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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: ZOE STRAUSS
Zoe Strauss American, b. 1970
15 photographs from the project Homesteading: Mayor Esper on Picket Line, 2013 Jitney Office, 2013 Diane’s Hand, 2013 Deer in Cemetery Where Strikers Are Buried, 2013 Homestead Homes at Sunset, 2013 Homestead Homes at Night, 2013 Erica at Work, 2013 Vendomatic Job Application, 2013 Facebook Status of Homestead Resident, July 12, 2013, 2013 Jet-skiing on the Monongahela, 2013 Ryan on the Homestead Grays Bridge, 2013 Homestead Appliances Bow, 2013 K-9 Call, 2013 West Homestead Homes, 2013 Blast Furnace Matriarchy, 2013
For the 2013 Carnegie International, Zoe Strauss lived and an operated a portrait studio in Homestead, PA, a borough just outside of Pittsburgh and former site of Andrew Carnegie’s steelworks.
The 215 portraits of neighborhood residents that she gifted to the museum at the close of the exhibition reflect the relationships that she formed during her time there. These street photographs, taken around the neighborhood outside the portrait studio, document some of the first encounters the artist had in Homestead—with characters ranging from the town mayor, Betty “Bo Bo” Esper, and a factory worker named Diane to a shirtless young man on the Homestead Grays Bridge—as well as the homes and businesses that were to become familiar sights over the course of her stay.
#Zoe Strauss#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#art#contemporary art#photography#homestead
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: MLADEN STILINOVIĆ
Mladen Stilinović Croatian, b. 1947 Potatoes, Potatoes (Krumpira, Krumpira), 2001 Joining two other works by this 2013 Carnegie International artist already in the collection, Krumpira, Krumpira shows Stilinović crouching in a snow bank—a peddler in what appears to be a remote wilderness. Repeatedly, he calls out the word krumpira (Croatian for “potato”), though no one is nearby to hear him. The goods stacked on his cardboard box-cum-sales table, however, are not potatoes but thick, square pieces of vanilla cake. Cake is a symbol Stilinović has often used—in his series Geometry of Cakes (1993), for example—to evoke the cynicism of power, referring to the famous phrase allegedly spoken by Marie Antoinette: “If they have no bread, let them eat cake.” With cutting irony and shades of self-deprecating humor, in this video the artist seems to suggest both the cruel absurdity of that sentiment and an attempt to transfigure a symbol of decadence into something common. His meager entrepreneurial endeavor—whether we take him for the hawker he purports to be or the artist he actually is—is revealed as a sham, as selling frivolities under the guise of substance to a nonexistent audience.
#Mladen Stilinovic#art#contemporary art#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: TARYN SIMON
Taryn Simon American, b. 1975 CHAPTER XVII, A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I–XVIII, 2011
Taryn Simon uses photography, text, and graphic design to investigate what we can know and cannot know about an image. A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters explores the process of mapping contemporary human relations through chance, blood, and other components of fate. The work was produced over a four-year period (2008–2011), as is typical of Simon’s approach.
Chapter XVII is one of the most written-about and provocative components of the series. Its subject is a group of Ukrainian orphans, united by their lack of discernible bloodline. Well-dressed in jackets, ties, and button-down shirts, these children, ages 6–16, appear in portraits arranged in ordered grid. Simon’s text tells us that the children are allowed to stay at the orphanage until age 16, when they are released and become susceptible to targeting “for human trafficking, prostitution, and child pornography.”
#Taryn Simon#art#contemporary art#photography#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#pittsburgh#carnegie museum of art
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: KAMRAN SHIRDEL
Kamran Shirdel Iranian, b. 1939
Mirrors (Gli specchi), 1964 Women’s Prison (Nedamatgah), 1965 The Silver Canvas, 1965 The Women’s Quarter (Qaleh), 1966–1980 Tehran Is the Capital of Iran (Tehran Paitakhte Iran Ast), 1966–1979 The Night It Rained (An shab ke barun amad), 1967–1974 Pearls of the Persian Gulf: Dubai, 1975 Gas, Fire, Wind (Gas, atash, baad), 1984–1986 Genaveh Project, 1986–1988 Wagon Pars, 1987 Cradle of Sun (Gahvareh Khorshid), 2001 Solitude Opus, 2001–2002
Since the mid-1960s, filmmaker Kamran Shirdel has made bold documentary films that address issues of everyday life, especially in his native Iran. Banned and censored for many years, Shirdel’s extraordinary work has not been widely seen until recently, and achieved a new level of visibility with his inclusion in the 2013 Carnegie International. This group of films represents nearly the entirety of Shirdel’s life’s work, from his surrealistic student work Mirrors through the peak of his subversive documentary period, his subsequent industrial commissions, and his late portrait film, Solitude Opus.
