PURCHASE, NY.- In the 1967 film The Graduate, Mr. McGuire dispenses fatherly advice to recent college graduate Benjamin Braddock. I want to say one word to you, Benjamin. Just one word. Are you listening? Plastics! Theres a great future in plastics. Think about it. Will you think about it?
He did. So did many of Americas artists, who, fascinated by the technology, seized on its potential and incorporated the material into their work as technological and commercial developments in plastics flourished.
Plastic was malleable, thin, translucent, lightweight, and could be stitched together or spliced, glued, melted, colored, and molded. For artists and designers, plastic in all its forms promised the possibility of creating unprecedented forms. At the same time, as it became the material of modernity, plastic was embraced as a vehicle to comment on ideas about disposability, as society began to use synthetics for everyday objects and then just throw them away.
So, whether encouraged by industry, or responding to behavior, or just excited by plastics inherent qualities, artists created works that showcased the mediums diverse, expressive, and complex qualities.
Between May 9 and August 23, 2015, the
Neuberger Museum of Art is presenting Plastic: Art in an Era of Material Innovation, an exhibition drawn from the Museums permanent collection of more than thirty works dating from the late 1950s to the early 1970s that were fabricated from, epoxy, Plexiglas, polyester resin, polyurethane, vinyl and other synthetics by approximately 20 artists including Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Louise Nevelson, LeRoy Lamis, and Robert Rauschenberg. The styles range from Conceptualism and Minimalism to Op and Pop Art, and illustrate artists fascination with new materials and their desire to comment on its implications.
Spanning the dominant art movements of the mid-twentieth century, the show demonstrates the unique versatility and dominance of plastic in art at its apex, explains Grace Converse, exhibition curator and a Neuberger Curatorial Fellow and graduate student in the Purchase College MA Program in Art History, Criticism, and Theory. While negative connotations about plastic being a cheap medium and the use of it for that very reason are polemical, we want to embrace the negative as part of the conversation.
During World War II, the push to create new industrial materials encouraged the chemical industry to develop new synthetic materials. A paradigm for innovation was set: if it could be imagined, it could be created, notes Converse. Because artists of the time were not confined by imperatives to make better consumer or military products, they were able to more fully explore the materials potential and question the ramifications of its use...The fact that plastic was a manifestation of chemical and technological innovation, it [became that much more] appealing to many artists. Working with the material...allowed them to participate in, reflect upon, and actively shape the course of this new technological development.
By the 1960s, the excitement about using synthetic plastic to make art reached a fevered pitch. As artists experimented with the shapes, colors textures, dimensions, and luminosities made possible by this medium, exhibitions specifically focused on art and plastic abounded across the United States. And while certain critics hesitated in celebrating the use of synthetic materials, artists explored its exceptional properties and the plastics industry press, exhibition catalogues, and curators touted the value of artists experiments. Geometric works, for example, called attention to the unique properties of the material and in Pop art conventional connotations of it as cheap, disposable, mass-produced, and commonplace contributed to the overall message communicated by the work.
Plastic: Art in an Era of Material Innovation revisits plastic as a curatorial theme. Exhibiting these works today provides an experiential means to understand the excitement and controversies that surrounded plastics when they were first exhibited, says Converse. The significance of art to and within the history of technological development is equal to the contemporaneous scientific and technological innovations themselves and in this exhibition, they are presented as such. We can take from it many lessons on how artists and the rest of us can approach cresting waves of innovation.
Plastic: Art in an Era of Material Innovation is organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College, curated by Grace Converse, a Neuberger Curatorial Fellow and graduate student in the Purchase College MA Program in Art History, Criticism, and Theory, and is overseen by Patrice Giasson, Neuberger Associate Curator of the Art of the Americas.