The five 2017 awardees recognized by SFMOMA’s group demonstrate the wide range of Bay Area contemporary art practices.
On December 6, people involved in San Francisco contemporary art started tagging their friends on social media who had won the SECA Art Award, sharing pride and congratulations. Albeit arguably superficial in its medium, the flurry provided a glimmer of hope in unsettling times, and the outpouring rings true that SF is a haven for artists that champion hybrid, non-traditional art-making—who bend the rules— their practice made all the more visible by museum support. San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) has a long history as an innovative and groundbreaking museum. From its early inception in 1935 when it was known as the SF Museum of Art, SFMOMA has spearheaded a number of initiatives, awards and exhibitions including Jackson Pollock’s first museum solo exhibition in 1945, the establishment of the Rental Gallery (now Artists Gallery)—the first of its kind in the US—and in 2014 the launch of The Artist Initiative, a program that provides collaboration opportunities for living artists. That legacy of looking forward continues with the newest iteration of the SECA Art Awards.
Denne historien er fra March - April 2017-utgaven av art ltd..
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Denne historien er fra March - April 2017-utgaven av art ltd..
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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The Schorrs
A recent show of drawings at the SBMA highlights longtime collectors Lenore and Herbert Schorr, who have gathered work by emerging artists on two coasts.
Reno/ Las Vegas
A new survey shows the range of contemporary art in the Silver State.
Lake ISEO, Italy
Vistors were walking on water experiencing Christo’s “Floating Piers” this summer.
Claire Falkenstein
From Venezia to Venice, California, Claire Falkenstein (1908-1997) proved herself to be a versatile and pioneering artist, in three and more dimensions.
Made in La 2016: a, the, Though, Only
This year’s edition of the Hammer biennial luxuriates in the de-materialized, the ephemeral, and the transitory.
Carmen Herrera
Engaging geometric painting both as image and as physical entity, to memorable effect, the 101-year old Cuban-born artist is having a career moment.
Catherine Morris
The Sackler Center for Feminist Art’s “A Year of Yes,” 10-year anniversary celebration becomes an intervention.
Spotlight: Portland
The arrival of the 51st NCECA Conference this March puts a spotlight on Northwest clay.
Seeing Seca
The five 2017 awardees recognized by SFMOMA’s group demonstrate the wide range of Bay Area contemporary art practices.
On View
A quick roundup of noteworthy museum shows on view this fall.