NEW MASTERS.Prediction being a fool's game, the National Gallery is hardly the only major museum to mark the new millennium by looking to the past. Nor, In a year of seemingly compulsory celebratory blockbusters, is it the only institution to fall back on its own collection. (Imagine the frantic curatorial bargaining that would have preceded the shows of Y2K--the promises made, the favors called in--had everyone been competing to borrow the same landmark works.) The trick is to treat the collection in a way that suggests an opening of possibility rather than a resort to the tried and true. A number of museums have managed this smartly, and the National Gallery looks to be one of them. For the "Encounters: New Art from Old" exhibition (June 14-Sept. 17), twenty-four artists are producing works Inspired by an image of their choice In the museum's collection. Appropriative and transhistorical An entity or concept is transhistorical if it holds throughout human history, not merely within the frame of reference of a particular form of society at a particular stage of historical development. , the concept seems strikingly au courant Cou`rant´ a. 1. (Her.) Represented as running; - said of a beast borne in a coat of arms. n. 1. A piece of music in triple time; also, a lively dance; a coranto. 2. for this Institution, but of course artists have long scoured museums for ideas, and "works after" are a venerable tradition. On January 11 the gallery announced the artists' picks. "It's been intensely interesting," says the show's curator, Richard Morphet. "The choice of source has been amazing in some cases. Bourgeois and Turner doesn't seem at all obvious to me "--Louise Bourgeois chose J.M.W. Turners Sun Rising through Vapour--while "Balthus is completely in character. He was copying Poussin right at the beginning of his career." (And the Poussin he chose, Sleeping Nymph nymph, in Greek mythology nymph (nĭmf), in Greek mythology, female divinity associated with various natural objects. It is uncertain whether they were immortal or merely long-lived. There was an infinite variety of nymphs. Surprised by Satyrs, seems a perfect subject for him.) The artists range In age from Balthus (born in 1908) to Francesco Clemente Francesco Clemente (born in Naples, 23 March 1952) is an Italian painter. His work shows both surrealist and expressionist references. He was self taught and studied architecture in 1970 at the University of Rome. (born in 1952; Titian's Allegory of Prudence The Allegory of Prudence (c. 1565-1570) is an oil painting by the Italian master Titian. It is in the National Gallery, London. The picture portrays three human heads, facing different directions, hanging over three animal one, depicting (from left) a wolf, a lion ), and run the gamut from abstract sculptor Anthony Caro Sir Anthony Caro, OM, CBE, (born 8 March 1924 in New Malden, Surrey) is an English, abstract sculptor whose work is characterised by assemblies of metal using 'found' industrial objects. (Ducolo's Annunciation Annunciation dove and lily pictured with Virgin and Gabriel. [Christian Iconography: Brewer Dictionary, 645] Elizabeth Mary’s old cousin; bears John the Baptist. [N.T. ) to conceptual photographer Jeff Wall (Stubbs's Whistiejacket), from video artist Bill Viola (Bosch's Christ Mocked) to painter Jasper Johns (Manet's Execution of Maximilian) and British Pop artist Patrick Cauifield (Zurbaran's A Cup of Water and a Rose on a Silver Plate). Curiously omitted are any of the young British artists Young British Artists or YBAs (also Brit artists and Britart) is the name given to a group of conceptual artists, painters, sculptors and installation artists based in the United Kingdom, most (though not all) of whom attended Goldsmiths College in London. lately so notorious. "It just worked out that way," claims Morphet (who promises that Robert Rosenblum's catalogue essay will discuss younger generations), but perhaps the gallery wanted to avoid distracting the public's attention. "This is the largest manifestation of contemporary art there has ever been at the National Gallery," says Morphet, "but the collection is at the core of this. A central purpose of the exhibition is to increase visitors' awareness of the richness of the collection and bring them to the works in a new way." David Frankel is a contributing editor of Artforum. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion