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Real/Surreal

Oct 06, 2011 - Feb 12, 2012
This exhibition, drawn entirely from the deep holdings of the Whitney Museum鈥檚 permanent collection, will focus on the tension and overlap between two strong currents in twentieth century art. Although the term 鈥渞ealism鈥 has many facets, a basic connection to the observable world underlies all of them; the subversion of reality through the imagination and the subconscious lies at the heart of Surrealism. Yet there are convergences in these different and even oppositional approaches to experience, and they encourage new ways of looking at the art of the twenties, thirties, and forties in America. For example, Edward Hopper, famous for chronicling New York urban life, is also a painter whose own subjectivity and imagination are integral to his work. Many artists who developed imagery based on new and very specific, concrete conditions of industrial American, such as Charles Sheeler, were essentially interested in artificial worlds and presented these as distillations of reality.


Even totally abstract painters such as Yves Tanguy depended on techniques developed from traditional, realist art to render bizarre worlds. By willfully distorting such techniques, Helen Lundeberg and Mabel Dwight could quietly undercut our sense of stability even while showing us recognizable and even mundane objects and settings. Understanding surrealism as above and beyond the real necessarily ties it to representation and reality, just as realist painting can be imaginative and bizarre without breaking with rational observation. The exhibition will feature approximately 120 works in painting, drawing, photography, and printmaking juxtaposed in ways that elucidate how artists developed qualified degrees of reality where the imagination held more or less sway, depending on intention and influence.


This exhibition, drawn entirely from the deep holdings of the Whitney Museum鈥檚 permanent collection, will focus on the tension and overlap between two strong currents in twentieth century art. Although the term 鈥渞ealism鈥 has many facets, a basic connection to the observable world underlies all of them; the subversion of reality through the imagination and the subconscious lies at the heart of Surrealism. Yet there are convergences in these different and even oppositional approaches to experience, and they encourage new ways of looking at the art of the twenties, thirties, and forties in America. For example, Edward Hopper, famous for chronicling New York urban life, is also a painter whose own subjectivity and imagination are integral to his work. Many artists who developed imagery based on new and very specific, concrete conditions of industrial American, such as Charles Sheeler, were essentially interested in artificial worlds and presented these as distillations of reality.


Even totally abstract painters such as Yves Tanguy depended on techniques developed from traditional, realist art to render bizarre worlds. By willfully distorting such techniques, Helen Lundeberg and Mabel Dwight could quietly undercut our sense of stability even while showing us recognizable and even mundane objects and settings. Understanding surrealism as above and beyond the real necessarily ties it to representation and reality, just as realist painting can be imaginative and bizarre without breaking with rational observation. The exhibition will feature approximately 120 works in painting, drawing, photography, and printmaking juxtaposed in ways that elucidate how artists developed qualified degrees of reality where the imagination held more or less sway, depending on intention and influence.


Contact details

Sunday
11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Wednesday - Thursday
11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Friday
1:00 - 9:00 PM
Saturday
11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Join curator Carter Foster as he discusses the key themes of Real/Surreal, a unique presentation of pieces from the Whitney鈥檚 rich holdings of American art from the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s.
October 27, 2011
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Whitney Teaching Fellows, PhD candidates in art history, lead engaging tours of current exhibitions for new moms and dads when the Museum is closed to the public. Crying babies are welcome!
December 02, 2011
12:00 - 1:00 PM
99 Gansevoort Street Greenwich Village - New York, NY, USA 10014
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