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Cindy Sherman to Receive The Jewish Museum's Man Ray Award

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Written by Barney Hess   
Saturday, 14 November 2009 02:42

Cindy Sherman - Untitled Film Still #43, 1979 - © Cindy Sherman

NEW YORK, NY.- The Jewish Museum will present photographer Cindy Sherman with a special award for her distinguished accomplishments in advancing understanding of the limitless possibilities of identity, and the profound impact of her work on the contemporary art world. Ms. Sherman will receive The Jewish Museum’s Man Ray Award at a celebratory event on Tuesday evening, November 17. From 6:30 to 8:00 pm event attendees will enjoy a cocktail reception and viewing of the new exhibition, "Alias Man Ray: The Art of Reinvention". The award presentation will take place at 7:30 pm. This award underscores the Museum’s continuing commitment to the art and artists of the avant-garde, who, in the spirit of Man Ray and Cindy Sherman, explore issues of identity through their creative work.

Artist Cindy Sherman will receive a special award for her distinguished accomplishments . AP/Evan AgostiniTickets range from $250 to $750. A $750 ticket includes a visit with Cindy Sherman in her studio on March 18, 2010. Proceeds from the event benefit The Jewish Museum’s contemporary art program. Joshua Nash, Chairman; Robert A. Pruzan, President; and Photography Acquisitions Committee co-chairs Ronit Berkman and Sheri Gellman, a Museum trustee, host the event.

Anticipated attendees include David Byrne, the musician who co-founded the group, Talking Heads (1976-88), and actress Gaby Hoffman, among others.

The Jewish Museum combines art and Jewish culture in collections, exhibitions and education programs, with art and artifacts from ancient times to the present. Now in its 105th year, the Museum is both the touchstone of Jewish identity and an internationally acclaimed art museum.

Man Ray - "Auto Portrait," 1933, mixed media: bronze, glass, wood and newsprint. Smithsonian American Art Museum, gift of Juliet Man Ray. © 2009 Man Ray Trust / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Working as her own model for more than 30 years, Cindy Sherman has developed an extraordinary relationship with her camera. A remarkable performer, Sherman is able to drastically manipulate her age and weight leaving the artist unrecognizable to the audience. Her works range from alarming and distasteful to amusing and poignant. Shooting alone in her studio, Sherman acts as author, director, actor, make-up artist, hairstylist and wardrobe mistress. Sherman ’s work has been widely collected and exhibited by major museums throughout the world since 1980 and is the subject of numerous monographs. She was born in Glen Ridge, New Jersey in 1954 and attended State University College at Buffalo , New York , B.A. (1976). Cindy Sherman lives in New York City .

A trailblazing figure in 20th-century art, Man Ray (1890-1976) revealed multiple artistic identities over the course of his career – Dadaist, Parisian Surrealist, international portrait and fashion photographer – and produced many important and enduring works as a photographer, painter, filmmaker, writer, sculptor, and object maker. Relatively few people know that he was born Emmanuel Radnitzky to Russian Jewish immigrants. The Jewish Museum is presenting "Alias Man Ray: The Art of Reinvention" from November 15, 2009 through March 14, 2010, a major exhibition considering how the artist’s life and career were shaped by his turn-of-the-century American Jewish immigrant experience and his lifelong evasion of his past.

The exhibition explores the deliberate cultural ambiguity of Man Ray who became the first American artist to be accepted by the avant-garde in Paris . It also examines the dynamic connection between Man Ray’s assimilation, the evolution of his art, and his willful construction of a distinctive artistic persona, as evidenced in a series of subtle, encrypted self-references throughout his career. Visitors to "Alias Man Ray" will be privy to the artist’s endless experimentation in over 200 works including photographs, paintings, sculptures and objects, drawings, films and a selection of his writings. As the first major multimedia Man Ray show in a New York City museum since 1974, the exhibition will present many iconic works like the photographs "Le Violon d’Ingres" (1924) and "Noire et Blanche" (1926); the paintings "War A.D. (MCMXIV)" (1914), "The Rope Dancer Accompanies Herself with Her Shadows" (1915-16) and "La Fortune" (1938); and the painted screen "La Fôret Dorée de Man Ray" (1950).

For nearly a century, The Jewish Museum has illuminated the Jewish experience, both secular and religious, demonstrating the strength of Jewish identity and culture. Its unparalleled collection and unique exhibitions offer a wide range of opportunities for exploring multiple facets of the Jewish experience, past and present, and for educating current and future generations. It is a source of education, inspiration and shared human values for people of all cultures. Visit : http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/


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