#Kamran Shirdel#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#art#contemporary art
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: PIERRE LEGUILLON
Pierre Leguillon French, b. 1969 Arbus Bonus, 2014 Pierre Leguillon’s artwork-as-exhibition Arbus Bonus encompasses 256 photographs by famed photographer Diane Arbus, bringing together hundreds of published magazine spreads that feature her editorial photography (rather than prints of street photography and the portraiture for which she is best known). Leguillon’s consideration of this major yet overlooked aspect of her oeuvre exposes a fascinating web of allusions and coincidences between image, history, and text. His project makes apparent how significant Arbus has been in defining the images of our popular culture.
#Pierre Leguillon#art#contemporary art#CMOA#ci13#carnegie international#carnegie museum of art#diane arbus
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: RODNEY GRAHAM
Rodney Graham Canadian, b. 1949
Phonokinetoscope, 2001
Rodney Graham’s Phonokinetoscope installation combines a record player and a looping film, producing a strange and beautiful window into the mechanics of perception and the artist’s interior world. In the film—which only starts when a visitor places the needle on the record—the artist rides a bicycle through a Berlin park while tripping on acid. Because the soundtrack can be triggered at any point in the film, image and sound never quite link up, mirroring the disconnection between Graham’s hallucinogenic mind and the calm, quiet park visible to the viewer. Between the film image, music, and the mechanics of their presentation, questions of time, perception, and philosophy circle the idyllic ramble in the park.
#rodney graham#ci13#carnegie international#carnegie museum of art#cmoa#art#contemporary art#pittsburgh
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2013 CARNEGIE INTERNATIONAL ACQUISITIONS: LARA FAVARETTO
Lara Favaretto Italian, b. 1973
Jestem, 2013 One of our visitors’ most loved and discussed works from the 2013 Carnegie International, Lara Favaretto’s sculpture Jestem invites wonder and myriad associations. The four cubes of compressed confetti, each weighing hundreds of pounds, perfectly capture the combination of spectacle, danger, and collapse that are at the heart of Favaretto’s important practice. This work, made especially for CMOA, disintegrates over the duration of its display, only to be reformed and shown again.
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#art#contemporary art#Lara Favaretto#pittsburgh#carnegie museum of art
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Our final round of acquisitions from the 2013 Carnegie International will be announced in June 2014.
Installation view of Christopher Wool, Untitled, for the 1991 Carnegie International
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#art#contemporary art#christopher wool
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Excerpt from Divagations by Stéphane Mallarmé
Stéphane Mallarmé was a French critic and poet, and a major force behind the French Symbolist movement.His work anticipated the revolutionary philosophy behind the transnational twentieth-century artistic movements of Dada, Surrealism, and Futurism.
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
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The Particularities of Pittsburgh: Episodes form a History of Collecting Robert Bailey
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
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The Playground Project: DIY Playgrounds Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#art#architecture#playgrounds#playground projects
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The Playground Project: Play Sculptures Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#art#architecture#playground#playground project
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The Playground Project: Landscape Playgrounds Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museumm of art#art#architecture#pittsburgh#pa#playgrounds#playground project
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The Playground Project: From the Skrammellegeplads to the Adventure Playground Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#art#architecture#playgrounds#playground project
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The Playground Project: The Humanist Roots of Playground Design Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#art#architecture#playground#playground project
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The Playground Project: The History of Playgrounds Gabriela Burkhalter
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
#ci13#carnegie international#cmoa#carnegie museum of art#pittsburgh#pa#playgrounds#playground project#art#architecture
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Correspondence and annotated checklist from the archives of Carnegie Museum of Art. Images of the installation of Explaining Abstract Art (1948) at the Art Institute of Chicago from the archives of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Katharine Kuh was a writer on art and a curator at the Art Institute of Chicago who devoted her career to broadening the acceptance of modern art. Kuh opened the first commercial avant-garde art gallery in Chicago in 1936 and went on to work at the Art Institute from 1943 to 1959. In 1959 she left for New York City, where she was a private art advisor, a contributor to the Sunday Review magazine, and the author of several books on modern art.
From the 2013 Carnegie International Catalogue
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