Fusing the aesthetics of an art-school education with the environmental immediacy of street art, Swoon has come to fame in the last few years for her large, intricate, wheat-pasted prints, urban interventions, and community-based projects. Submerged Motherlands brings her practice indoors in order to create a new, immersive environment within the Brooklyn Museum’s 5th floor rotunda gallery. Look up, look down, stand back, plunge in—the installation encourages a thorough investigation of its many nooks and crannies, and rewards the viewer at every angle.
Swoon: Submerged Motherlands will be on view until August 24, 2014. For more information, visit the Brooklyn Museum’s website.
Zoe Leonard (b. 1961). 945 Madison Avenue, 2014. Lens and darkened room (camera obscura). Whitney Biennial; Curator: Anthony Elms.Kiki Smith (b. 1954). Lilith, 1994, United States. Bronze with glass eyes. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Jean de Liège (d. 1381). Tomb Effigy Bust of Marie of France, c. 1381, from the Chapel of Notre-Dame-la-Blanche, Royal Abbey of Saint-Denis, Ile-de-France, France. Marble with lead inlays. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Miljohn Ruperto (b. 1971); animated by Aimee de Jongh (b. 1988). Janus, 2014. Digital video, color, sound. 3:30 min. Whitney Biennial; Curator: Stuart Comer.Dan Graham (b. 1942) with Günther Vogt (b. 1957). Roof Garden Commission, 2014, United States. Ivy, steel, mirrored glass. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). Moon Chest, 2008. 7 chests in huali wood. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Alma Allen (b. 1970). Three Untitled sculptures, 2013. Marble on walnut and walnut on aluminum. Whitney Biennial; Curator: Michelle Grabner.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). Coca-Cola Vase, 2007. Neolithic vase (5000–3000 BCE) and paint. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Circle of Conrad Meit of Worms (1480s–1550/51). Lucretia, 1500–15, Flanders. Boxwood. Metropolitan Museum of Art.View across the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, May 2, 2014.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). He Xie, 2010. 3,200 porcelain crabs. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Jean-Joseph Carriès (1855–94). Le Grenouillard, c. 1891, France. Stoneware. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Riccio (Andrea Briosco, 1470–1532). Striding Satyr with Vase Inkwell and Shell Lamp, ca. 1507, Padua. Bronze. (Metropolitan Museum of Art)Swoon (Caledonia Dance Curry, b. 1978). Swoon: Submerged Motherlands, 2014. Mixed media installation with the boats, Alice and Maria, from a former 2008 performance. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Lucas Samaras (b. 1936). Untitled, A, 1966, United States. Graphite and incised lines on paper. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Charlemagne Palestine (b. 1945). hauntteddd!! nhuntteddd!! n daunttlesss!! n shuntteddd!!, 2013. Stairwell installation with toys, speakers, sound. Whitney Biennial; Curator: Anthony Elms.Bjarne Melgaard (b. 1967). 2014 installation with mixed media and video. Whitney Biennial; Curator: Stuart Comer.Pierre-Adrien Dalpayrat (1844–1910) and Alphonse Voisin-Delacroix (1857–1893). Vase with Face, 1892–93, France. Stoneware. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). Ruyi, 2012. Porcelain. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Swoon (Caledonia Dance Curry, b. 1978). Swoon: Submerged Motherlands, 2014. Mixed media installation with the boats, Alice and Maria, from a former 2008 performance. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). Brooklyn Museum of Art.Swoon (Caledonia Dance Curry, b. 1978). Swoon: Submerged Motherlands, 2014. Mixed media installation with the boats, Alice and Maria, from a former 2008 performance. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Ai Weiwei (b. 1957). Bowls of Pearls, 2006. Porcelain bowls and freshwater pearls. Brooklyn Museum of Art.Saint Elzéar, c. 1370–73, from the Franciscan church, Apt, Provence, France. Alabaster. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Nautilus Cup, Dutch (Utrecht), 1602. Nautilus shell, gilt silver. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Saint Sebastian, Austrian (Salzburg), 17th century. Ivory. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Oracle Figure (Kafigeledjo), Senufo culture, Côte d’Ivoire, 19th – mid-20th century. Wood, iron, bone, porcupine quills, feathers, commercially woven fiber, organic material. