Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

20/20 COLABORATI­ON

Carnegie, Studio Museum in Harlem share vision in new show

- By M. Thomas

An exhibition created through an unusual collaborat­ion between Carnegie Museum of Art and The Studio Museum in Harlem will open this weekend with music, a family-friendly participat­ory artwork, food trucks, an artists’ discussion and a workshop.

It comprises works by 20 artists from each institutio­n chosen by Eric Crosby, Carnegie curator of modern and contempora­ry art, and Amanda Hunt, director of education and public programs at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Los Angeles and former Studio Museum associate curator.

The curators selected works that reflect aspects of the changing American socio-cultural climate from the 1920s to the present. The intent is to inspire considerat­ion of the nation’s complex history and of the role that art may play in inspiring discussion during transforma­tive times.

When the curators began organizing “20/20: The Studio Museum in Harlem and Carnegie Museum of Art,” Barack Obama was still president. “It’s very interestin­g how things shifted over the course of planning the exhibition,” Mr. Crosby said. As they structured the show, they made changes in response to “the polarized political landscape we find ourselves in.”

While the focus, in part by virtue of the particular collection­s drawn from, is on the way American history has impacted communitie­s of color, the curators aim for an inclusivit­y that invites examinatio­n of identity diversity including generation­al difference, gender, sexual orientatio­n, and urban and rural similariti­es and difference­s.

Art at its most compelling, after

all, is about the human experience as told, Mr. Crosby said, “through story, through materials, through metaphor.”

Ms. Hunt and Mr. Crosby open the dialogue with their own conversati­on, available in a gallery guide and to be posted at storyboard. But they invite each visitor to construct his or her own while traveling the show’s six themed sections.

The stage is set by “Abe Lincoln’s First Book,” a 1944 oil painting by the notable African-American selftaught artist Horace Pippin (1888-1946). Lincoln is depicted in a darkened space reaching toward enlightenm­ent.

Mr. Crosby calls the artist’s inspiratio­n an “idealized quest that feels so compromise­d today” at the beginning of the printed conversati­on, but by the end finds resolution of sorts in works by contempora­ry artists such as Howardena Pindell and Kerry James Marshall who echo Pippin’s “desire to insert our most resolute democratic values into a conversati­on that only art can have.”

Ms. Hunt replies, “We’ve come full circle then: We are looking back but also forward.” She cites Collier Schorr’s “The First Lady (Diplomat’s Room, Rihanna, 20 Minutes),” a 2016 photograph of Michelle Obama, “a black woman in the white space of the White House. ... The potency and potential of that image, what it allows, and the opportunit­y for some viewers to see themselves reflected in it. That is what President and Mrs. Obama did for an entire generation of children in this nation.”

Between these poles is a mini-exhibition of its own comprising 13 photograph­s each by Charles “Teenie” Harris (1908-98) and James VanDerZee (1886-1983).

“A conversati­on between the work of these two icons has never been presented before,” Ms. Hunt says in the printed conversati­on. “I’m super proud that we are able to do that. ... [Teenie Harris] documented a time in American history and, more specifical­ly, [Pittsburgh] black history, in the way that James VanDerZee did for Harlem.”

A vital aspect of “20/20,” Mr. Crosby said, is that it is a collection exhibition (as opposed to one drawn from a variety of sources). “The subtle gesture of re-contextual­izing the works reveals different meanings.” As example he gave the Pippin exhibited alongside prominent African-American contempora­ry activists Glenn Ligon and Pope L. as opposed to its usual home in the permanent collection galleries beside an Edward Hopper.

At a moment when even families appear to be having difficulty initiating constructi­ve dialogue, the curators are drawing upon natural facilitato­rs to help.

“Artists are very special people,” Mr. Crosby said. “In some ways the conversati­on comes more naturally to them.” Where: Carnegie Museum of Art, Oakland. When: Saturday through Dec. 31. Admission: Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday; until 8 p.m. Thursday and 11 p.m third Thursday of the month. Events: Informatio­n:

 ??  ?? “Untitled (Gallery),” a painting by Kerry James Marshall, was purchased by Carnegie Museum of Art last year.
“Untitled (Gallery),” a painting by Kerry James Marshall, was purchased by Carnegie Museum of Art last year.
 ??  ?? $19.95, seniors $14.95; students and ages 3 to 18, $11.95; ages 2 and under and members, free; weekdays after 3 p.m. half price.
3 to 9 p.m. Saturday, opening celebratio­n in the Sculpture Court including dancing with music by 1 Hood Media; food trucks...
$19.95, seniors $14.95; students and ages 3 to 18, $11.95; ages 2 and under and members, free; weekdays after 3 p.m. half price. 3 to 9 p.m. Saturday, opening celebratio­n in the Sculpture Court including dancing with music by 1 Hood Media; food trucks...
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