Routes of Influence

(Sabato) (Martedì)

Routes of Influence consists of six thematic presentations of works from the permanent collection, positioned within the two adjacent galleries on this floor and in four galleries upstairs. These Overview Galleries form a conceptual spine running through the building, continually placing collection works in visual dialogue with the exhibitions and projects presented in the museum’s additional galleries.



Inspired by Miami’s position as a hub of diverse flows of people, ideas, and art histories, this exhibition juxtaposes artworks in a manner that maps how aesthetic concepts move fluidly across traditional, national or cultural lines, how “influence” in art is understood today as multi-directional,  rather than linear in character. Specifically exchanging the notion of “roots” for “routes,” this presentation emphasizes trajectories over origins in its interpretation of these artworks, how meaning is not limited to the context in which each work was produced, but expands as it is put into dialogue with the other works on display.  Each thematic gallery highlights the ways in which particular forms, narratives, or political ideas migrate between artworks. Additional pieces selected involve journeys referenced by artists working across diverse parts of the world.



Shifting CartographiesDiagrams, engineering drawings, and geographical maps are several of the references that connect the works in this gallery. Traditionally associated with construction and industry, these forms evoke notions of modernization, development, and progress, and relate to Constructivism, which originated in the early 20th-century Russian avant-garde. The abstracted forms these works present are shown in various states of flux, involving movement, fragmentation, or dissolution. Through these devices, the artists represented address various contemporary structural shifts involving ideologies in transformation—from evolving emotional states to economics systems, potential utopias, or global migrations.



Perceptive Geometries



The works in this gallery involve geometric forms that engage the perceptive capabilities of the viewer. Presenting cubes, lines, and bands of color in compositions that emphasize the repetition of these elements, the scale and placement of these artworks actively interact with the viewer’s body. They demand that viewers navigate among or around them as they seek the various views and effects the pieces generate. This gallery includes works that are directly related to Minimalism and Conceptualism, art movements from the 1960s and ‘70s that sought to stimulate the viewers’ awareness of themselves interacting with the works presented in a museum or gallery context. Use of industrial materials, reflective surfaces and seriality are some of the strategies used by this previous generation and referenced by the younger artists also on view.



Ideological Circuits



The works exhibited in this gallery address intersections between commodities, ideology, and transnational politics. They reference the tradition of Pop Art, which began in the 1960s, with artists appropriating images and objects from popular culture—from newspapers, television and film. Since the Cold War period, many US consumer products, such as Coca-Cola or Campbell’s soup cans, have been seen as symbols of not only the country’s technical innovation and marketing, but of ideologies related to the expansion of its political and economic interests internationally. Several artists address these and related dynamics, using strategies that highlight and subvert the commercial and advertising systems through which these products and ideas circulate, transforming these ideological circuits into tools of political critique and alternative messaging.



Critical Gestures



The collection works in this gallery each dialogue with legacies of painterly abstraction, specifically Abstract Expressionism, which strongly influenced artistic production in the post-World War II period in the United States. Abstract Expressionism emphasized the significance of the painted mark on a canvas, identifying multiple meanings to this action—as an expression or trace of the movement of the artist’s body, as a depiction of  the emotional, spiritual or psychic state of the artist or as a pre-linguistic sign system. The artworks installed here critique this tradition in diverse ways—through the use of alternate tools, instead of a paint brush, in placing paint on canvas, through experiments with the thickness of paint, or through the implementation of systems, materials or processes that counter the immediacy and spontaneity historically associated with gestural painting.



Ornament and Empire



This gallery addresses how ornamentation has historically been used as a symbol of status and power. The artworks exhibited reference several colonial contexts from the 18th and 19th centuries, and explore how decorative elements used in textiles, clothing, and architecture were tied to systems of control and the expansion of the British, French, and Spanish empires. The artists presented here address these histories, of both resistance and subordination, in ways that speak to the perpetuation of these systems in a contemporary global context. Their works speak to the current development of hybrid decorative styles, generated by post-colonial migrations and the expansion of commodity markets, which promote new forms of status-related adornment.



On the Road



Highways, and the particular views they generate, have deeply influenced how the North American landscape has been seen and understood within a global imaginary. Since the 1950s, the open road has been perceived as a place of adventure, endless possibilities, and potential futures. Photography has played a crucial role in the construction of this mythical landscape, with the handheld or small-format camera serving as a symbol of this mobile, contemporary view. This gallery is organized around several groupings of images that juxtapose contemporary with historical photographs, outlining both actual and potential trajectories of influence among these artists. Also referenced in this presentation is violence along the road and the socioeconomic effects of suburban sprawl, in particular how it relates to the growth of highway infrastructures.



