Viewing
art as affecting change, the California-based artist and
founding
director of the Watts Towers Arts Center, Noah Purifoy,
embraced
dichotomy and explored disparate juxtapositions in his work,
making
use of material at hand. He found “beauty in what has
been
discarded” states Franklin Sirmans, Terri and Michael
Smooke
Department Head and Curator of Contemporary Art at Los
Angeles County
Museum of Art (LACMA), “to give new life to an
object by changing its
context, transforming it from junk to
artwork”.
The
exhibit includes, among others, abstract topography, a mixed media
collection, furniture, and a Nkisi, a ritual object from lower Congo,
made by the artist from nails and an old piano pedal. At times
Purifoy’s art has a hint of humor, such as the Office
Chair,
The last Supper,
and Rags and Old
Iron II,
a collage of tattered clothing evoking Tanya Marie Harris’ song
Second Hand Dreams, as well as multiple art pieces with references to Jazz musicians such as Black
Brown and Beige (1989)
after Duke Ellington, representing gigantic fingers pointed towards
the sky playing the piano.
Purifoy's
landmark exhibition 66
Signs of Neon,
is an exhibition of
works constructed from fire ravaged debris
collected after the
8/11/1965 Watts rebellion. Displayed are
selections of his surviving
works from his landmark exhibition that
set him on the path as an
artist.
Presented are approximately one dozen assemblage works, three-dimensional standing-alone sculptures, by Purifoy and other artists, including Judson Powell, Debbie Brewer, and Arthur Secunda.
Spending the last 15 years of his life in Joshua Tree, Purifoy established his Outdoor Museum, an international cultural destination with more than 120 large scale sculptures over 10 acres, composed entirely of junk.
Presented are approximately one dozen assemblage works, three-dimensional standing-alone sculptures, by Purifoy and other artists, including Judson Powell, Debbie Brewer, and Arthur Secunda.
Spending the last 15 years of his life in Joshua Tree, Purifoy established his Outdoor Museum, an international cultural destination with more than 120 large scale sculptures over 10 acres, composed entirely of junk.
Special
to this exhibit are eight
large-scale
assemblages rarely seen
outside of the Noah Purifoy
Foundation's
Joshua Tree Outdoor Museum,
and include From the Point of
View
of the Little People (1994), Ode to
Frank Gehry (1999), and
65
Aluminum
Trays (2002). The public can enjoy
four of the large-scale
works
displayed within the exhibition
galleries, and four
situated
outdoor
on LACMA's campus adjacent to the
Resnick Pavilion and in the
Los
Angeles Times Central Court.
The
exhibit runs from June 7, 2015, through September 27, 2015, at BCAM, 5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90036. For
more information call (323) 857-6000 or visit http://www.lacma.org/
No comments:
Post a Comment