20th-21st Century American Sculpture, Mixed-Media
Online information about 20th-21st Century American Sculpture from sources other than Resource Library
Kelly Akashi: Cultivator is a 2020 exhibit at the Aspen Art Museum which says: "Kelly Akashi's sculptural objects, from ethereal glass orbs to gently trickling fountains, take on a celestial, spectral quality. The Los Angeles-based artist uses a variety of media such as glass, bronze, wax, concrete, water, rope, and marble to explore their impressionable and indexical properties." Accessed 12/20
Industrial Nature: Works by Michelle Stitzlein is a 2017 exhibit at the Springfield Museum of Art which says: "Michelle Stitzlein creates large scale sculpture from recycled materials. She works in a large studio converted from a former grange hall in Baltimore, Ohio." Also see artist's website Accessed 2/17
Machines of Futility: Unproductive Technologies is a 2020 exhibit at the Telfair Museums which says: "This exhibition of interactive and kinetic art highlights artists making machines that use humor and absurdity to question the usefulness of technology." Accessed 10/20
Making Everything Out of Anything - Prints, Drawings, and Sculptures by Willie Cole is a 2017 exhibit at the Snite Museum of Art which says: "This exhibition will focus on a major theme of American artist Willie Cole: his extraordinarily creative repurposing of everyday objects such as steam irons, ironing boards, hair dryers, bicycle parts, and women's shoes to create artworks that comment on diverse subjects such as African art, cultural identity, gender, and sexuality." Also see artist's website. Accessed 9/17
Martha Posner, Mercy is a 2013 exhibit at the Lafayette College Galleries which says: "In her earlier work, Posner's signature garments are empty vessels filled with associations. In the present series from 2011 to 2016, the previously omitted figures have taken form." Accessed 2/19
Scrap Redefined: Works by Mei Greer and Ronald Nigro, an exhibit held May 2 - August 10, 2014 at the Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art. Includes exbibit catalog. Accessed April, 2015.
Sharif Bey: Excavations is a 2021 exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Art which says: "For artist and educator Sharif Bey (b. 1974), curiosity and critical inquiry are paramount. In his artistic process, Bey engages his past and present selves, a process he calls auto-archaeology. As an African American whose family history includes enslavement and displacement, Bey forges ancestral identities in his sculpture. He explores functional and ritual objects, arts of the African and Oceanic diasporas, and the materiality of clay, metal, wood, and glass. He rejoices in nature, power, and awesomeness, in its literal sense: that which inspires awe." Also see website of the artist. Accessed 12/21
Steve Reber: Anemic Compass is a 2019 exhibit at the Hyde Park Art Center which says: "The exhibition will feature the large sculpture Auto Mending; a full-scale model of an automobile that is stripped down and modified." Also see artist's website. Accessed 5/19
Trucks: Recent Work by John Himmelfarb was a 2014 exhibit at the Brauer Museum of Art at Valparaiso University. The exhibit featured whimsical representations of trucks by the prolific Chicago-based artist. Himmelfarb's works are executed in a wide variety of media including sculpture, painting, and printmaking. An outdoor sculpture made out of an actual truck accompanied the exhibition. The link is to the brochure for the exhibit. Accessed 12/16
Rose
Bowl Floats from NPR's Weekend Edition, Saturday, December
29, 2001. Susan Stamberg talks with Rose Bowl float designer Raul Rodriguez
about his many creations. Accessed August, 2015.
Indianapolis
Museum of Art produced a video titled Robert
Indiana, available online through ArtBabble.
According to ArtBabble, "After a complete restoration of Robert Indiana's
Numbers and many discussions with the artist, Richard McCoy, Conservator
of Objects and Variable Art at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, shares insight
to Indiana's symbolic use of color on the large sculptures. You can see
all 10 Numbers at the IMA's Alliance Sculpture Court." This
is episode 2. Indianapolis Museum of Art
also produced a video titled Lichtenstein
/ Five Brushstrokes, available online through ArtBabble.
According to ArtBabble, "The Indianapolis Museum of Art has acquired
Five Brushstrokes, a monumental work by Roy Lichtenstein, commissioned
in the early 1980s but never before assembled. The work will be unveiled
in its completion for the first time this August at the IMA. The sculpture
is considered to be Lichtenstein's most ambitious work in his Brushstroke
series. Consisting of five separate elements, the tallest of which soars
40 feet into the air, Five Brushstrokes features a striking collection of
forms and colors and is one of Lichtenstein's premier 'scatter pieces'."
Accessed June, 2015.
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