Walkthrough of the epic Made With Pleasure: Pattern & Decoration, curated by the brilliant Anna Katz. What a pleasure to see this work in my hometown of Los Angeles. In early days at UCLA, the Dept. of Graphic and Visual Art was agog with P and D's social critique of gender. Womanhouse had happened, likely Cal Arts already disbanded, but the conversation continued in works by Mira Schor, Tom Knechtel, and Mike Kelley's stuffed animal sculptures into the 1980s. We begin with Al Loving's Untitled, 1975. Anna Katz writes, "P and D's maximalist , eclectic citation of all things decorative flew in the face of the dominant artistic values of the time: minimalism's cool, reductive aesthetics and modernism's aspirations to formal purity. Most importantly, Pattern and Decoration recuperated art forms historically discredited on the basis of their femininity (such as embroidery) or status as craft (such as weaving, pottery, and other traditional, often non-Western arts). It was shaped by feminism, pointed to the global origins of abstraction, and influenced the development of installation art."Museum Link |
Surprise surprise: Ree Morton! One of the Beaux Paintings, 1975 (another iteration below, same title) |
Cynthia Carlson's extruded flower wallpaper--one of the amazing discoveries of seeing this work in the reals. |
From Tough Shift for M.I.T., 1981/2019, recreated for MOCA originally shown at MIT. |
The focus on wallpaper and dimension is so exciting and relevant--like something coming alive , or breaking the fourth wall. |
Insouciant bouquets by Kim MacConnel: Lotus Flower Decoration, 1978 |
Vase Decoration, 1978 |
MacConnel room with hand-painted sofa and accessories. |
This could work with Daniel Wiener's tables, Scott Burton's chairs, and Yayoi Kusama's sofas |
Curatorial genius: incorporating a print by Judy Pfaff informed by P&D's maximalist aesthetic |
And the 1978 Stella Khar-piddda! A wonderful shock: it makes SO MUCH SENSE. |
Alan Shields, Top Spin Lob, 1980-82. |
Ralph Bacera, my ceramics teacher at Otis/Parsons in 1983! (Ceramics I). How I wish I knew this work but alas, a callow student. |
Takako Yamaguchi, Magnificat #6 |
Mary Grigoriadas, New Day, 1975. What a discovery! |
Mary Grigoriadas, Rain Dance, 1975. So exquisite, especially after a recent trip to Mexico! Her influences combine the Catholic Church with Mayan temple facades and knitting designs. |
Context view, with Nancy Graves' Accordia in front, 1982. I have really come to love her work for its worlds within worlds, its spiky charm, shown to great advantage in Mapping, April 2019, at Mitchell Inness and Nash Gallery Link. |
Robert Zakanitch's Dragon Fire, 1985 |
Dragon Fire Detail |
Zakanitch Angel Feet, 1978 |
Chinese painting aficionado with a heavy brush: Brad Davis' Rabbit and Two Dogs = Desire, 1978 |
Robert Kushner Fairies, 1980. Such delicacy-- his concern with the fleet mark has always been evident, though this early work is new to me. |
Another installation view for context: Nancy Graves, Robert Zakanitch |
Joyce Kozloff, installation so relevant to the ledger drawings by Laura Battle and my own explorations at MacDowell. The first work of Kozloff's I saw was her fabulous lobby at 745 Fifth Avenue, but since then have seen exhibitions at DCMoore including Girlhood, 2017 Gallery Link and was most especially impressed with the Kozloff map installation at Basel 2019: Gallery Link. |
From Striped Cathedral, 1977 |
Valerie Jaudon. Mineral Wells, 1980. |
Jaudon: Facture |
Tony Robbin, Japanese Footbridge, 1972 |
Jaudon. Bellafontaine, 1976. |
The great Sylvia Sleigh's epic painting of art critics. |
Constance Mallison. A new discovery, and impossible to convey the quality of these drawings through images. They are gorgeous, discrete, delicate, elegant. |
Detail, Miriam Shapiro. |
Miriam Shapiro's signature femmage in Heartland, 1985 |
Howardena Pindell, Carnival at Ostende, 1977 |
Howardena Pindell, Carnival at Ostende, 1977 |
Tina Girouard, Wall's Wallpaper I, 1974 |
Sandra Sallin, Melasti, 1981 |
Barbara Zucker, Lace on Top Doorknob Ruffle, 1979-80 This show opens at Bard College June 27, 2020!! See you there. |
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