The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Tang Museum presents new exhibit starting Saturday

- By Saratogian staff

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. » The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College presents “Where Words Falter: Art and Empathy”, an exhibition of work from the Tang collection that encourages visitors to strengthen their empathic muscles.

The exhibition opens Saturday — the Tang’s annual community day — and runs through Dec. 18. The exhibition is organized by Associate Curator Rebecca McNamara and is supported by the Friends of the Tang.

The past few years of the pandemic and social upheaval have intensifie­d feelings of distance and difference, exacerbati­ng inequality, alienation, and distrust. “Where Words Falter” aims to act as a counterwei­ght by offering viewers opportunit­ies to re-engage with a shared sense of humanity through more than 100 works of art, including photograph­y, painting, textile, and moving image, many of which are recent acquisitio­ns being shown at the Tang for the first time.

Among these works are: -Laurel Nakadate’s self-portraits from the series “365 Days:

A Catalogue of Tears.” The 31 large-format photograph­s are presented on three walls, immersing viewers in moments that are intimate, vulnerable, and emotional for artist and viewer alike.

-Noa Eshkol’s “Window to the Night” is one of the artist’s acclaimed wall carpets, stitched together from found fabrics, repurposin­g material such as discarded clothing, fabric scraps, and garment factory waste into something vibrant and new.

-Erin M. Riley’s “Believe Me” is a tapestry that spans more than seven by eight feet and shows what appears to be items in a scrapbook, or fallen out of a purse: a necklace, a bubblegum wrapper, and a newspaper clipping of a horrific killing in Mechanicvi­lle of the artist’s greatgrand­mother, who was wounded by a man firing a shotgun and died seven days later.

-Lorna Simpson’s “Cloudscape” is a single-channel, 7-minute black-and-white video that shows the late Black artist Terry Adkins whistling while slowly being enveloped by clouds until he disappears.

One wall of the exhibition features a salon-style presentati­on of about fifty portraits created in the twentieth and twenty-first

centuries. The people are of different ages, races, and socioecono­mic background­s, expressing a wide range of human emotion, and all of them looking at the viewer. The wall includes works by artists such as Diane Arbus, Richard Avedon, James Barnor, Wendy Ewald, Donna Ferrato, Eve Fowler, Nan Goldin, Andrea Modica, August Sander, and Isaac Scott, as well as found family photograph­s. Other artists with work in the exhibition include Laura Aguilar, Nayland Blake, Josh Faught, Martin Kersels, Tracey Moffatt, and John Sonsini.

Visitors are invited to participat­e in the production of a community “zine” by making their own creative responses to the exhibition. Space will be set aside in the exhibition with materials such as colored pencils, magazines, scissors, and glue. Prompts will guide participan­ts through the art-making process, providing a creative outlet to articulate feelings, thoughts, and informatio­n that may be difficult to express. In doing so, people can engage more deeply with the processes of empathy activated by the exhibition and join others— friends and strangers alike—in creating something new.

Don’t miss the following “Where Words Falter: Art and Empathy” special events:

-July 9, 3 pm: Curator’s Tour with Rebecca McNamara: Associate Curator Rebecca McNamara leads a tour of the exhibition as part of Frances Day, the Tang’s annual community open house named in honor of the museum’s namesake Frances Young Tang, Skidmore College Class of 1961. Frances Day runs from 1 to 5 pm and includes tours, music, art-making, food, and more!

-July 14, Noon: Curator’s Tour with Rebecca McNamara

-Oct. 27, 6 pm: “Where Words Falter” theater event: In collaborat­ion with the Skidmore College Theater Department, the Tang will present three new works by commission­ed playwright­s in response to the exhibition. Details will be announced in the fall.

The Tang Teaching Museum is open to the public Thursdays from noon to 9 pm and

Fridays through Sundays from noon to 5 pm. The Tang is a Blue Star Museum, offering free admission to active military personal and their families through Labor Day. For more informatio­n, please call the Visitors Services

Desk at 518-580-8080 or visit https://tang.skidmore.edu.

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED ?? The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs.
PHOTO PROVIDED The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs.

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