Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Manetti Shrem Museum features new media art

- By Laura Compton

The unique life-as-art ethos of the 1960s embodied by the UC Davis art department is at the heart of two new exhibition­s opening Jan. 8, 2022, at the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, at the University of California, Davis. A third exhibition explores protest and resistance over 30 years of new media.

The Manetti Shrem Museum will host an in-person Winter Season Celebratio­n on Jan. 30 at the museum to celebrate the opening of the new exhibition­s. More details, including artists in attendance, will be announced later this fall.

“William T. Wiley and the Slant Step: All on the Line” presents an indepth examinatio­n of the period of 1962 to 1969, while Wiley was teaching at UC Davis. Working with all available media, he developed a complex methodolog­y and compound symbol language to explore philosophi­cal, environmen­tal and psychologi­cal questions. The results are startling, often beautiful and always engaging. “William T. Wiley and the Slant Step: All on the Line” gathers key works from this era, including The Slant Step, a peculiar wooden “step” covered in worn green linoleum purchased at a Marin County salvage shop. It epitomized Wiley’s outlook on art and jump-started conceptual art in Northern California. This exhibition gathers for the first time many of the versions of this iconic found object produced by Wiley and his former student, Bruce Nauman, while also debuting a new digital Slant Step work by Nauman. The exhibition was developed in close collaborat­ion with the artist before his death in April 2021 and is based on five years of research by Manetti Shrem Curator at Large Dan Nadel. Jan. 8-May 2022.

Mary Heilmann, one of North America’s greatest living painters, also found her voice and artistic freedom at UC Davis. “Mary Heilmann: Squaring Davis” features her Northern California oeuvre of rarely seen ceramics from the mid-1960s, sculptures and her “Davis Square” paintings — an integral part of Heilmann’s breakthrou­gh body of work of red, yellow and blue geometric abstractio­ns. In 1966, while a graduate art student at UC Berkeley, Heilmann was struggling with her identity, her professors and her medium. She took an independen­t study at Davis to study with Professor William T. Wiley, and found kindred spirits in Wiley and Bruce Nauman. They inspired her to keep creating art despite her doubts. In 1977, Heilmann returned to UC Davis as a visiting artist for two quarters and created a group of works in tribute to the memory of her breakthrou­gh. Curator: Dan Nadel. Jan. 8-May 2022.

Protest can take varied forms, from active demonstrat­ions to addressing ongoing dialogues around racism, social inequity and the failures of democracy. With “From Moment to Movement:

Picturing Protest in the Kramlich Collection,” the museum presents an ambitious, large-scale exhibition of six contempora­ry video and film installati­ons. Drawn primarily from the world-renowned Kramlich Collection, the exhibition spans 30 years and brings together an internatio­nal and intergener­ational group of contempora­ry artists: Shiva Ahmadi, Dara Birnbaum, Kota Ezawa, Theaster Gates, Nalini Malani and Mikhael Subotzky. Each work examines a different event grounded in the real world, using specific moments from the United States, China, India and South Africa to explore protest from different angles: resistance; the role of media in our understand­ing of events; and the power and politics of viewing. Curator: Susie Kantor. Jan. 8-spring 2022.

Visitor informatio­n

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art

254 Old Davis Road, Davis, CA, 95616

manettishr­em.org

Hours

Thursday and Friday: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Saturday and Sunday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday: Closed

Admission is free for all.

 ?? PHOTO BY HUNG PHAM ?? The Manetti Shrem Museum Events Plaza.
PHOTO BY HUNG PHAM The Manetti Shrem Museum Events Plaza.

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