 



 



 



 



 

Altri eventi: Stati uniti

24.01.3086 - 24.03.3086
Mexican and Latino Art Museum | San Francisco | In Association With The Smithsonian Institution - Th
Fort Mason Center, 2 Marina Blvd., Building D
San Francisco

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Routes of Influence Perez Art Museum Miami - PAMM Main address: Perez Art Museum Miami - PAMM 1103 Biscayne Blvd. FL 33132 Miami, Stati uniti Perez Art Museum Miami - PAMM 1103 Biscayne Blvd. FL 33132 Miami, Stati uniti Routes of Influence consists of six thematic presentations of works from the permanent collection, positioned within the two adjacent galleries on this floor and in four galleries upstairs. These Overview Galleries form a conceptual spine running through the building, continually placing collection works in visual dialogue with the exhibitions and projects presented in the museum’s additional galleries.



Inspired by Miami’s position as a hub of diverse flows of people, ideas, and art histories, this exhibition juxtaposes artworks in a manner that maps how aesthetic concepts move fluidly across traditional, national or cultural lines, how “influence” in art is understood today as multi-directional,  rather than linear in character. Specifically exchanging the notion of “roots” for “routes,” this presentation emphasizes trajectories over origins in its interpretation of these artworks, how meaning is not limited to the context in which each work was produced, but expands as it is put into dialogue with the other works on display.  Each thematic gallery highlights the ways in which particular forms, narratives, or political ideas migrate between artworks. Additional pieces selected involve journeys referenced by artists working across diverse parts of the world.



Shifting CartographiesDiagrams, engineering drawings, and geographical maps are several of the references that connect the works in this gallery. Traditionally associated with construction and industry, these forms evoke notions of modernization, development, and progress, and relate to Constructivism, which originated in the early 20th-century Russian avant-garde. The abstracted forms these works present are shown in various states of flux, involving movement, fragmentation, or dissolution. Through these devices, the artists represented address various contemporary structural shifts involving ideologies in transformation—from evolving emotional states to economics systems, potential utopias, or global migrations.



Perceptive Geometries



The works in this gallery involve geometric forms that engage the perceptive capabilities of the viewer. Presenting cubes, lines, and bands of color in compositions that emphasize the repetition of these elements, the scale and placement of these artworks actively interact with the viewer’s body. They demand that viewers navigate among or around them as they seek the various views and effects the pieces generate. This gallery includes works that are directly related to Minimalism and Conceptualism, art movements from the 1960s and ‘70s that sought to stimulate the viewers’ awareness of themselves interacting with the works presented in a museum or gallery context. Use of industrial materials, reflective surfaces and seriality are some of the strategies used by this previous generation and referenced by the younger artists also on view.



Ideological Circuits



The works exhibited in this gallery address intersections between commodities, ideology, and transnational politics. They reference the tradition of Pop Art, which began in the 1960s, with artists appropriating images and objects from popular culture—from newspapers, television and film. Since the Cold War period, many US consumer products, such as Coca-Cola or Campbell’s soup cans, have been seen as symbols of not only the country’s technical innovation and marketing, but of ideologies related to the expansion of its political and economic interests internationally. Several artists address these and related dynamics, using strategies that highlight and subvert the commercial and advertising systems through which these products and ideas circulate, transforming these ideological circuits into tools of political critique and alternative messaging.



Critical Gestures



The collection works in this gallery each dialogue with legacies of painterly abstraction, specifically Abstract Expressionism, which strongly influenced artistic production in the post-World War II period in the United States. Abstract Expressionism emphasized the significance of the painted mark on a canvas, identifying multiple meanings to this action—as an expression or trace of the movement of the artist’s body, as a depiction of  the emotional, spiritual or psychic state of the artist or as a pre-linguistic sign system. The artworks installed here critique this tradition in diverse ways—through the use of alternate tools, instead of a paint brush, in placing paint on canvas, through experiments with the thickness of paint, or through the implementation of systems, materials or processes that counter the immediacy and spontaneity historically associated with gestural painting.



Ornament and Empire



This gallery addresses how ornamentation has historically been used as a symbol of status and power. The artworks exhibited reference several colonial contexts from the 18th and 19th centuries, and explore how decorative elements used in textiles, clothing, and architecture were tied to systems of control and the expansion of the British, French, and Spanish empires. The artists presented here address these histories, of both resistance and subordination, in ways that speak to the perpetuation of these systems in a contemporary global context. Their works speak to the current development of hybrid decorative styles, generated by post-colonial migrations and the expansion of commodity markets, which promote new forms of status-related adornment.



On the Road



Highways, and the particular views they generate, have deeply influenced how the North American landscape has been seen and understood within a global imaginary. Since the 1950s, the open road has been perceived as a place of adventure, endless possibilities, and potential futures. Photography has played a crucial role in the construction of this mythical landscape, with the handheld or small-format camera serving as a symbol of this mobile, contemporary view. This gallery is organized around several groupings of images that juxtapose contemporary with historical photographs, outlining both actual and potential trajectories of influence among these artists. Also referenced in this presentation is violence along the road and the socioeconomic effects of suburban sprawl, in particular how it relates to the growth of highway infrastructures.



 



 



 



 



 
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