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Terracotta Hadra hydra (water jar), Ptolemaic Crete, late 3rd century BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art.The Dead Christ with Angels, Édouard Manet, 1864. Oil on canvas. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Amemo (Mask of Humankind), El Anatsui (Ghanaian, b. 1944), 2010. Aluminum and copper wire. Installation at the Brooklyn Museum.Pierced Screen, Mughal India, second half of the 16th century. Red sandstone. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Marble funerary altar of Cominia Tyche, Roman, ca. 90–100 CE. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Peak (?), El Anatsui (Ghanaian, b. 1944), 2010. Installed at the Brooklyn Museum.Central Governor, Saul Melman, 2010, installation with gold leaf and saliva, and Untitled, Matt Mullican, 1997. PS1, Queens.Church of Saint Vincent FerrerAfrum I (White), James Turrell (American, b. 1943), 1967. Projected light. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.E 65th St. and LexingtonLine outside the Rain Room, MoMA, July 20, 2013Rain Room, rAndom International (based in London), 2012. Installed in lot beside The Museum of Modern Art, West 54 St.Ronin, James Turrell (American, b. 1943), 1968. LED light. Collection of the artist, on display at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.Gli (Wall), El Anatsui (Ghanaian, b. 1944), 2010. Aluminum and copper wire. Installation at the Brooklyn Museum.Detail from a Scene of the Legend of Saint Germain of Paris and the History of His Relics, Île-de-France, Paris, ca. 1245–47. Pot-metal and colorless glass with vitreous paint. The Cloisters.Aten Reign, James Turrell (American, b. 1943), 2013. Rotunda, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.Twisted Face Mask, Veracruz (Mexico), 600–900. Ceramic and pigment. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Reclining Nude, Amedeo Modigliani (Italian, 1884–1920), 1917. Oil on canvas. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Two Hands, Claudette Schreuders (b. 1973, Pretoria, South Africa), 2010. Jelutong wood, enamel, oil paint. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Terracotta comic actors, Greek, late 5th–early 4th century BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Christ Presenting the Keys to Saint Peter and the Law to Saint Paul, Germany, Westphalia, 1150–1200. Elephant ivory. The Cloisters.The Third-Class Carriage, Honoré Daumier (French, 1808–79), ca. 1862–64. Oil on canvas. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Atrium of the Greek and Roman Galleries, Metropolitan Museum of ArtUpper East Side, ManhattanPair of ewers with wild men, Nuremberg (?), ca. 1500. Gilt silver, enamel, and paint. The Cloisters.House exterior, HarlemCuxa Cloister, the Cloisters, Fort Tryon ParkPool, Meg Webster, 2013. Installed at PS1, Queens.Commemorative monument, Maya (Guatemala), first quarter of the 8th century. Limestone with traces of paint. Metropolitan Museum of Art, on loan from the Guatemalan government.Eagle Attacking a Mountain Lion, Kawanabe Kyōsai (Japanese, 1831–89), 1885. Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Roundel with silver stain. The Cloisters.Handle in the Shape of a Dragon’s Head, Eastern Han dynasty (China), 1st–2nd century. Gilded bronze with traces of red pigment. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Christ Child with an Apple, workshop of Michel Erhart (Ulm, Germany), ca. 1470–80. Willow with original paint and traces of gilding.Space Womb, Long Island City, QueensColony, a77 (Argentinian). Installed in PS1, Queens.Somewhere in Manhattan5 Pointz, Long Island City, Queens, as seen from the 7 trainTomb of Ermengol VII, Count of Urgell, Catalan, Lerida, ca. 1300–50. Limestone with traces of paint. The Cloisters.Terracotta statuette of a grotesque man with a shield, Greek, 2nd–1st century BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art.Saint Roch, Normandy, France, early 16th century. Oak with paint and gilding. The Cloisters.Beaker with Apes, South Lowlands, probably Burgundian Territories, ca. 1425–50. Silver, silver gilt, and painted enamel. The Cloisters.Three Apes Assembling a Trestle Table, Germany (?), 1480–1500. Colorless glass with vitreous paint and silver stain. The Cloisters.Ink Splash, El Anatsui (Ghanaian, b. 1944), 2010. Aluminum and copper wire. Installation at the Brooklyn Museum.5 Pointz, Long Island City, QueensLangon Chapel, The Cloisters, Fort Tryon Park
All photographs by Renée DeVoe Mertz, July 19–21, 2013.
