SACRAMENTO, CA.- This June, the
Crocker Art Museum brings to Sacramento Turn the Page: The First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose, a one-of-a-kind exhibition of works by artists who have been prominently featured in the best-selling contemporary art magazine Hi-Fructose. This exhibition marks the tenth anniversary of the influential magazine by bringing together some of the most remarkable artists to grace its pages artists whose works may not otherwise be exhibited together.
In 2005, husband-and-wife artists Daniel Attaboy Seifert and Annie Owens set out to increase the publics access to the works of many emerging, underground, and lowbrow artists they enjoyed, and founded the pioneering magazine Hi-Fructose. Through their print and digital publications and platforms, Hi-Fructose has become an important and divergent voice for contemporary artists who work in a variety of mediums, highlighting works that demonstrate a mastery of technical skill in ways that are unique, meaningful. Through their inclusive approach, the editors have consistently employed a democratic outlook that allows pop surrealist, street, figurative, narrative, and many other styles to seamlessly converge.
This summer, the Crocker Art Museum is showing works by 51 of the foremost New Contemporary artists to be featured in Hi-Fructose. With pieces ranging from oil paintings and drawings, to porcelain, bronze sculptures, video works, and installations, Turn the Page forms a remarkable assembly of artists who have challenged traditional notions of art to inform and break new ground. According to the Museums Assistant Curator Christie Hajela, the artists featured in the exhibition have acquired followers and become successful through non-traditional means, such as Hi-Fructose magazine and social media platforms, rather than through traditional channels like museums and galleries.
Bringing these works to a museum setting reinforces the artists contributions, and the contributions of Hi-Fructose magazine, to the broader dialogue of contemporary art, says Hajela. The exhibition presents these artists not just as products of an alternative or underground scene, but as considerably underrepresented yet equally relevant.
Among the artists featured at the Crocker are Beth Cavener, Mark Ryden, Olek, Tara McPherson, and Mark Dean Veca, the latter creating an interactive, immersive installation. Visitors will likely recognize the work of street artist Shepard Fairey, who is known for his graphic, stenciled works including his Obey Giant propaganda and iconic Barack Obama Hope poster. Also on view is a heroic, old-master-style portrait of a contemporary African American man by Kehinde Wiley, whose retrospective, which is currently touring the nation, has garnered widespread acclaim. Some featured artists, including Kris Kuksi and Tracey Snelling, are already represented in the Crockers permanent collection.
Although viewers may recognize the names of the artists in this exhibition, many have only seen their works as two-dimensional images in magazines or online, says Hajela. Turn the Page creates the opportunity for viewers to walk through the pages of Hi-Fructose, and brings an array of exquisitely crafted artworks to the Crocker for an interactive and engaging experience.