Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

THE ART OF ENJOYING ART

Coming to grips with contempora­ry works a matter of perception

- By Mary Thomas

Most people are on board when they look at “The Wreck,” Winslow Homer’s charged 1896 painting of an oceanside rescue, at Carnegie Museum of Art. But by the time they get to Thomas Schutte’s 2008 sculpture “Zombie VIII,” in the contempora­ry galleries, they’re often ready to bail.

Confronted with something so unfamiliar, many mistakenly conclude they don’t understand contempora­ry art. However, enjoying it is often just a matter of approachin­g it differentl­y. Contempora­ry art is, by definition, of our time, and the viewer is part of the equation.

The 56th Carnegie Internatio­nal, one of the world’s oldest and most prestigiou­s exhibition­s of internatio­nal contempora­ry art, opens Oct. 5 at The Carnegie. Fortunatel­y, the museum has provided a gallery guide for navigating the turns that art has taken over the past century in the form of a recent reinstalla­tion of the modern and contempora­ry components of the permanent collection that draws heavily on works purchased from past Internatio­nals.

These are identified by bright yellow labels, as with Mr. Schutte’s collapsed figurative bronze exhibited in the last Internatio­nal

held in 2008. The yellow labels also extend through earlier collection halls, identifyin­g Mr. Homer’s painting as having been exhibited in the inaugural Internatio­nal of 1896. By following the yellow trail, and reading the accompanyi­ng wall text, a visitor may gain a visual sense of how one form of expression morphed into another. Couple that with an overlay of currently significan­t issues artists are confrontin­g — racism, school safety, environmen­t, societal isolation — and a 21stcentur­y video, painting or installati­on is no longer inscrutabl­e.

This reinstalla­tion is unique in that it is considered part of the 2013 Internatio­nal and will remain throughout the exhibition with slight changes. One of those was the addition of Phyllida Barlow’s massive “untitled: upturnedho­use,” a 2013 museum purchase. A temporary work by Ms. Barlow for the museum’s Forbes Avenue entry has been commission­ed for this fall’s Internatio­nal.

Visitors will find other connection­s to the forthcomin­g show. One gallery featuring visionary artists displays seven works by Pittsburgh native John Kane including “Scene From the Scottish Highlands” (circa 1927), the first painting by a self-taught artist accepted into an Internatio­nal (1927). Screened elsewhere is Paul Chan’s 2000-2003 “Happiness (Finally) after 35,000 Years of Civilizati­on (after Henry Darger and Charles Fourier),” which references the prolific and reclusive late Darger (2004 Internatio­nal). Two visionary artists, Guo Fengyi and Joseph Yoakum, are represente­d in the 2013 exhibition.

Another gallery recognizes the importance of film in the museum’s collecting history and features rotating programmin­g including work by previous Internatio­nal exhibitors (currently Bruce Conner).

An archives room includes photograph­s of many Internatio­nals. If you’re still having trouble coming to terms with the way art has changed over the past century, compare the fashions in the 1896 and 1960s photograph­s and art may not seem so far out after all.

 ??  ?? Above: A still from Paul Chan’s “Happiness (Finally) after 35,000 Years of Civilizati­on (after Henry Darger and Charles Fourier),” which was in the 2004 Carnegie Internatio­nal. Right: John Kane, “Scene From the Scottish Highlands,” 1927 Carnegie...
Above: A still from Paul Chan’s “Happiness (Finally) after 35,000 Years of Civilizati­on (after Henry Darger and Charles Fourier),” which was in the 2004 Carnegie Internatio­nal. Right: John Kane, “Scene From the Scottish Highlands,” 1927 Carnegie...
 ??  ?? Center: Winslow Homer, “The Wreck.”
Left: Thomas Schutte, “Zombie
VIII.”
Center: Winslow Homer, “The Wreck.” Left: Thomas Schutte, “Zombie VIII.”
 ??  ?? Top: Mary Cassatt, “Young Women Picking Fruit,” 1899 Carnegie Internatio­nal. Above: Rachel Harrison, “Utopia,” 2004 Carnegie Internatio­nal.
Top: Mary Cassatt, “Young Women Picking Fruit,” 1899 Carnegie Internatio­nal. Above: Rachel Harrison, “Utopia,” 2004 Carnegie Internatio­nal.
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