Henri Matisse, The Serf (1900-04) in front of Bathers by a River (1909–10, 1913, 1916–17)
Pablo Picasso, Half-Length Female Nude [detail], 1906Amedeo Modigliani, Jacques and Berthe Lipchitz [detail of Berthe], 1916
Amadeo de Souza Cardoso, The Leap of the Rabbit, 1911Maurice de Vlaminck, Houses at Chatou, c. 1905Alexei Jawlensky, Girl with the Green Face, 1910Henri Matisse, Woman Leaning on Her Hands, 1905Pablo Picasso, Head of a Woman (Fernande), autumn 1909Pablo Picasso, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, autumn 1910Gino Severini, Festival in Montmarte, 1913
Jacques Lipchitz, Seated Figure [detail], 1917Alberto Giacometti, Diego Seated in the Studio [detail], 1950Alberto Giacometti, Walking Man II [detail], 1960
Theo van Doesburg, Counter-Composition VIII, 1924Marc Chagall, The Praying Jew, 1923 (after a 1914 composition)Henri Matisse, Lorette with Cup of Coffee [detail], 1916–17Constantin Brâncusi, Sleeping Muse, 1910Giorgio de Chirico, The Philosopher’s Conquest, 1913–14Marcel Duchamp, Hat Rack, 1964 (1916 original now lost)Hans Bellmer, Untitled, 1951Pablo Picasso, The Old Guitarist, 1903–04Constantin Brâncusi, Suffering, 1907Juan Gris, Portrait of Pablo Picasso, 1912Constantin Brâncusi, Two Penguins, 1911–14Pablo Picasso, Abstraction: Background with Blue Cloudy Sky, 1930
Emil Nolde, Red-Haired Girl, 1919Victor Brauner, Gemini, 1938Henri Matisse, Girl in Yellow and Blue with Guitar, 1939Pablo Picasso, Mother and Child, 1921
Henri Matisse, Woman before an Aquarium [detail], 1921–23Giorgio de Chirico, The Eventuality of Destiny [detail], 1927
Constantin Brâncusi, White Negress II (1928), Leda (c. 1920), and Golden Bird (1919/20, base c. 1922)Yves Tanguy, The Rapidity of Sleep [detail], 1945Paul Klee, Sunset, 1930Joan Miró, Woman [detail], 1934Gino Severini, Still Life (Centrifugal Expansion of Colors), 1916Lyonel Feininger, Longeuil, Normandie, 1909Alberto Giacometti, Spoon Woman, 1926–27Pavel Tchelitchew, Untitled, 1948Georges Rouault, The Dwarf, 1937Aleksei Alekseevich Morgunov, Portrait of Nathalija Gontcharova and Mihajl Larionov [detail of Gontcharova], 1913Arshile Gorky, The Plough and the Song (II), 1946
Ludwig Meidner, Max Herrmann-Neisse [detail], 1913Le Corbusier, Untitled [detail], 1932
Jean (Hans) Arp, Growth (1938/60) in front of Joan Miró’s The Policeman (1925)Leonora Carrington, Juan Soriano de Lacandón [detail], 1964John D. Graham, Untitled, 1945
Max Beckmann, Self-Portrait [detail], 1937John D. Graham, Apotheosis [detail], 1955-57Matta, The Earth Is a Man [detail], 1942Joan Miró, Two Personages in Love with a Woman [detail of woman], 1936Matta, Untitled (Flying People Eaters) [detail], 1942Salvador Dalí, Venus de Milo with Drawers [detail], 1936Pablo Picasso, The Red Armchair [detail], 1931
Victor Brauner, Acolo, 1949John D. Graham, Untitled, 1944Alberto Giacometti, Head, 1934Yves Tanguy, Untitled, 1928Joseph Cornell, Untitled (Forgotten Game), c. 1949Salvador Dalí, A Chemist Lifting with Extreme Precaution the Cuticle of a Grand Piano [detail], 1936Victor Brauner, Turning Point of Thirst, 1934Salvador Dalí, Portrait of Gala with Two Lamb Chops in Equilibrium upon Her Shoulder, 1934Surrealist gallery with René Magritte’s The Banquet (1958) and a wall of Cornell boxes.
