Kathleen McHugh  

 

  

McHugh Art
Seattle, WA
mchughart@gmail.com

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FLUX-USA / NEW NEW ART



C

 

 

An Exchange With Sol LeWitt

 

MASS MoCA
22 January – 31 March 2011

87 Marshall Street
North Adams, MA 01247

Cabinet

20 January – 19 February 2011

300 Nevins Street
Brooklyn, NY 11217

A two-part exhibition curated by Regine Basha 

Christine Tarantino/Words of Light/homeless poet
P.O. Box 121, Wendell, MA 01379 USA

MASS MoCA: 23 January–31 March, 2011
Opening reception: Saturday, 22 January 2011, 7–9 pm
Location: 1040 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA
Gallery hours: 11 am–5 pm, every day except Tuesday

Including TARANTINO Mail Art Call for Sol LeWitt:
http://fluxusa.blogspot.com/2010/08/tarantino-mail-art-call-for-sol-lewitt.html

About MASS MoCA
MASS MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) is one of the largest centers for contemporary visual and performing arts in the United States and is located in North Adams, Massachusetts, on a restored nineteenth-century factory campus. MASS MoCA’s galleries are open 11 am–5 pm every day except Tuesdays. Gallery admission is $15 for adults, $10 for students, $5 for children 6–16, and free for children 5 and under. Members admitted free year-round. For additional information, call 413-662-2111
FLUX-USA was created November 11, 2008, so that all FLUXUS inspired artists could communicate with each other and the cosmos. On October 13, 2009 NEW NEW ART was added to the name for fluxus inspired artists rising from the ashes of old school art and attitudes. "The aim of the Fluxus group was to instill artistic values into every part of life." The aim of New New Art is to uncover art/beauty in every part of life. Welcome to NEW NEW ART!!!

The story of Sol LeWitt's exchanges with other artists is by now widely known. Though most artists engage in this process at one point or another, LeWitt seemed fully committed to it as an artistic code of conduct, a way of life. Eva Hesse, Robert Mangold, Hanna Darboven, and Robert Ryman are just a few of LeWitt's celebrated contemporaries with whom the artist exchanged works. Such exchanges were not limited to well-known artists, however: LeWitt consistently traded works with admirers whom he did not know but who had nevertheless sent their work to him, as well as amateur artists with whom he interacted in his daily life. LeWitt's exchanges—he responded to every work he received by sending back one of his own—fostered an ongoing form of artistic communion and, in some cases, a source of support and patronage. The Sol LeWitt Private Collection retains all of the works he received, as well as a record of what he offered in return.

For LeWitt, the act of exchange seemed to be not only a personal gesture, but also an integral part of his conceptual practice. In addition to encouraging the circulation of artworks through a gift economy that challenged the art world's dominant economic model, LeWitt's exchanges with strangers have the same qualities of generosity, and risk, that characterized his work in general. This kind of exchange was designed to stage an encounter between two minds, outside the familiar confines of friendship.

If we consider the process of exchange as another of Sol LeWitt's instructional pieces, then the rational (or irrational) thing to do is to continue to exchange work and ideas, if only symbolically, with him.

 

 

Copyright Mchugh Art. All rights reserved.

McHugh Art
Seattle, WA
mchughart@gmail.com