Studio Gallery promotes local artists and gives them space to present art in both physical and online platforms. While being committed to the local art scene, Studio Gallery is also interested in international art. To support artists everywhere and raise awareness for Georgian art, here is a blog post!
Read moreIn the Washington Post: Organic Geometry, A Tribute To Nancy Frankel
“An influential and much-loved figure, Frankel worked assuredly in wood, metal, plaster, clay, plastic and cast acrylic, sometimes painted in exuberant colors…”
Read moreArt In The Dark
As Daylight Saving Time ends on this chilly weekend, we are imagining the velvety darkness of the early evenings to come. While this is not always a welcome change, there is so much beauty in the city once the sun has gone down. This blog post explores some artworks by Studio Gallery artists to hopefully help you see the grandeur and magic of darkness while we all quietly look forward to Spring’s long hours of sunshine once more.
Read moreMotivation for Art
Jump into this riveting blog post about reflection on motivation to create art amidst the pandemic and social revolutions.
Read moreCamilla King: Joy in Color
Studio Gallery artist Camilla King discusses the joy of Blackness, and how she celebrates it every day through her portraiture.
Read moreKnowing When You're Ready: A Guide for Artists
Knowing how and when to approach an art gallery with your work is tricky business.
Read moreIntriguing, Interactive, and “Instagrammable”: Why Art Installations are Leading the Way for an Exciting Future in Contemporary Art
In our digital age, art is EVERYWHERE. With the rise of technology and social media, viewing art has become extremely accessible to all. It feels impossible to avoid seeing art in any capacity in our day-to-day lives. It exists in museums, galleries, streets, and more recently on our screens. Therefore, if art is everywhere; how does it capture our attention? A popular answer to this question is art installations. Installation art is one of the most eye-catching and “Instagrammable” forms of contemporary art. The Tate defines installation art as a term describing large-scale, mixed-media constructions, that are often site-specific and temporary. In recent decades, installation art has blown up. Why is that? By exploring the history and nature of installation art, this question will be answered.
Kurt Schwitters, Merzbau, 1937, Hanover, Germany
The term installation art was not officially in use until the 1960s, but precursors to the art form came about in the early 20th century. One of the earliest examples is Kurt Schwitters’ Merzbau of 1937. This work of art was constructed using eight rooms of Schwitters’ house. Each room contained assembled panels of wood that gave the illusion of forms growing outwards from the walls. The house was destroyed in 1943 as a result of a British air raid of Hanover, and the only evidence of Merzbau’s existence comes from the photographs taken of the house. The controversial Dada artist Marcel DuChamp followed Schwitters’ lead and created Mile of String in 1942. This piece was set in a gallery space and was made up of three miles of string devouring all of the open space in the gallery and turning the space itself into artwork. Although both Schwitters and DuChamp were early inspirations for installation artists, many art historians recognize Allan Kaprow’s Yard of 1961 as the first art environment. Kaprow filled the backyard of a New York gallery with tires and tarpaper-wrapped forms. Visitors were encouraged to run, jump and play in the tires, transforming this work of art into an interactive environment. This experiment opened the gates for the immersive and transformative art environments that we know today and are frequented by millions every year.
Chiharu Shiota, In Silence, 2019, Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, Photography: Sunhi Mang, © DACS, London, 2020 and the artist
So, why have art installations become so popular in recent years? Let’s start with their size. Almost every art installation is monumental in size. It often consumes an entire space making it extremely immersive. Whether it is in a gallery space or outdoors, art environments force the viewer to notice them. Chiharu Shiota’s In Silence (2008) is a wonderful example of the effects of scale. This piece features a burned grand piano playing to an empty audience of other burned chairs. The piano and chairs are engulfed in black string creating an overarching web of mesh. The mesh creates the visual illusion that music is coming from the silent piano in the form of string. The pathways through the installation are created through gaps in string making them feel like tunnels in this dark and daunting environment. This large-scale installation contributes to the eerie tone of Shiota’s piece. The overwhelming back strings appears as though it is about to engulf the viewer into its darkness. Without the enormous scale of In Silence, the tone would be lost on the audience.
