#deliriousmet
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Photo
Former AAA member, Ruth Vollmer, "Steiner Surface", 1970 in "Delirious" at the MET Breuer . #americanabstractartists #ruthvollmer #deliriousmet (at The Met Breuer)
4 notes
·
View notes
Video
instagram
I'd really like to know who made the decision to install this wonderful Jacques Villegle decollage work directly opposite a flashing Bruce Nauman, causing it to change weird colors every few seconds...like, seriously?! #MetBreuer #DeliriousMet #JacquesVillegle #decollage #contemporaryart #modernart
0 notes
Photo
A STRANGE CHARISMA
The Met Breuer’s survey Delirious: Art at the Limits of Reason 1950-1980 offers works that don’t conform to canonical modernism. Taking in the selection of painting, sculpture and videos installed in the building’s grand fourth floor gallery, against kookily skewed partitions, is like walking through a playground; it gives great pleasure. The artworks are, for the most part, eccentric, personal, whimsical, political, confusing, ugly, and viscerally powerful. A wall of Hanne Darboven’s tablet-sized paintings, each crowded with X’s and O’s on a quarter inch grid, evokes both the sterility and infinite possibility of Cartesian space. Eva Hesse’s ottoman-sized cube of metal grate, threaded with hundreds of lengths of dark rubber tubing, is oddly, warmly organic. Paul Thek’s painted wax models resembling raw chunks of flex, sealed inside cool acrylic vitrines, are both revolting and fascinating; one can’t turn away from them. These artworks posses a strange charisma; they give a middle finger to modernist cool.
Delirious impresses as a group show of outsiders -- of stubborn, brilliant postwar artists who followed the visions in their heads rather than intellectual and commercial trends. In most cases the artist involves himself or herself actually, physically, personally. Bruce Nauman videotapes himself performing an abstract choreography, raising his leg and turning at fixed angles like a jewelry-box ballerina. Lee Lozano keeps a personal calendar of upcoming performances with felt-tipped marker, in text, in a spiral notebook. Ana Mendieta takes self-portraits with her face smashed against a square of glass, distorting her fine features into the mask of a hysteric, producing images as gruesome as Charcot’s nineteenth-century portraits of the insane. (In addition to everything else, this show is a love song to obsolete technologies, including videotape, xerox, analog photography, CRT television, and handheld calculators.)
One senses that these artist aren’t constructing a parallel modernism, but working in causal disregard to modernism, turning instead towards more intimate narratives of gender, race and brute power that at the time remained unexpressed. In that sense they were decades ahead of their more convention-bound contemporaries.
Ana Mendieta (1948–1985), Untitled (Glass on Body Imprints—Face), 1972. Gelatin silver print. Courtesy of the Princeton University Art Museum and Art Resource.
1 note
·
View note
Photo
#savethedate Lynda Benglis' work is included in the upcoming exhibit "Delirious Art at the Limits of Reason, 1950-1980" at The Met Breuer. The group show will include about 100 works of art by 62 diverses artists. Linked by a common distrust of reason, the featured works will alternately simulate and stimulate delirium, straining the limits of both legibility and intelligibility. On view from September 13, 2017. @metbreuer ___________ #lyndabenglis #metbreuer #deliriousmet #metropolitanmuseum (presso The Met Breuer)
1 note
·
View note
Photo
I think the Met Breuer's "Delirious" show should be renamed "Grids for Days: We All Read That Rosalind Krauss Essay" #MetBreuer #DeliriousMet #contemporaryart #modernart #SolLewitt #minimalism #conceptualart
0 notes
Photo
I looked through my photos for something good to post for #museumselfieday, and I found several photos of art made with mirrors where I made a very deliberate effort to not be in the image, so selfless selfies of sorts? There could be a good dissertation waiting to be written about the mirror in postwar art, but certainly not by me. Left to right these are works by Robert Smithson in the @metmuseum's just closed "Delirious" exhibition, Dan Graham in Munster for Sculpture Projects (part of the city's permanent collection) and Lucas Samaras in Documenta (in the display of contemporary Greek art that was not really part of the main exhibition). #museumselfie #contemporaryart #metmuseum #deliriousmet #dangraham #sculptureprojects #lucassamaras #documenta #documenta14
#dangraham#museumselfieday#documenta#sculptureprojects#deliriousmet#lucassamaras#museumselfie#documenta14#metmuseum#contemporaryart
0 notes