All photos by author. Paintings shown without frames are cropped to varying degrees. Photographs showing only a small portion (half or less) of the original objects are listed as details.
Vessel in the Form of a Seated Ruler with a Pampas Cat, ceramic and pigment, 250/550 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruBowl Depicting a Mask (Possibly a Katchina), above an Abstract Bighorn-Sheep Head, ceramic and pigment, 1300/1400 CE, Four Mile Polychrome, White Mountain Redware; Cibola region, east-central Arizona, United StatesFigure of a Woman in Ceremonial Dress, ceramic, 700/900 CE, possibly Totonac, Nopiloa; Veracruz, south-central Gulf Coast, MexicoSeated Joined Couple, ceramic and pigment, 200 BCE/300 CE, Nayarit; Nayarit, MexicoMiniature Mask, wood, gold foil, shell, pigment, and resin, 1300/1400 CE, possibly Mixtec; possibly northern Oaxaca, MexicoStanding Figurine with Missing Leg, jade, 800/400 BCE, Olmec; Guerrero, MexicoVessel Depicting a Mythological Scene, ceramic and pigment, 600/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; Petén region, GuatemalaPortrait Vessel of a Ruler, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruHead Fragments from Large Ceremonial Jars, ceramic and pigment, 700/800 CE, Tiwanaku-Wari; Pacheco, south coast, PeruHieroglyphic Panel, limestone, 650/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; Usumacinta River area, Mexico or GuatemalaStoryteller Figure, ceramic and pigment, 100/800 CE, Jalisco; Ameca Valley, Jalisco, MexicoVase of Seven Gods, Ah Maxam (active mid-late 8th century), ceramic and pigment, 750/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; vicinity of Naranjo, Petén region, GuatemalaBowl Depicting a Hero-Hunter with a Heron Headdress, Bow, and Arrows, along with a Rabbit Hunter; ceramic and pigment (Classic Mimbres Black-on-white); Mimbres branch of the Mogollon; New Mexico, United StatesMosaic Disk with a Mythological and Historical Scene, turquoise, shell, and sandstone, 1400/1500 CE, Mixtec; Northern Oaxaca, MexicoMask from an Incense Burner Portraying the Old Deity of Fire, ceramic and pigment, 450/750 CE, Teotihuacan; Teotihuacan, MexicoBallcourt Panel, limestone, 700/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; possibly La Corona, Usumacinta River area, GuatemalaFigurine of an Aristocratic Lady, ceramic and pigment, 650/800 CE, Late Classic Maya, Jaina; Campeche or Yucatán, MexicoVessel of the Dancing Lords, Ah Maxam (active mid-late 8th century), ceramic and pigment, 750/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; vicinity of Naranjo, Petén region, GuatemalaRitual Impersonator of the Deity Xipe Totec, ceramic and pigment, 1450/1500 CE, Aztec; possibly central Veracruz, MexicoFemale Figurine, ceramic and pigment, 500/400 BCE, Tlatilco; Tlatilco, Valley of Mexico, MexicoVessels, ceramic and pigment, Late Classic Maya, Mexico or GuatemalaStela, limestone, 702 CE, Late Classic Maya; vicinity of Calakmul, Campeche or Quintana Roo, MexicoJar in the Form of a Standing Figure, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruFemale Effigy, terracotta and pigmented slip, 200/100 BCE, Chupícuaro; Guanajuato or Michoacán, MexicoStanding Male Figure, ceramic and pigment, 650/800 CE, Late Classic Maya, Jaina; Campeche or Yucatán, MexicoPendant in the Form of a Figure, shell stone, silver, copper, and cotton, 400/800 CE, Tiwanaku-Wari; coastal Peru or highland BoliviaCarved Vessel Depicting a Lord Wearing a Water-Lily Headdress, ceramic and pigment, 600/800 