Ernesto Neto, SunForceOceanLife, 2020, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Photography: Albert Sanchez, © 2020 Ernesto Neto
Ernesto Neto is another popular installation artist who creates large-scale and interactive art environments. One of his most recent exhibitions is located at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston and is titled SunForceOceanLife. This piece is a long and winding pathway suspended in the air made up of plastic balls and crocheted textiles. Audiences are invited to walk through the pathway to enjoy a tactile and sensory experience. Its warm colors and crisscross patterns make the audience feel as though they are walking through a coral reef. The idea of interacting with art is an essential part of many art installations. It allows for audiences to better understand the piece and feel apart of its purpose. Humans are literally consumed by the immense volume of SunForceOceanLife.
Tadashi Kawamata, overhead view of Over Flow, 2018, Museum of Arts, Architecture, and Technology, Photography: Bruno Lopes
View of Over Flow from below
Furthermore, art installations are almost always mixed media pieces. The medium can often dictate the tone of the piece. It makes the work intriguing and often transforms ordinary materials into extraordinary works of art. For example, Tadashi Kawamata’s Over Flow of 2018 filled the Museum of Arts, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon with plastics and nets found on Portugal’s beaches. This piece can be viewed from multiple perspectives. Seen from above, it appears as a boundless expanse of garbage floating in the water. From below, the viewer is covered by a net holding the garbage with a sinking ship piercing the net. The shadows generated by the plastic ooze into the room creating an illusion of water. The mixed media transforms the work of art into an alarming yet ethereal experience. The beauty resulting from devastation is exhilarating.
Random International, Rain Room, 2021, Sharjah, U.A.E.
With the ever-evolving technical advances of our modern era, new mediums are constantly arising. One fascinating example is the Rain Room created by Random International in 2012. This art installation allowed for visitors to walk through rain without getting wet through the use of sensors. Rain Room uses natural materials (water) to create an unnatural experience. Furthermore, Rain Room was a huge hit on social media. Although this art piece was created before Instagram became extremely popular, photos and videos were constantly being taken by the participants. This installation opened the floor to “Instagrammable” art experiences such as Culturespace’s immersive digital Van Gogh exhibit or Meowwolf’s House of Eternal Return.
Dustin Klein, 2020, Robert E. Lee Statue, Richmond, VA, Photography: Alexis Delilah (@alexis_delilah)
Additionally, many art installations are also site-specific. Artists will sometimes adapt a site and use certain aspects of it in their piece. Other times, they will simply create works of art that will complement the space. Either way, the site of the art environment is very important to the message and reception of the art installation. One influential artist of 2020 was Dustin Klein, who projected various digital images of fallen Black Americans on the Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond, Virginia. These projections pasted “BLM” on the body of Robert E. Lee and images of George Floyd, Brianna Taylor, Martin Luther King Jr., Harriet Tubman, and many other Black heroes on the pedestal. This art installation used the site of the last Confederate statue on Richmond’s historic Monument Avenue to call upon the statue’s history and its role in the suppression of Black Americans, further communicating the artists’ powerful message. Many artists around the world have similarly used projections to transform historically significant sites into the backdrop for important political messages, furthering the importance of art installations.
Ball Nogues, Pour Me Another, 2021, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
Other art environments such as Ball Nogues’ Pour Me Another outside of the Brooks Museum in Memphis, Tennessee used the site to enhance the piece. Ball Nogues used an inflatable bubble as the canvas for the paint poured repeatedly onto the surface of the bubble. After hundreds of layers of paint hardened, the artists popped the bubble to create an open interior space. People were able to walk into the paint sphere and see the paint from the inside. They were given an insight into the physicality of paint and the process of creation. The bright, eye-catching colors popped against the classic white marble of the museum’s building. The durability of the paint allowed for the installation to be interactive and withstand the outdoors, making this the perfect site for these whimsical paint homes.
It is also important to note that Pour Me Another was a temporary art installation. The ephemerality of art environments is a key component in making them so popular. The temporality makes the installation exclusive. It rushes visitors to the doors to see this almost “once in a lifetime” experience. One of the most popular installation artists of all time is Yayoi Kusama. Her work is often displayed in a room or a space box. One of her most well-known art installations is “Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity”, which is part of her Infinity Mirror Rooms series. This piece uses mirrors and hanging lights to create the illusion of being engulfed in lights in a dark room. However, when one enters the room there is only a few minutes to experience the lights; they will eventually turn off. Even the experience is a temporary one. Her Infinity Rooms have travelled all over the world and often have lines around the block to witness the boundless array of lights. Effective and memorable art installations combine all of these aspects (monumental size, interesting mediums, site-specificity, and temporality) to create captivating and interactive experiences for the public.
