Accumulated vision: Barry Le Va.Philadelphia was--perhaps surprisingly--a major art destination this winter. Visitors flocked to see the Barnes Collection in its dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. days in nearby Marion; to take in a tender show of Bronzino and Pontormo portraiture at the Philadelphia Museum of Art Philadelphia Museum of Art, established in 1875, chartered in 1876. When the city of Philadelphia planned to erect a building to house the Centennial Exposition of 1876, provision was made to keep the building permanently occupied; the Pennsylvania Museum and School (this just before the blockbuster Dali show went up); and to catch a moving survey of the work of Barry Le Va at the Institute of Contemporary Art. Even more surprising was the strong media interest in Le Va's exhibition: An artist who made a splash in 1968 when, less than two years out of art school, he landed the cover of our sister publication, Artforum (then and now, the most influential art magazine), Le Va has typically been associated with the anti-form era of post-Minimalist sculpture, a historical moment that doesn't usually set critics' hearts aflutter a·flut·ter adj. 1. Being in a flutter; fluttering: with flags aflutter. 2. Nervous and excited. Adj. 1. . This attention is salutary, but at the risk of looking a gift horse in the mouth, Le Va deserves to be understood on his own terms, not, as one critic had it, for laying the groundwork for Maurizio Cattelan and Urs Fischer. The catalogue for the Philadelphia show--with essays by curator Ingrid Schaffner, art historians Pamela M. Lee and Rhea rhea, in zoology rhea (rē`ə), common name for a South American bird of the family Rheidae, which is related to the ostrich. Weighing from 44 to 55 lb (20–25 kg) and standing up to 60 in. Anastas, and supertheorist Paul Virilio--is a corrective to such a view, and it nicely complements Le Va's carefully calibrated cal·i·brate tr.v. cal·i·brat·ed, cal·i·brat·ing, cal·i·brates 1. To check, adjust, or determine by comparison with a standard (the graduations of a quantitative measuring instrument): , deceptively precise, and cognitively satisfying work.--ED. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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