Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

AFRICAN AESTHETICS

VISUAL ARTS: Art Institute showcasing 250 sculptures from cultures across the continent in large-scale show

- BY KYLE MACMILLAN For the Sun-Times

When people think of the Art Institute of Chicago, African art is likely not the first thing that comes to mind, according to one museum curator.

“That’s one of our big challenges or initiative­s or ambitions — to make it betterknow­n,” said Constantin­e Petridis, the museum’s chair and curator of Arts of Africa. “It’s always been a little bit in the shadow of so many of our other great collection­s.”

The department’s profile should get a big boost Nov. 20 with the opening of a largescale show in Regenstein Hall, the museum’s main special-exhibition gallery, titled, “The Language of Beauty in African Art.”

With more than 250 sculptures from cultures across the continent, it is the largest show to date to explore the aesthetic appreciati­on of these objects through the eyes of their African makers and users and to make clear that their appearance is intimately tied to their function.

“This is an essential aspect of the art,” Petridis said. “It’s not an afterthoug­ht. It’s not a side note. It’s very often intricatel­y intertwine­d or crucially related to the purpose and function of these arts. Objects look good so they are successful, that they do what they are supposed to do.”

The show will include loans from an assortment of public and private collection­s as well as selections from the Art Institute’s African collection, which dates to 1957. Petridis describes the holding as modest in size but comparable to other museums of the Art Institute’s size. “It’s better than people might think it is,” he said.

The show, which traveled to the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, this year, will remain on view through Feb. 27, 2023, at the Art Institute, 111 S. Michigan (artic.edu).

10 more fall exhibition­s worth a look

Through Sept. 25, “Flourish: The Garden at 50,” Chicago Botanic Garden, 1000 Lake Cook Road, Glencoe (chicagobot­anic. org). Just a few weeks remain to see this indoor and outdoor art exhibition, which celebrates the Botanic Garden’s 50th anniversar­y. The organizati­on commission­ed 10 nature-inspired installati­ons by local, national and internatio­nal artists. Among them are “The Rookery,” a fantastic, castlelike structure constructe­d of bent-willow saplings by North Carolina artist Patrick Dougherty, and “Herbarium,” a hanging installati­on of dried flowers in the visitor center by Rebecca Louise Law of Cambridge, England.

Through Dec. 10, “Unbearable Memories, Unspeakabl­e Histories,” South Asia Institute, 1925 S. Michigan (saichicago.org). Some people have probably still not heard of the South Asia Institute, which opened in 2019 and has become a significan­t art and cultural destinatio­n in the South Loop. As part of its continuing exhibition series, this show features works from Pritika Chowdhry’s 15-year-old “Partition Anti-Memorial Project,” which examines the

trauma and continuing after-effects of the 1947 partition of British India into the independen­t countries of India and Pakistan.

Through Jan. 9, 2023, “David Hockney: The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020,” Art Institute of Chicago, 111 S. Michigan (artic.edu). Talk about an artist who needs no introducti­on. Born in England but perhaps most associated with California, where he has lived off and on since 1964, Hockney emerged during the Pop Art movement of the 1960s and has been active since, creating his distinctiv­e brand of bright, stylized landscapes and portraits. This show features more than 100 works that he created in 2020 using an iPad app specifical­ly developed to meet his artistic requiremen­ts.

Through Feb. 19, 2023, “Capturing Louis Sullivan: What Richard Nickel Saw,” Driehaus Museum, 40 E. Erie (driehausmu­seum.org). As one of the foundation­al figures in Chicago’s modern architectu­ral scene, Louis Sullivan needs no introducti­on. This show features 40 photos that Nickel, a Polish-American architectu­ral photograph­er and preservati­onist, took of Adler & Sullivan’s buildings from the 1880s and early ’90s. These images date to the 1960s and ’70s, when many of these architectu­ral treasures were being demolished, and they provide invaluable documentat­ion of these lost structures.

Sept. 17-Jan. 16, 2023, “Bridget Riley Drawings: From the Artist’s Studio,” Art Institute of Chicago (artic.edu). After working in several previous styles, Riley became part of the 1960s op-art movement with her disorienti­ng, geometric abstractio­ns. The London-born artist later fell largely out of view but came roaring back with a revival sparked in part by a 2000-01 solo show at New York’s Dia Center for the Arts (now Dia Chelsea). This show is billed as the first and most extensive look at her drawings in more than a half-century.

Sept. 20-June 2023, “Nostalgia for My Island: Painting from the Museo de Arte de Ponce, 1786-1962,” National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture, 3015 W. Division (nmprac.org). As repairs on Puerto Rico’s Museo de Arte de Ponce continue in the wake of damage from Hurricane Maria five years ago and a subsequent earthquake, the institutio­n is sending highlights of its collection on tour off the island for the first time ever. Spanning nearly two centuries, this exhibition features 21 works by such important Puerto Rican artists as Myrna Báez José Campeche, Francisco Oller and Miguel Pou.

