Fictions of Display
Exploring the intertwined themes of theater, performance, and museum display鈥攔anging from props, stages, and pedestals to actors, impersonators, avatars, and the ghostly image of the audience itself鈥攖his exhibition presents works from MOCA鈥檚 permanent collection. Through sculpture, video, photography, painting, and archival materials, Fictions of Display foregrounds performance strategies that permeate museum spaces and its modes of presentation.
At its core are iconic works from MOCA鈥檚 collection, including Claes Oldenburg鈥檚 sculptural renditions of everyday consumer goods鈥攕hoes, dresses, cakes, ice cream鈥攎ade from muslin soaked in plaster and painted with enamel that were originally part of his immersive, performative project The Store (1961鈥62). These works set the tone for a broader exploration of how objects are not only displayed but also staged鈥攔e-staged within the conventions of a museum after initially being displayed outside an institutional context. In a note written in 1962, Oldenburg stated that theater was the most powerful art form because it is the most involving. A few lines later he added: 鈥淚 no longer see the distinction between theater and visual arts very clearly . . . distinctions I suppose are a civilized disease.鈥
The exhibition also introduces several new acquisitions, as well as works never installed in our galleries, like a painting by groundbreaking Polish theater director Tadeusz Kantor, known for his avant-garde and deeply personal approach to performance, or Catherine Sullivan鈥檚 video installation, which merges theater, film, and visual art to examine systems of acting and representation.
Fictions of Display includes figures who have made significant contributions to the history of performance, such as Eleanor Antin, Colette, Rebecca Horn, Mike Kelley, Senga Nengudi, Yoko Ono, Raphael Monta帽ez Ortiz, and Johanna Went, among others. A live element is subtly woven into the gallery experience: For Tania P茅rez C贸rdova鈥檚 Portrait of an Unknown Person Passing By, a performer dressed in a garment featuring the same pattern as a ceramic object on view will quietly circulate among visitors at unannounced moments.
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Exploring the intertwined themes of theater, performance, and museum display鈥攔anging from props, stages, and pedestals to actors, impersonators, avatars, and the ghostly image of the audience itself鈥攖his exhibition presents works from MOCA鈥檚 permanent collection. Through sculpture, video, photography, painting, and archival materials, Fictions of Display foregrounds performance strategies that permeate museum spaces and its modes of presentation.
At its core are iconic works from MOCA鈥檚 collection, including Claes Oldenburg鈥檚 sculptural renditions of everyday consumer goods鈥攕hoes, dresses, cakes, ice cream鈥攎ade from muslin soaked in plaster and painted with enamel that were originally part of his immersive, performative project The Store (1961鈥62). These works set the tone for a broader exploration of how objects are not only displayed but also staged鈥攔e-staged within the conventions of a museum after initially being displayed outside an institutional context. In a note written in 1962, Oldenburg stated that theater was the most powerful art form because it is the most involving. A few lines later he added: 鈥淚 no longer see the distinction between theater and visual arts very clearly . . . distinctions I suppose are a civilized disease.鈥
The exhibition also introduces several new acquisitions, as well as works never installed in our galleries, like a painting by groundbreaking Polish theater director Tadeusz Kantor, known for his avant-garde and deeply personal approach to performance, or Catherine Sullivan鈥檚 video installation, which merges theater, film, and visual art to examine systems of acting and representation.
Fictions of Display includes figures who have made significant contributions to the history of performance, such as Eleanor Antin, Colette, Rebecca Horn, Mike Kelley, Senga Nengudi, Yoko Ono, Raphael Monta帽ez Ortiz, and Johanna Went, among others. A live element is subtly woven into the gallery experience: For Tania P茅rez C贸rdova鈥檚 Portrait of an Unknown Person Passing By, a performer dressed in a garment featuring the same pattern as a ceramic object on view will quietly circulate among visitors at unannounced moments.
Artists on show
- Ali Eyal
- Ana Barrado
- Ana Mendieta
- An-My Lê
- Asco
- Atsuko Tanaka
- Beverly Semmes
- Brassaï
- Brian Jungen
- Catherine Sullivan
- Charles LeDray
- Christian Holstad
- Cindy Sherman
- Claes Oldenburg
- Colette
- Cosima von Bonin
- Dan Flavin
- Dan Graham
- Donald Judd
- Eleanor Antin
- Evan Holloway
- Felix González-Torres
- Fiona Connor
- Giuseppe Penone
- Guillermo Gómez-Peña
- Guy de Cointet
- Hannah Wilke
- Hiroshi Sugimoto
- Joe Goode
- Johanna Went
- Joseph Beuys
- Julia Phillips
- Kayode Ojo
- Los Carpinteros
- Louise Lawler
- Lukas Duwenhögger
- Lyle Ashton Harris
- Mark Bradford
- Marnie Weber
- Martin Kippenberger
- Math Bass
- Mike Kelley
- Monique Prieto
- Nancy Brooks Brody
- Nikki S. Lee
- Pae White
- Peter Fischli
- Raphael Montañez Ortiz
- Raul de Nieves
- Rebecca Horn
- Reynaldo Rivera
- Robert Gober
- Roni Horn
- Roxy Paine
- Senga Nengudi
- Sherrie Levine
- Sigmar Polke
- Silke Otto-Knapp
- Sondra Perry
- Steve McQueen
- Tadeusz Kantor
- Tania Pérez Córdova
- Terence Koh
- Thomas Eggerer
- Toba Khedoori
- Valie Export
- Victor Estrada
- William Leavitt
- Wolfgang Tillmans
- Yaron Michael Hakim
- Yoko Ono
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