perils faced if we, as citizens of the world, dont take care are incredibly poignant now.
Journey to Natures Underworld premiered at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, CT, in June 2023, and will travel to the Tang Teaching Museum at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY; the Lowe Art Museum at the University of Miami; and the Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State University after the Virginia MOCA presentation.
Virginia MOCA presents Journey to Natures Underworld in conjunction with Spencer Tinkham: Witness, a solo exhibition of the artist and Hampton Roads natives close study and sculptural storytelling of birds and their habitats. Together, the exhibitions remind us how inextricably linked we are with the environment and all living beings, continuing Virginia MOCAs commitment to exploring environmental issues and sustainability through contemporary art. The Museum has worked to initiate dialogue about our threatened ecological landscape through exhibitions such as Maya Lin: A Study of Water, When the Water Rises: Recent Paintings by Julie Heffernan, and Courtney Mattison: Sea Change, profoundly impactful presentations that emphasized the fragility of our natural world and the urgency and local relevance of our global climate crisis.
A richly illustrated catalogue accompanying Journey to Natures Underworld will be available for sale. Co-published by the American Federation of Arts and Hirmer Publishers, the catalogue explores the work of Dion and Rockman in an introduction by guest curator Suzanne Ramljak; an essay by writer, art critic, and activist Lucy R. Lippard; a new joint interview with organizer and writer Patrick Jaojoco; and a timeline of the artists lives.
The exhibitions are open to the public as of Friday, February 9, 2024, offering free admission to all.