CE, Late Classic Maya, Chocholá; Yucatán or Campeche, MexicoPortrait Vessel of a Young Man with a Scarred Lip, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruBowl Depicting a Harvest Dance, ceramic and pigment, 180 BCE/500 CE, Nazca; South coast, PeruPortrait Vessel of a Man with a Cleft Lip and Tattoos, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruPedestal Bowl, ceramic and pigment, 1100/1300 CE, Coclé; possibly La Peña, Veraguas province, PanamaVessel Depicting a Prisoner with Avian Captors, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruVessel in the Form of a Llama, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; Chimbote, Santa Valley, PeruPortrait Vessel of a Ruler, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruRattle in the Form of a Mythological Figure, ceramic and pigment, 650/800 CE, Late Classic Maya, Jaina; Campeche or Yucatán, MexicoVessel in the Form of a Royal Messenger, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruFigure of a Standing Warrior, ceramic with pigment, 650/800 CE, Late Classic Maya, Jaina; Campeche or Yucatán, MexicoVessel in the Form of a Courtly Musician, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, PeruVessel in the Form of a Warrior, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; Chimbote, Santa Valley, north coast, PeruDrinking Cup (Kero) with an Abstracted Masked Figure, ceramic and pigment, 600/1000 CE, Tiwanaku-Wari, Bolivia or PeruBowl Depicting a Swarm of Mice, ceramic and pigment, 180 BCE/500 CE, Nazca; South coast, PeruDouble Pendant in the Form of a Mythical Caiman, gold with plaster restoration of boar tusks, 800/1200 CE, Coclé; Coclé province, PanamaVase of Seven Gods, Ah Maxam (active mid-late 8th century), ceramic and pigment, 750/800 CE, Late Classic Maya; vicinity of Naranjo, Petén region, GuatemalaMantle (detail), camelid wool, 100 BCE/200 CE, Paracas Necropolis; Paracas peninsula, south coast, PeruDouble-Spouted Vessel Depicting Ritual Masks, ceramic and pigment, 180 BCE/500 CE, Nazca; South coast, PeruPedestal Bowl, ceramic and pigment, 700/1100 CE, Coclé; possibly Los Santos province, PanamaJar in the Form of a Seated Figure, ceramic and pigment, 100 BCE/500 CE, Moche; North coast, Peru
Guanyin (Avalokiteshvara), gilt copper alloy, late 14th century, Yuan/early Ming dynasty, ChinaGonzaze Myō-ō, Nakabayashi Gennai, wood with polychromy, 1680 [Edo period], JapanStanding Attendant (Tomb Figurine), wood with traces of polychrome pigments, Eastern Zhou dynasty, Warring States period, 4th/3rd century BCE, ChinaArmored Guardian King (Tianwang), earthenware with three-color (sancai) lead glazes and traces of pigments, Tang dynasty, first half of the 8th century, ChinaHead of a Bodhisattva, stucco with traces of pigment, 4th/6th century, Pakistan or Afghanistan, Gandharan regionVajrasattva Seated on Lotus Flower with Hands Grasping a Thunderbolt (Vajra) and Bell (Ghanta) with Thunderbolt Handle, gilt copper alloy, Tang dynasty, late 8th/early 9th century, ChinaDetail of saddle on “Camel with Rider,” earthenware with three-color (sancai) lead glazes and traces of pigments, Tang dynasty, first half of the 8th century, ChinaPlaque with Demonic Mask, Late Neolithic period, Longshan culture or Shang dynasty, 2nd millenium BCEPensive Bodhisattva, gray schist, 2nd/3rd century, Pakistan, Gandharan regionHead of a Buddhist Deity, Possibly Prajnaparamita, sandstone, Angkor period, 13th century, CambodiaShūkongōjin, wood with traces of polychromy, 12th/14th century [probably