:From February 5 to May 14, the Allentown Art Museum will present
"Surrealism - Theater of the Mind" ("High Drama: Eugene Berman
and the Legacy of the Melancholic Sublime" at the McNay Art
Museum, San Antonio) in the Kress Gallery. This major display
will be the largest Surrealist exhibition in the museum's history
and its first in 40 years.
The exhibit will feature more than 60 works of art, including
such major artists as Giorgio de Chirico, Joseph Cornell,
Salvador Dalí, Frida Kahlo, Dorothea Tanning and the
collaborative group of photographers PaJaMa (Paul Cadmus, Jared
French and Margaret French), along with a core group of work by
Russian American painter and designer Eugene Berman (1899-1972).
"Surrealism - Theater of the Mind" will bring together painting,
drawing, collage, photography and sculpture with the theater
arts. The exhibition also explores the Surrealist heritage,
featuring work by contemporary artists like Cindy Sherman and
John Wilde.
The McNay Art Museum owns one of the finest theater collections
of any American art museum. Drawing on this collection, the
exhibition features designs for stage sets and costumes used in
major productions such as Mozart's Don Giovanni and
Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera.
According to David R. Brigham, the museum's Priscilla Payne Hurd
Executive Director, "This exhibition is unique in that it takes
an international and cross-generational view of Surrealism, while
also relating this important Twentieth Century style to the
theater arts. These dimensions result in a visually rich,
intellectually exciting exhibition."
The exhibition will be celebrated with a costume-optional opening
party on Saturday, February 11, from 6 to 8 pm.
Admission to the exhibition is $4 in addition to museum
admission; museum members, children under 12 and active members
of US armed forces (with appropriate ID) are admitted at no
charge.
Surrealism is a period style that emerged in the 1920s,
reflecting artists' interest in exploring the human psyche in all
its depth. These artists rebelled against the Cubists and other
abstract artists who dominated the scene in the 1910s and 1920s.
Returning to a late Nineteenth Century interest in picturing
strong emotion as well as dreams and explorations of the
subconscious realm, they were responding to the sense of loss and
nostalgia that prevailed during this period of economic
depression and war. Similarly, the fallout of 1960s idealism and
the AIDS epidemic, along with the tragedies of 9/11 and the war
in Iraq, have left their mark on contemporary art, resulting in
many works concerned with loss, disappointment and nostalgia.
Eugene Berman, American, born Russia (1899-1972). "Cassandra,"
1942-43, oil on canvas. Collection of the McNay Art Museum,
gift of Robert L.B. Tobin.
Guest curator Michael Duncan organized the exhibition in
conjunction with Jody Blake, curator of the Tobin Collection of
Theatre Arts at the McNay. Duncan is a corresponding editor for
Art in America and a frequent contributor to Artform.
The museum is partnering with three Allentown cultural
organizations to offer citywide multidisciplinary programming
throughout the winter and spring, all revealing different facets
of Surrealism.
The Baum School of Art will offer three adult workshops
("Cerealism: Create Collage Art from Consumer Goods Packaging,"
"Jewelry: Surrealism to Where?" and "The Art of Collage
Sculpture: An Exploration of Joseph Cornell") and a children's
winter session, all focused on Surrealism. For information visit
www.baumschool.org
From February 4 to April 14, the Lehigh County Historical Society
will feature a special exhibition, "History of Concept Cars,"
with a lecture on the topic by Kutztown University professor Dr
Paul Sable on opening day at 11 am.
For information, visit www.lchs.museum.
Theatre Outlet will present "Cloud Tectonics" by José Rivera
March 31 to April 15. Rivera is widely known for magic realism,
an American style closely related to Surrealism. For information,
visit www.theatreoutlet.org.
The Allentown Art Museum is part of a national tour of this
exhibition, which includes the McNay, the Georgia Museum of Art,
and the Long Beach Museum of Art. A full color exhibition
catalog, High Drama: Eugene Berman and the Legacy of the
Melancholic Sublime, will be available in the museum store.
The museum is at 31 North Fifth Street. For more information,
www.allentownart museum.org or 610-432-4333.