#AskACurator Day

AskCuratorCMA

Go behind the scenes during #AskACurator Day on September 16, 2015 when Columbus Museum of Art joins hundreds of Museums around the world.

Find out about #newcma, and the installation of the new wing and reinstallation of the permanent collection from Chief Curator David Stark and William and Sarah Ross Soter Curator of Photography Drew Sawyer. Sawyer will be answering questions on Twitter from 11:00 AM-12:00 PM, followed by Stark from 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM.

Tag your questions with @columbusmuseum and #askacurator.

New Acquisitions to Debut at CMA Grand Opening

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Four recently acquired works of art will make their CMA debut during the Museum’s Community Grand Opening, presented by PNC Arts Alive, on Sunday, October 25 celebrating the completion of the Museum’s new wing. The works, all by contemporary artists, span several artistic media including photography, painting, sound sculpture and video.

Three Screens for Looking at Abstraction, CMA’s first work by American artist Josiah McElheny, is an installation comprised of three large, faceted screens made from mirrors and translucent projection cloth. An abstract film program, is digitally projected onto each of these objects simultaneously. The films bounce off the mirrors in different directions and produce kaleidoscopic movement and sound. Film program can be changed each time the work is shown, creating an ever-changing experience. McElheny has had solo exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, the Whitechapel Gallery, London, the Wexner Center for the Arts, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York. His work can be found in the collections of Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Tate Modern, and the Whitney Museum.

Study for Strings is the first sound sculpture in CMA’s collection and the first work the Museum has acquired by Scottish artist and Turner Prize winner Susan Philipsz. Study for Strings is based on Jewish composer Pavel Haas’s 1943 work Study for Strings, written while he lived in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. The music became the soundtrack for a Nazi propaganda film illustrating the “benevolent treatment” of the Jews interned there. Haas was later moved to Auschwitz-Birkenau where he was killed. Study for Strings was first presented at dOCUMENTA (13), a twice-a-decade festival in Kassel, Germany. It was hailed by Gregory Volk as, “one of the most searing and entrancing artworks I’ve encountered anywhere,” and later shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The CMA installation will be experienced while walking down a birch-lined, flagstone path in the Museum’s new sculpture garden.

CMA is the first American museum to add a work by Carissa Rodriguez, artist and director of Reena Spaulings Fine Art in New York, to its collection. It’s Symptomatic/What Would Edith Say is from a series of photographs of artists’ tongues that have detailed diagnoses by Rodriguez’s acupuncturist scrawled across them in black marker. Acupuncture and TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) use the tongue’s appearance to diagnose overall internal health, and Rodriguez uses that connection to explore the physical demands of being an artist as well as the play between surface and depth. Rodriguez was recently featured in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and will have a solo exhibition at the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts in San Francisco this winter.

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The earliest work in the group, Untitled (January 12), is a significant abstract painting by modernist painter Paul Feeley. Feeley’s paintings and sculptures are characterized by bright colors and undulating forms that are often poised between representation and abstraction. Feeley held an influential position as a professor at Bennington College in Vermont, where he helped make the school an ambitious cultural outpost in the 1950s and sixties. He organized or co-organized important early exhibitions of Jackson Pollock, David Smith, and Barnett Newman, and was himself honored with a 1968 memorial retrospective at the Solomon S. Guggenheim Museum in New York. Imperfections by Chance: Paul Feeley Retrospective, 1954–1966 will be one of the inaugural exhibitions in CMA’s new wing. The exhibition was organized by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, in partnership with the Columbus Museum of Art. It is co-curated by Tyler Cann, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at the Columbus Museum of Art and Douglas Dreishpoon, Chief Curator Emeritus at the Albright-Knox.

[Photos: Top: “Josiah McElheny: Some Pictures of the Infinite”, June 22 – October 14 2012, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Image courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York © Josiah McElheny. Bottom: Carissa Rodriguez, It’s Symptomatic/What Would Edith Say , 2015, Inkjet print, 152.4 x 101.6 cm (60 x 40 inch)]

Calling Master LEGO Builders: 2015 LEGO Design Challenge

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The 2015 LEGO DESIGN CHALLENGE is a partnership between the Columbus Museum of Art (CMA), COSI, and Ohio History Connection Open to builders of all ages and experience levels, the challenge promotes the creative use of LEGO bricks to explore transportation and architecture. Show us where you want to live and how you want to get there by designing a building and a mode of transportation.

The partnership between CMA, COSI and Ohio History Connection grew from the LEGO exhibitions each has planned during the coming months.

Anyone is eligible to participate in the 2015 LEGO DESIGN CHALLENGE, but all finalists must be able to transport their designs to and from the exhibiting museum. Judging of designs will be divided into 2 categories Youth (16 and under)/Family and Adult/Professional.

CHALLENGE GUIDELINES:

Design submissions will be accepted July 15—September 21, 2015
All entries must be original designs.
Designs may not exceed 10” W x 10” L x 24” H
All entries must be built on a LEGO baseplate measuring 10” x 10”
One submission per individual or group.
All entries must include a complete application and photograph of the design.
All entries must be submitted between July 15 and September 21, 2015

 Submit your designs for the 2015 LEGO DESIGN CHALLENGE here. Submit the application along with one photograph of the design between July 15 and September 21, 2015. (Photo should not exceed 2MB).