Kamakura period], JapanFemale Musician, earthenware with polychrome pigments, Tang dynasty, first half of the 8th century, ChinaArmored Guardian (Wushiyong), earthenware with polychrome pigments and gilding, Tang dynasty, late 7th/early 8th century, ChinaDing (tripod food caldron) with tao-tie design, bronze, Shang dynasty, 11th century BCE, China“Running in Advance” Mask (Shinshōtoku), wood with traces of color, 15th/16th century [probably Muromachi period], JapanEquestrienne, earthenware with traces of polychrome pigments, Tang dynasty, 2nd quarter of 8th century, ChinaFour-Armed Sarasvati, Goddess of Learning, Seated in Lotus Position (Padmasana), chloritic schist, Hoyasala period, 13th century; India, Karnataka, Mysore regionVotive Plaque with God Vishnu; gilt bronze with ivory, semiprecious stones, crystal, and glass; c. 19th century; Nepal, Kathmandu ValleyBodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, sandstone, Angkor period, 12th/13th century, CambodiaFudō Myō-ō, wood with polychromy and gilt-bronze accessories, 12th/14th century [probably Kamakura period], JapanGroom, earthenware with three-color (sancai) lead glazes and traces of pigments, Tang dynasty, first half of the 8th century, ChinaDemon Mask (Tsuina-men), wood with traces of color, 15th/16th century [probably Muromachi period], JapanEntertainer (Tomb Figure), buff earthenware with pigment, Northern Dynasties, 6th century, ChinaLakshmana, from Panel with Lakshmana and Hanuman, the Monkey God, terracotta, Gupta period, 4th/5th century; India, Uttar PradeshStanding Attendant (Tomb Figurine), wood with traces of polychrome pigments, Eastern Zhou dynasty, Warring States period, 4th/3rd century BCE, ChinaSōgyō Hachiman, wood with traces of white pigment, Heian period, 10th century, JapanSeitaka Dōji, wood with traces of polychromy, 15th century [Muromachi period], JapanSnake Goddess Manasa, basalt, 11th century, Bangladesh or Eastern IndiaZenzai Dōji, wood with glass and polychromy and metal accessories, 12th/14th century [probably Kamakura period], JapanTwenty-Armed Dancing God Ganesha, Remover of Obstacles, buff sandstone, 11th century, India (Madhya Pradesh)Standing Attendant (Tomb Figurine), wood with traces of polychrome pigments, Eastern Zhou dynasty, Warring States period, 4th/3rd century BCE, ChinaBodhisattva, limestone with traces of polychromy, Tang dynasty, 8th century, ChinaArmored Guardian King (Tianwang), earthenware with three-color (sancai) lead glazes and traces of pigments, Tang dynasty, first half of the 8th century, ChinaWeight in the form of nested birds, gilt bronze, Tang dynasty (618-907), China
In Part 1 of this review, I focused on the contentious origins of the new Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and the problematic concept of provincialism that quietly plagues any small or medium-sized cultural center in this country.
Built with the purpose of redefining a predominantly rural community as a new cultural destination, the greatest challenge for the CBMAA is to create a space and collection capable of meeting the established standards for world-class museums while also representing solidarity with its specific location.
Although the work on the grounds and building has yet to be completed, the museum has already proven itself to be generally successful in striking this delicate balance. In some instances, however, its achievement comes hand-in-hand with a curatorial timidity that has kept the CBMAA from being as intellectually daring as it could be.