Yayoi Kusama, Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity, 2009, Hirshhorn Museum, © Yayoi Kusama
One of the controversies surrounding art installations is the question of their categorization. Can art installations be considered fine art? If something is temporary or public, is it fine art? If a piece cannot be bought and sold, is it fine art? Some art enthusiasts would say no, an experience is not a work of art. However, I would argue that art installations are the future of fine art. Just because something cannot be bought and sold and exists in a temporary time frame does not diminish its value. An experience can be just as valuable as a million-dollar painting sold at Sotheby’s. Many would say that Tadashi Kawamata’s Over Flow is a piece of fine art because of the important message that it is making about the environment, or that the technology used to create the physical euphoria of the Rain Room brings a whole new experimental element to the art world. The innovation and interactive nature of art installations make them exciting to a diverse audience. Many people who would never think to visit a museum or gallery flock to see a Yayoi Kusama piece or a Ball Nogues installation because they are unique and approachable. With the rise of social media, art installations will become an even more important part of the art world because of their aesthetic appeal to a camera. Anyone who enjoys taking an ”artsy” photo will tell you that the popularity of art experiences will continue for years to come.
From Staff Contributor Caitlin Cooner
Sources for further reading:
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/i/installation-art#:~:text=From%20the%201960s%20the%20creation,on%20ideas%20rather%20than%20objects
https://www.thecollector.com/what-is-installation-art/
Kurt Schwitters:
https://www.tate.org.uk/research/publications/tate-papers/08/kurt-schwitters-reconstructions-of-the-merzbau
Marcel DuChamp:
https://www.tate.org.uk/research/publications/tate-papers/22/duchamp-childhood-work-and-play-the-vernissage-for-first-papers-of-surrealism-new-york-1942
Allan Kaprow:
http://allankaprow.com/about_reinvetion.html
Chiharu Shiota:
https://www.alcantara.com/artists/chiharu-shiota/
Ernesto Neto:
https://www.mfah.org/exhibitions/ernesto-neto-sunforceoceanlife
Tadashi Kawamata:
https://www.azuremagazine.com/article/tadashi-kawamata-over-flow/
Rain Room:
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/aug/13/rain-room-offers-art-lovers-and-instagrammers-the-perfect-storm
Dustin Klein:
https://mymodernmet.com/light-projections-robert-e-lee-memorial/
Ball Nogues:
https://www.brooksmuseum.org/ball-nogues
Yayoi Kusama:
https://hirshhorn.si.edu/kusama/infinity-rooms/
Jennie Lea Knight: Celebrating her Life and Work
This month at Studio Gallery we commemorate our founder, Jennie Lea Knight, through an exhibition celebrating her life and work. Knight was a sculptor and painter whose work focused primarily on the natural world. Her art is featured in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Phillips Collection, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, and many other prestigious art institutions, and she is considered a seminal figure in the D.C. art scene. Her foundation of Studio Gallery was a trailblazing move for a woman artist, and made space for a diverse, multi-generational community of artists.
The Role of Ambivalence in Viewing Contemporary Art
Have you ever stood in front of a work of art and thought, ‘I just don’t get it.”? Have you ever felt baffled while wandering through a contemporary gallery or museum of obscure works, like the curators held some great secret they refused to share with you? Have you ever rolled your eyes at a particularly pretentious description of an artwork, wondering why you can’t see what others see? Even the most enthusiastic art lover has probably felt some sense of ambivalence towards a work of art at a certain point. The study of art history is dense and full of bias, and the contemporary art world is complex and often elitist. It seems sometimes that you have to be in the know to truly connect with the works of art in certain museums or galleries. But to be in the know, what exactly do you need to know? What would occur if you approached art with nothing but your five senses?
Read moreIn Conversation with J.S. Herbert
I was fortunate to be able to talk with J.S. Herbert, one of Studio Gallery’s Fellows and a prolific and thoughtful ceramicist, about a variety of subjects, including creating during lockdown, her connection between art and faith, and stopping to smell the flowers.
