:The Neuberger Museum of Art will open three new shows in January,
at Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road. The museum also
announces that the exhibition of Jim Dine's drawings will
continue through January 8. This exhibition includes many works
on paper from the artist's collection and the collection of Arnie
Glimcher. Large-scale and typical full-sheet drawings are
featured.
The show opening January 15, "Facing Abstraction: Refiguring the
Body in the Twentieth Century," looks at figurative art from the
Twentieth Century, which has often been measured in relation to
the development of abstraction. By the 1950s, Abstract
Expressionist painters viewed the idea of three-dimensional
representation on a two-dimensional surface as suspect,
questioning the relevance of representational imagery at all.
"Facing Abstraction" traces an alternate art history, one in
which faces and figures, although abstracted and distorted (and
even sometimes barely recognizable) remained essential.
The exhibition includes paintings, prints and sculptures by
Alexander Archipenko, Georges Braques, Jean Dubuffet, Alberto
Giacometti, Matta, Amadeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso, Larry
Rivers, Mark Rothko, Rufino Tamayo and Antoni Tapies. All works
come from the Neuberger Museum of Art's permanent collection.
Ben Shahn, "Blond Botanist #2," 1954, tempera on canvas mounted
on board, 21 by 17 inches sight, 32 ΒΌ by 28 3/8 inches framed.
Curated by Tracy Fitzpatrick, Neuberger museum adjunct
curator and Purchase College assistant professor of art history,
the show will be on view through July 16.
On January 29 the exhibition "Sharon Louden: Character" will open
with five new works by Louden, and also paintings, drawings,
serigraphs and sculpture by an abstract artist who is known to
observe nature in simple lines in motion. This is the artist's
largest exhibition to date, and includes work from a new
animation series. Noted for its "character," Louden's work exudes
personality, integrity, spirit and charm; it also represents
anthropomorphic individuals that, although abstract and formal,
have humanlike characteristics in minimal states produced in
simple lines and gestures. Through the illusion of movement and
placement, Louden gives character to her gestures. Thirty works
that have been created in the past eight years, will be on view.
Though her work is highly abstract and minimal, it has tremendous
impact. "The question of how it is made arises time and time
again, as does a vivid discussion of the many currents in the
work," notes Dede Young, curator of modern and contemporary art
at the Neuberger Museum of Art, and curator of the show.
"Louden's lines project an attitude that can be enigmatic and
often humorous, expressing a personal, internal dialogue that
ranges in tone from serious and tense to surprising and
entertaining. Her minimal expression has a maximal impact."
A full color catalog will include an essay by critic Lilly Wei
and an interview with the artist by Young, examining Louden's
process and concerns with "stretching" drawing. Louden's work
will be on view through June 18.

Dennis Oppenheim, "The Assembly Line (With By-Products from a
Mechanical Trance)," 1980, mixed media installation, 14 by 75
by 33 feet overall, installed.
Also opening on January 29, and scheduled to run through May
21, is "Dennis Oppenheim: The Assembly Line (with By-Products from
a Mechanical Trance)." This amazing installation is part of Dennis
Oppenheim's "Factory Series." The assembly line consists of large
industrial fans that push air from a central, neon-lit stage
through crossing ductwork to spinning turbines, blowing chimneys
and a floating suite of translucent inflatable vessels. A swaying
metronome arches above rocking tables, chutes, diffusers and
ventilators. To Oppenheim, this industrial machinery embodies the
urgency and orchestration of creative output.
"The assembly line, the processing system, the coupling of
elements, emphasized my concern with the internal dynamics of
thought processes, making physical the extra-visual forces that
proceed art making, that form thoughts," he observed.
For information, 914-251-6100 or www.Neuberger.org.