Be that as it may, there is much to celebrate in the new Crystal Bridges Museum. One of its most refreshing aspects is the self-evident intention of all involved to create an innovative space that responds to the natural and cultural environment of the institution’s surroundings without sacrificing the larger story of American art.
Both in- and outside of the building itself, the curving lines and sloping shapes of Moshe Safdie’s architectural design clearly draw on the forms of organic bodies, while the many walls of glass invite as much contemplation of the world outside as the art within.
Not only does his design harmonize well with its natural setting, but it is in easy dialogue with another nearby structure of architectural note: the glass and steel Mildred B. Cooper Memorial Chapel, designed by Fay Jones and Maurice Jennings and dedicated in 1988.
If museums are the secular cathedrals of modernity, then the parallel designs of these two spiritual houses seem particularly telling. Both museum and chapel were designed to allow the natural world to visually penetrate the interior and define the visitor’s experience of the space. Taken together, the buildings’ shared concern with transparency and the inclusion of the natural environment suggest the development of a noteworthy local trope in contemporary architecture and the potential for the cultivation of a related style.
Similarly, landscape architect Scott Eccleston modified the CBM’s grounds, which constitute a lightly forested area with trails, streams, and—eventually—a lake that abuts the rear of the building, but did not drastically alter their character. The outdoor sculpture and installations, too, were chosen for their responsiveness to the natural environment, although the sensitivity or sophistication of this responsiveness varies. Highlights include James Turrell’s site-specific installation The Way of Color (2009), which incorporates native rock into his signature investigation of natural light effects; Roxy Paine’s stainless steel tree, Yield (2011), located at the museum’s entrance; and Mark di Suvero’s Lowell’s Ocean (2005–2008), visible both in- and outside of the building.
A preoccupation with nature continues throughout the collection, along with a few other areas of focus. The CBMAA’s own literature describes these themes as “artists’ encounters with and responses to nature; strong women, both as subjects and makers of art; the ongoing dialogue between American artists and other world cultures; and the continuing role of the artist as innovator.”
For a nature-loving, feminist, cross-cultural art historian like myself, that is a very exciting declaration of intent.
A wander around the museum revealed the list to have been arranged in decreasing order of success or urgency, although each concept was indeed present. A fifth motif, not mentioned in the literature but clearly woven throughout the collection, was the subject of conflict. However, this is perhaps the inevitable but unintended consequence of focusing on works that deal with issues of nature, gender, innovation, and cross-cultural interaction.
I was pleased with the quality and selection of much of the work on display throughout the collection, a sample of which can be found in the images at the end of this post. I also liked that between the chronologically divided sections were areas where people could sit and peruse any of a large collection of books. While tables supporting a few exhibition catalogues directly related to the show at hand have become commonplace in temporary exhibits, the selections provided by the CBM are far more comprehensive—and the sitting areas far more welcoming—than found elsewhere.
My greatest criticism of the museum is that it tends to be a little too safe, as was particularly evident in the temporary exhibition of contemporary work titled, Wonder World: Nature and Perception in Contemporary American Art. Excluded from the title but endemic to the works featured in Wonder World was a clear preference for contemporary artists drawing on historical modes of making. Each of these topics—nature, perception, and traditional practices in contemporary art—is a welcome basis for an exhibition, and there is quite a bit of good work in the show. Yet, when viewed together, the pieces felt a little one-note and lacking in radically innovative contributions.
Stagnation is particularly a problem for a museum that takes “artist as innovator” as one of its driving concepts. And with a subject as broad as wonder, nature, and perception, the narrowness of artistic approach seems doubly strange. For instance, why not include people who take the systems of nature as their starting point? Or who play with the nature of nature via an investigation of physics or biology or even taxonomy? While there is nothing wrong with utilizing the convention of representation in contemporary art, there are so many contemporary artists working in non-representational modes, or whose relationships to nature and perception are both subtle and complex, that to lean so heavily on visually and conceptually straightforward works does a disservice to the exhibition’s topic and its visitors.
