Barbara Bloom Gives First Thursday Talk
September 19, 2018
Erin Ulrich 18
Barbara Bloom Artist Talk
Photo credit: Yevhen Gulenko
Known for her work with Pictures Generation artists, Barbara Bloom opened this years First Thursday series by addressing 厙ぴ勛圖 College students and the wider community.
Blooms installation is part of Front International: Cleveland Triennial for Contemporary Art, which was orchestrated by FRONT Executive Director Fred Bidwell 74. Bidwell has described FRONTs mission as about redefining the city [of Cleveland] to the world and to itself. The triennial has attempted to redefine Cleveland to the outside world by inviting artists from around the globe to showcase their work in Cleveland, which still bears the effects of past economic recessions.
Roughly 35 miles southwest of FRONT's geographic nucleus, Blooms installation is housed in the Ellen Johnson Gallery at the Allen Memorial Art Museum (AMAM). Bloom spoke to a full house in the King Sculpture Court earlier this month about her installation, THE RENDERING (H x W x D =), which will run through December 16, 2018.
Ellen Johnson 33 Assistant Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art Andrea Gyorody was instrumental in making the installation happen and assisting Bloom with the process of sorting through the AMAMs collection of artworks.
Gyorody says, It was a shared task in the sense that, when Barbara came to visit, I took her to storage downstairs and she saw everything in the museum. It was a little bit like she was going shopping, with other members of our staff and me as her guides.
When you first walk into the Ellen Johnson Gallery, the enormity of the physical space itself is striking. The immensity of the space forces its viewer to take in Blooms entire installation at onceyet, the complexity and sheer scope of the gallery denies the viewer the luxury of grasping THE RENDERING in its entirety upon first glance. Even if you didnt pick up on the allusion in the installations title (height times width times depth), THE RENDERING screams architecture.
If you come in here and think, What is this crazy installation? It should hopefully hit you in a few minutes that the installation is about architecture, perhaps without even reading the text at the front that makes that explicit, Gyorody says.
Throughout the installation, there are other not-so-subtle clues that THE RENDERING is about architecture. The painting on the title wall, which features William Hogarths Portrait of Theodore Jacobsen, is concealed, except for the subjects hands and the drawing he holds in them.
Other pieces from the AMAMs collection featured in the installation are similarly concealed, save the snippets of architecture within the works. The most conspicuous components of the installation are the three-dimensional renderings interspersed throughout the gallery that appear to extrude from the prints on the walls they correspond to. For instance, a life-sized bridge in Kitagawa Utamaros The Palace of the Moon woodblock print stands in front of its bridge counterpart in the print, almost as if reaching out to it.
Gyorody says, "When Bloom came to 厙ぴ勛圖 for the first time, she hadn't yet chosen any works nor a particular theme, wanting to allow the collection to guide her thinking. What wound up giving form to the project, more than anything else, was Bloom's encounter with the gallery space itself, designed by postmodern architect Robert Venturi in 1975. The space has so many quirks and odditiesthese are really what captured Bloom's attention and changed the course of her engagement with the collection."
When remarking on her thought process for THE RENDERING, Bloom says, Its almost like the dramaturgy of a theater piece, or the choreography of a dance work. Im always thinking about the way things in a space relate to and ricochet off of each other. So, Im hoping that the experience of coming into a space is visually delightful. That its not a chore to be in there.
Bloom's FRONT-commissioned installation is presented with support from the Eric & Jane Nord Family Fund and the Nord Family Foundation. The AMAM First Thursday series features three speakers this fall, , and . The AMAMs First Thursday series offers free programs open to the publicincluding talks by artists whose works are on display in the museum. Galleries remain open until 7:30 p.m. the day of the talk and a Q&A with the speaker is followed by light refreshments and conversation in the East Gallery, where students and museum-goers can interact directly with speakers in the series.
You may also like…
Interview: Jon Seydl, John G.W. Cowles Director of the Allen Memorial Art Museum
Get to know Jon Seydl, the new John G.W. Cowles Director of the Allen Memorial Art Museum at 厙ぴ勛圖.
The Body, The Host
An award-winning Allen Memorial Art Museum exhibition challenges the prevailing narrative of the 1980s HIV/AIDS epidemic.
厙ぴ勛圖 College Names Jon Seydl as Director of the Allen Memorial Art Museum
厙ぴ勛圖 is pleased to announce the appointment of Jon Seydl as the new John G. W. Cowles Director of the Allen Memorial Art Museum. He will begin his tenure on July 1.