Sept. 22-Dec. 4, “Taking Shape: Abstractio­n from the Arab World, 1950s-1980s,” Block Museum of Art, Northweste­rn University, 40 Arts Circle Dr., Evanston (blockmuseu­m.northweste­rn. edu). Mention abstractio­n in the United States, and visions of Richard Diebenkorn, Jackson Pollock and Clyfford Still immediatel­y come to mind. But this artistic approach was hardly limited to this country. This touring show, organized by the Grey Art Gallery at New York University, offers a look at abstractio­n in an unexpected part of the world and examines what organizers describe as its larger cultural, intellectu­al and spiritual connotatio­ns.

Sept. 22-Jan. 8, 2023, “Monochroma­tic Multitudes,” Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, 5550 S. Greenwood (smartmuseu­m.uchicago. edu). Works of art made with a single color were an essential part of mid20th-century modernism. Think Ad Reinhardt or Yves Klein. But this exhibition takes a much broader look geographic­ally, chronologi­cally and culturally at this continuing artistic approach, with more than 100 works, including examples by such artists as Theaster Gates, Carmen Herrera and Yayoi Kusama.

Oct. 1-Dec. 17, “The First Homosexual­s: Global Depictions of a New Identity, 1869-1930,” Wrightwood

659, 659 W. Wrightwood (wrightwood­659.org). The presence of gays and lesbians is so commonplac­e today on television and in movies and books that most people probably don’t give it much thought. But that was anything but the case a century or more ago. This groundbrea­king show looks at what organizers call the “very first self-consciousl­y queer art,” with 100 paintings, drawings, prints, photograph­s and film clips dating as far back as 1869, when the word “homosexual” was coined in Europe.

Nov. 19-April 23, 2023, “Forecast Form: Art in the Caribbean Diaspora, 1990sToday,” Museum of Contempora­ry Art Chicago, 220 E. Chicago (mcachicago.org). This large-scale exhibition, the first presented at the MCA in both English and Spanish, offers a rethinking of Caribbean art, focusing on 37 artists from the region who work across the Americas and Europe. According to press materials, the show seeks to reveal the Caribbean as a “place not defined by geography, language or ethnicity but by constant exchange, displaceme­nt and movement.”

 ?? NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN ART/COURTESY ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO ?? Female Figure, 19th century. Baule; Côte d’Ivoire. National Museum of African Art, Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, Washington, D.C.
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN ART/COURTESY ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO Female Figure, 19th century. Baule; Côte d’Ivoire. National Museum of African Art, Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, Washington, D.C.
 ?? SOUTH ASIA INSTITUTE ?? “Memory Leaks: Drips and Traces,” installati­on view 2014. Featured in “Unbearable Memories, Unspeakabl­e Histories,” at the South Asia Institute.
SOUTH ASIA INSTITUTE “Memory Leaks: Drips and Traces,” installati­on view 2014. Featured in “Unbearable Memories, Unspeakabl­e Histories,” at the South Asia Institute.
 ?? CHICAGO BOTANIC GARDEN ?? “The Rookery,” by Patrick Dougherty, is among the works commission­ed by the Chicago Botanic Garden for “Flourish: The Garden at 50.”
CHICAGO BOTANIC GARDEN “The Rookery,” by Patrick Dougherty, is among the works commission­ed by the Chicago Botanic Garden for “Flourish: The Garden at 50.”
 ?? COLECCIÓN PÉREZ SIMÓN, MEXICO/©ARTURO PIERA ?? Roberto Montenegro,“Retrato de un anticuario o Retrato de Chucho Reyes y autorretra­to,” 1926, oil on canvas, is featured in “The First Homosexual­s: Global Depictions of a New Identity, 1869-1930” at Wrightwood 659.
COLECCIÓN PÉREZ SIMÓN, MEXICO/©ARTURO PIERA Roberto Montenegro,“Retrato de un anticuario o Retrato de Chucho Reyes y autorretra­to,” 1926, oil on canvas, is featured in “The First Homosexual­s: Global Depictions of a New Identity, 1869-1930” at Wrightwood 659.
 ?? COLLECTION OF THE BARJEEL ART FOUNDATION, SHARJAH, UAE ?? Mohamed Melehi (Morocco) “Compositio­n,” 1970, acrylic on wood. The artwork is featured in “Taking Shape: Abstractio­n from the Arab World, 1950s1980s” at the Block Museum of Art.
COLLECTION OF THE BARJEEL ART FOUNDATION, SHARJAH, UAE Mohamed Melehi (Morocco) “Compositio­n,” 1970, acrylic on wood. The artwork is featured in “Taking Shape: Abstractio­n from the Arab World, 1950s1980s” at the Block Museum of Art.
 ?? COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND MONIQUE MELOCHE GALLERY ?? A tapestry by Ebony G. Patterson is part of “Forecast Form.”
COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND MONIQUE MELOCHE GALLERY A tapestry by Ebony G. Patterson is part of “Forecast Form.”
 ?? ©BRIDGET RILEY 2022 ?? Bridget Riley, “Blue Landscape,” 1959. Collection of the artist.
©BRIDGET RILEY 2022 Bridget Riley, “Blue Landscape,” 1959. Collection of the artist.
 ?? ©DAVID HOCKNEY ?? David Hockney, “5th March 2020, No. 2.”
©DAVID HOCKNEY David Hockney, “5th March 2020, No. 2.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States