My other point of concern lies in the apparent definition of American art, which tends towards the mainstream or canonical (albeit expanded for both gender and, in the more recent sections, race). For example, although the collection includes depictions of Native Americans, I do not recall any historical objects by Native Americans in the main galleries.* I suspect this is due partly to lines drawn by citizenship and partly to pre-existing art historical categories put in place to make collections and the narratives they tell manageable and coherent.
In other words, the presence of these somewhat arbitrary collection standards and definitions is not only understandable, but in accordance with typical museum practice. However, should the CBM choose to complicate the concept of “American” in the future by incorporating works which do not stem mainly from European traditions, the story they could tell would be fuller and, in my opinion, more interesting. Such a shift would also represent a challenging and innovative curatorial decision that is already overdue in most museological practice.
Finally, the café is worth mentioning, as it represents a fusion of a high-end sensibility that is typical of museum eateries and the low prices that are a hallmark of both Wal-Mart and Midwestern towns. Even here, the museum exhibits a savvy awareness of the expectations of its varied audience that, if continued, will be the institution’s greatest strength.
Indeed, perhaps what the Crystal Bridges Museum does best, and what it needs to do most, is break down the centuries-long fallacy that nature and culture represent binary opposites. During a period of wide-spread concern for the environment, increased use of urban gardens and suburban farms, and the decentralization of ideas and information away from large cosmopolitan cities, a new museum that takes the fusion of nature and culture as its basis is truly an institution that embodies the concerns of its time.
For further exhibition and visiting information, go to the Crystal Bridges Museum website: http://crystalbridges.org/.
*The CBM does have a dedicated section of cases that presents samples from the collections of other local museums. In addition to representing a uniquely neighborly practice, the cases also suggest the kinds of materials that may be related to, but are not otherwise present in, the CBM’s own collection. Among these is a display for the Museum of Native American History (formerly the Museum of Native American Artifacts).
Jenny Holzer, Venice Installation: Gallery D (Second Antechamber), 1990, seen through Frederick Eversley’s Big Red Lens, 1985Jim Hodges, When We Stay, 1997Devorah Sperber, After The Last Supper, 2005Alison Elizabeth Taylor, Room, 2007-08Walton Ford, The Island, 2009Nick Cave, Soundsuits, 2010Roxy Paine, Bad Lawn, 1998Andrew Wyeth, Airborne, 1996Jamie Wyeth, Orca Bates, 1990Richard Estes, Antarctica, 2007Evan Penny, Old Self: Portrait of the Artist as He Will (Not) Be. Variation #2, 2010Max Ferguson, Time, 2006John Singleton Copley, Mrs. Theodore Atkinson Jr. (Frances Deering Wentworth) [detail], 1765George Winter, Ten Potawatomi Chiefs, 1837Richard Caton Woodville, War News from Mexico, 1848Gilbert Stuart, William Smith, ca. 1801–02Samuel Finley Breese Morse, Marquis, de Lafayette, 1825Martin Johnson Heade, Cattleya Orchid, Two Hummingbirds and a Beetle, ca. 1875–90Dennis Miller Bunker, Anne Page, 1887Mary Cassatt, The Reader, 1877Thomas Eakins, Professor Benjamin Howard Rand, 1874William Holbrook Beard, School Rules, 1887Maria Oakey Dewing, Rose Garden, 1901John Singer Sargent, Robert Louis Stevenson and His Wife [detail], 1885Thomas Eakins, The Model, ca. 1908Maxfield Parrish, The Lantern Bearers, 1908Isamu Noguchi, Lunar Landscape, 1943Arshile Gorky, Composition (Still Life), 1936–37Will Barnet, Woman Reading, 1965Jasper Johns, Bread, High School Days, and Light Bulb, 1969Oscar Bluemner, Self-Portrait, 1933Wayne Thiebaud, Supine Woman, 1963Kara Walker, A Warm Summer Evening in 1863, 2008Louise Nevelson, Night Zag Wall, 1969–74Kerry James Marshall, Our Town, 1995Lynda Benglis, Eat Meat, 1969/1975James Turrell, The Way of Color, 2009