Read moreMonsters, Memories, and Masterpieces: Discussing the role of Children's Literature in the Art World
When you were a child, what did you know about art? You were probably walked (or carried, or pushed in a stroller) around museums at a certain point, had famous works pointed out to you on TV or in books, and were encouraged to paint, draw, or play with clay. These were all deliberate attempts to give you an understanding of art and your ability to create it. But you were also probably read to, which means you were saturated with colorful images of rainbow fish, mischievous monkeys, and soaring castles from infancy. These images swam in your mind, excited your imagination, inspired you to dream, look, and create. Children’s books are naturally perceived as a tool for language acquisition and literacy, and are a staple of any family home. But what about their role in promoting visual understanding? What purpose do they serve in the art world?
Read moreWhen Art Goes Viral
Social media has become increasingly more visual, especially with the rise of video-sharing platforms like Tik Tok. The internet is a new exhibition space — where artists can have full control over how they market and sell their work. More well-known artists, like Takashi Murakami (1.9 million Instagram followers) or Banksy (9.5 million Instagram followers), enjoyed giant fan bases long before the emergence of social media. However, both emerging and established artists are experiencing newfound fame and recognition through viral posts.
Read moreCelebrating Disability Pride Month through the Lens of Art History
Looking back on July, we at Studio Gallery wanted to honor the month’s status as Disability Pride Month and celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act by highlighting some talented artists with disabilities. These artists all have different experiences and methodologies, but all of them made an impact on the art world. They all navigate their identities in different ways through their works; some choose to discuss their experiences with disability through artistic self-reflection or activism, some choose to express themselves through more abstract concepts and share their unique interpretations of the world around them. Overall, these artists share a steadfast talent and powerful creative energy that reminds us that vision exists regardless of ability, education, or background, and must be fostered in all artists to create a more colorful and welcoming art world.
Read moreThe Power of Art in Activism
Art has always held power far greater than just beauty. For centuries, art has been indicative of the society and culture that created it. While not all art is overtly political, for centuries artists around the world have used their work to educate, comment, and criticize culture and politics. Some of these moments produced significant cultural shifts by increasing awareness of suppressed issues. Read about 6 artists who created works that shocked the world with controversy and awakened many to injustices they were blind to.
Read moreRibbons Stretching Across the World: Eleanor Kotlarik Wang's multicultural approach to her latest exhibition, Ribbons of Stretch
Ribbons of Stretch is on view from Wed, Jul 29, 2020-Sat, Aug 22, 2020 in the upstairs gallery, available by appointment only. Stop by and immerse yourself in the varied textures and moody colors of Eleanor Kotlarik Wang’s dynamic, meditative works.
Read moreExploring Black Mountain College: a Small School with a Big Impact, a Brief History with a Lasting Legacy
What do Elaine de Kooning, Ruth Asawa, and Robert Rauschenberg have in common? Besides being some of the most influential contemporary artists of the 20th century, they all spent time at the small, alternative liberal arts school Black Mountain College. Black Mountain College, located near Asheville, N.C., was a short-lived experiment, only remaining open from 1933-57, but it provided a jumping-off point for many visual artists, writers, and thinkers to learn outside of the boundaries of a formal education.
Read moreCelebrating Pride With A History Lesson
This Pride Month, Studio Gallery is celebrating same-sex love with a history lesson. So many of us support this rainbow-colored month, but how many of us really know the history behind Pride? Read on to learn about a pivotal moment in Pride history, and the POC who fought for LGBTQ+ rights.
Read moreBreaking Tradition: Contemporary Chinese Art with Freda Lee-McCann
Since the late 1980s, Contemporary Chinese art has become increasingly more lucrative in the international art market. Up until 1985, it was illegal to sell art in China. Today, major European auction houses like Christie’s and Sotheby’s hold offices in Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Beijing. Contemporary Chinese art often features a mix of both traditional Chinese techniques with Western art movements such as pop art, cementing its popularity among western buyers. Studio Gallery artist Freda Lee-McCann speaks on the emerging popularity of her genre of artwork while explaining the inspiration behind her upcoming exhibition.
Read moreRecommended Reads
What are our artists reading in quarantine, and how can you have these books delivered to your house for cheap? Easy peasy! Read on for some exciting book recommendations:
Read moreSupport Black-Owned Businesses in D.C.
On this Juneteenth, we solemnly celebrate the 155th anniversary of the end of slavery in this country. Eradicating racism sounds like an overwhelmingly daunting task when you think of all the complexities involved, so today we are focusing on one simple way that you can help to support BLM. Read on to learn about some wonderful Black-owned, D.C.-based businesses to support!
Read more