|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Wednesday, September 24, 2025 |
|
Wunderground: Providence, 1995 to the Present |
|
|
|
PROVIDENCE, RI.- For the past decade, Providence, RI, has been the site of a radical underground art scene, giving rise to a multi-faceted, unbridled aesthetic that is as distinct as it is influential. The work earns international press ranging from music and fine art to comic and shelter publications, yet the artists maintain their underground life-as-art practices. This fall, the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design will present Wunderground: Providence, 1995 to the present, an exhibition celebrating Providence's intersection of art and music.
This watershed exhibition consists of two parts, representing present and past: Shangri-la-la-land and Providence Poster Art, 1995-2005. Organized by Judith Tannenbaum, Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art at The RISD Museum, the exhibition is conceived by a core group of eight artists: Mat Brinkman, Brian Chippendale, Jim Drain, Leif Goldberg, Jungil Hong, Xander Marro, Erin Rosenthal, and Pippi Zornoza.
"This exhibition provides an extraordinary window onto a thriving creative world whose art is seldom-seen by mainstream museum-goers," says Tannenbaum. "We hope to honor the non-establishment spirit of this community within the Museum's walls."
For Shangri-la-la-land the eight artists will construct a sculptural installation especially for the Museum's soaring 30-foot Main Gallery, transforming it into a fantastic landscape loosely based on the idea of a village. The artists, who work in a range of media including video and film animation, comics, music, puppet theater, and screen-printing, will make a winding path through eccentric buildings and trees, with a 16-foot monster looming above. Taking the raucous interiors of such Providence artists' collectives as Fort Thunder and Dirt Palace as a guide, bets are on for a lively spectacle.
Providence Poster Art, 1995-2005 will display, floor-to-ceiling, some 2,000 screen-printed posters advertising rock shows, art exhibitions, and community events held in Providence since 1995-a comprehensive timeline of the signature creative activities of the underground's last decade: silk-screening and noise music. Over 200 artists created these colorful, graphic, cartoony posters for happenings at off-the-radar venues such as Safari Lounge, Candle Factory, Box of Knives, and Pink Rabbit. These are among the sites-some established, some fleeting-in which Providence's mighty "noise" music scene was born. Headsets with recordings of live shows will pepper the galleries.
Hope Alswang, Director of The RISD Museum, says of the opportunity to present these artists, "It's hard to imagine a richer connection between an exhibition's content and the exhibition venue itself. Many of Olneyville's artists were once RISD students; this is our story, raw, intense, loud, and exuberant."
The posters date back to the summer of 1995, when two RISD students, Chippendale and Brinkman, founded the legendary artists' collective/rock-show venue Fort Thunder in the Providence neighborhood of Olneyville.
An improvisational installation filled floor-to-ceiling with eye-popping sculptures, paintings, and prints, The Fort housed a dozen artists in a sprawling, historic mill building. The industrial neighborhood provided a liberating backdrop for bands to play loudly and for such legendary events as costumed wrestling matches and bike parades. Olneyville became a haven for communal artists' spaces, offering that ineffable mix of possibility and freedom that breeds truly revolutionary movements.
Word of the Providence underground scene spread, and by 2001, Fort Thunder's raucous interiors were featured in Nest magazine; soon after, the resident four-artist group Forcefield was included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial. Chippendale's celebrated noise-music duo, Lightning Bolt, was touring internationally, and Brinkman's comic 'zines were drawing critical acclaim. The Fort itself was short-lived, razed by developers who put up a shopping mall in 2002. Its intrepid residents and their Olneyville cohorts persevered in new collective living spaces: notably Hilarious Attic, current site of several former Fort Thunder artists, and the women's art collective the Dirt Palace.
Judith Tannenbaum was named The RISD Museum's first curator of contemporary art in 2000. In 2002, she became the Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art, the Museum's first endowed position. At RISD she has organized Island Nations: New Art from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and the Diaspora (2004), Betty Woodman: Il Giardino dipinto (2005), On the Wall: Wallpaper by Contemporary Artists (2003), and Jim Isermann: Logic Rules (2000), among other exhibitions. From 1986 to 2000, Tannenbaum served variously as curator, associate director, and interim director at the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania.
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|