Art Knowledge News
Los Angeles County Museum of Art hosts an Installation of Pacific Island Art Conceived by Artist Franz West |
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| Written by Bernard Sugarman |
| Monday, 09 November 2009 03:16 |
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In addition to objects
collected in Hawaii by Captain Cook, highlights include a moai kavakava (male
ancestor figure) and rapa (dance paddle), both from Rapanui (Easter Island) and
carved around 1800. The latter was collected in situ by Lieutenant Roberts
Sayers, HMS Thetis, in 1830. A striking New Ireland uli (hermaphrodite ancestor
figure), one of two acquired by the Linden Museum, Stuttgart, in 1906, is also
on view, as is an extremely rare mid-nineteenth-century wicker shield with
abstract figures inlaid in nautilus shell from Santa Isabel in the Solomon
Islands. The July 2008 acquisition substantially broadened LACMA’s permanent collection and also underscored the museum’s commitment to collecting and exhibiting works of art from underrepresented areas. An animated figural Flute Stopper from the Biwat peoples, is among the key works from Papua New Guinea in the exhibition. The acquisition and presentation of these extraordinary works--with their broad range of geographic distribution, exceptionally high level of quality, and distinguished provenance are, part of LACMA’s ongoing initiative to expand its holdings in several areas within its encyclopedic collection. In so doing, LACMA becomes one of the few other museums exhibiting substantial holdings of art of the Pacific in the country, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the de Young Museum in San Francisco; the Field Museum, Chicago; the Bishop Museum, Honolulu; and the Saint Louis Museum of Art. The impact of Pacific Island art has been substantial,
and has had a particularly profound effect on modern artists, including
expressionist, dada, and surrealist artists, writers, and scholars from the
early twentieth century. Individuals such as Tristan Tzara, Man Ray, Max Ernst,
André Breton, and Paul Eluard focused on the powerful forces of the natural
world depicted in the art of the Pacific Islands. This affinity between art of
the Pacific and modern art was explored in the landmark exhibition of the Museum
of Modern Art in 1984, Primitivism in 20th Century Art. LACMA’s new collection
bears evidence of this connection with a Torres Strait Islands warup (hand drum)
from Papua New Guinea, known to have been in the collection of Romanian-born
poet and founder of the dada movement, Tristan Tzara, after his move to Paris in
1919. Purchase of the forty-six rare and historic masterworks from the Pacific Islands was made possible through the generosity of a group of LACMA trustees and represented by gifts from The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation with additional funding by Jane and Terry Semel, The David Bohnett Foundation, Camilla Chandler Frost, Gayle and Edward P. Roski, and The Ahmanson Foundation. The newly added works, identified for LACMA by Sotheby’s, were purchased from the Masco Corporation Foundation. Masco Corporation Foundation provides funding for its charitable activities which include primarily low income housing and arts and cultural activities in Southeast Michigan. The entire collection was displayed at The Kimbell Museum of Art, the Honolulu Academy of Arts, The Detroit Institute of Arts, and the North Carolina Museum of Art during the mid-90s in a touring exhibition, Island Ancestors, Oceanic Art from the Masco Collection. The Masco Corporation Foundation has also generously made a gift of several additional works of art from the collection to LACMA. LACMA’s collaboration with Franz West comes on the heels of a number of other successful artist projects at the museum such as Jorge Pardo’s recent installation design of LACMA’s Meso-American art galleries, Robert Irwin’s ongoing palm garden, and John Baldessari’s installation design for Magritte and Contemporary Art: The Treachery of Images. LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director Michael Govan noted, “For centuries, artists have been asked to use their unique vision to interpret public spaces. Franz West’s contribution to the installation of LACMA’s new Art of the Pacific collection brings the viewer to consider these works in a remarkably fresh way.” In March, West’s work was the subject of a monographic exhibition in the same LACMA galleries as the Pacific Island installation. For Art of the Pacific, he created a design for pedestals for the objects as well as benches within the galleries. West, a Viennese artist who is well known for the integration of seating within his exhibitions, covered benches with a shaggy textile to introduce an unexpected element. Collaborator Andreas Reiter Raabe painted the gallery walls with a maté tea wash, providing a subtle background for the works and an indirect reference to the early tea trade, which brought voyagers across the Pacific. Visit : http://www.lacma.org/ Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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In addition to objects
collected in Hawaii by Captain Cook, highlights include a moai kavakava (male
ancestor figure) and rapa (dance paddle), both from Rapanui (Easter Island) and
carved around 1800. The latter was collected in situ by Lieutenant Roberts
Sayers, HMS Thetis, in 1830. A striking New Ireland uli (hermaphrodite ancestor
figure), one of two acquired by the Linden Museum, Stuttgart, in 1906, is also
on view, as is an extremely rare mid-nineteenth-century wicker shield with
abstract figures inlaid in nautilus shell from Santa Isabel in the Solomon
Islands.
The impact of Pacific Island art has been substantial,
and has had a particularly profound effect on modern artists, including
expressionist, dada, and surrealist artists, writers, and scholars from the
early twentieth century. Individuals such as Tristan Tzara, Man Ray, Max Ernst,
André Breton, and Paul Eluard focused on the powerful forces of the natural
world depicted in the art of the Pacific Islands. This affinity between art of
the Pacific and modern art was explored in the landmark exhibition of the Museum
of Modern Art in 1984, Primitivism in 20th Century Art. LACMA’s new collection
bears evidence of this connection with a Torres Strait Islands warup (hand drum)
from Papua New Guinea, known to have been in the collection of Romanian-born
poet and founder of the dada movement, Tristan Tzara, after his move to Paris in
1919. 