Design finalists will be exhibited at one of the partnering organizations at a designated time from November 2015 – May 2016. Finalists will be notified by October 20, 2015.

CMA’s Center for Creativity presents Think Outside the Brick, its fourth annual holiday season celebration of the creative potential of LEGO® building blocks, November 2015–February, 2016. This exhibition features the return of the Central Ohio LEGO® Train Club’s wildly popular collaborative model of the city of Columbus. Familiar landmarks and imaginative additions come together in a gallery of original creations by local builders.

The Ohio History Center’s There’s No Place Like Home will be on view January 13, 2016–April 10, 2016. From small houses to high towers, see how finalists in the 2015 LEGO® Design Challenge explored the idea of home. Come see new architectural creations and discover how ideas like shelter, structure and form can inspire builders of all ages.

Celebrating Aminah Robinson

Aminah

Join us July 18 for A Celebration of Life: Aminah Robinson. This day-long event features many opportunities to remember and to celebrate Aminah.

A special exhibition of Aminah’s work is on view in the Forum. Guests of all ages can drop into CMA’s Center for Creativity for an Open Studio project that encourages people to remember Aminah by creating art inspired by their own history and community. Presentations about the artist and her work will take place in Cardinal Health Auditorium in the afternoon.

At 3:00 PM, friends and colleagues will share memories of Aminah during a special program that will include music by Arnett Howard and tributes from cultural leaders and organizations. A reception, featuring Aminah’s favorite treat Krispy Kreme donuts, follows in Derby Court. All are welcome.

Schedule for the Day
Throughout the Day: Exhibition Celebrating Aminah, Share a Memory Guest Book, Aminah and Friends – Videos and Photographs
1:00 – 3:00 PM Aminah–Inspired Drop-In Studio
1:00 – 1:20 PM Aminah and Picturebook Art Michael Rosen, author and illustrator
1:30 – 1:50 PM Urban Strings Columbus Youth Orchestra under the direction of Stephen Spottswood
2:00 – 2:30 PM Ragging On and On: Aminah’s Art Carole Genshaft, CMA curator
3:00 – 4:00 PM Celebrating Aminah
4:00 – 5:00 PM Reception

 

Closed Sept. 7 to prepare for October opening celebrations

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We’re heading into the final stretch before our new wing opening. In preparation for our Community Grand Opening, presented by PNC Arts Alive on Sunday, October 25,  Columbus Museum of Art will be closed September 7 – October 24. This temporary hiatus allows us to streamline operations, test new systems, and put the finishing touches on our stunningly transformed institution. Thank you for your patience during the long journey that has led to this moment. The public opening of CMA’s new wing will mark the completion of the third and final phase of the Museum’s Art Matters campaign.

The $37.6 million project broke ground August, 2013. It encompasses major renovations to the Ross Wing and lobby area the Museum added in 1974 and the construction of a new wing. These changes will result in a unique meeting and special event complex, as well as new Gallery spaces to showcase the Museum’s permanent collection and expanded space for high-profile traveling exhibitions.

Microwave Talk

At the Center for Creativity, in the Columbus Museum of Art, we’re always asking ‘why?’ which leads us to big, heavy, and Interesting topics about how we as a museum affect our community. One of the great perks of working at an institution such as CMA that values critical thinking and sharing ideas, is that there’s always something to think about and someone to think with.

This quote, for example, came from a presentation at this years’ National Art Education Association conference:

“The goal of creating ‘Diversity’ should be ‘Justice.’ Otherwise, it is empty and for show.”

We posted this quote near the staff microwave and invited others to share their own thoughts and reactions:

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I feel like this second part is the real hook of this quote. What we do (such as ‘creating diversity’) must have a larger societal impact (such as ‘justice’) otherwise why do we bother? It’s meaningless without the greater purpose.”

“Diversity has no goal. People have goals.”

“The quote is accurate, but what does justice mean here? If it’s regarding fair and equal treatment, that essentially exists under law and social mores. The discrepancies we see are a response to diversity itself, as our laws and social mores favor homogeny. Lack of diversity is a symptom of that homogeny, which stems from the idea of a right/wrong answer, extending toward the respect we give one another, among other issues. The only way to get away from that is to seek out those that are othered to us, and attempt to form personal connections. Not out of the basis of a project, or includsion or further goal, but as personal experience. No one can get along with everyone, but so long as an open and honest exchange of ideas can occur, understanding, and hopefully empathy can develop. Without that, diversity can be ‘created’, but fair and equitable justice might have a hard time.”

“Is the end result of (lasting) diversity justice whether you meant to or not?”

“What is justice? Does it simply imply equal access?”

“ ‘Access is more than just being open’ …?”

“How does one create diversity? We can have diverse offerings, we can encourage a diverse attendance/audience, but we can’t force the diversity to happen”

Creating is not the correct word here. You do not ‘create’ diversity, you ‘allow’ for it. How can we allow for diversity to exist in one place? And yes, the goal is justice.”

What are your thoughts? We invite you to share in the comments below!