Indepth Arts News:
"Collage : Piecing It Together"
2009-12-19 until 2010-02-28
Portland Museum of Art
Portland, ME,
USA
This winter the Portland Museum of Art will explore the world of collages in the exhibition Collage: Piecing It Together, on view December 19, 2009 through February 28, 2010. Featuring approximately 25 works from the Museum‚s collection and selected loans from contemporary Maine artists, this exhibition will explore the history of collage from its introduction in Europe in the early 20th century by artists such as Kurt Schwitters and Jean Arp to present day works by Maine artists such as Tom Hall and Aaron Stephan. The exhibition will also cover a wide range of collage techniques, including abstract works pieced together from newsprint and colored papers, collaged elements incorporated into drawings and prints, paintings that include collaged figurative elements, and photomontages.
Collage (from the French, coller, to glue) is a work of art made from the assemblage of different forms, thus creating a new whole. It became a distinctive part of the modern movement in the early 20th century, notably deployed by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso at the height of synthetic cubism, and it continues to be an important aspect of the visual arts in Maine today.
The exhibition demonstrates how collages by the renowned German modernist Kurt Schwitters and Surrealists Jean Arp and Joan Miró influenced the work of Abstract Expressionists including Anne Ryan, James Brooks, and John Hultberg.
In Maine today, artists continue to draw on the inventive nature of collage for works in a variety of media, such as Henry Wolyniec's abstract collotypes that combine printmaking and traditional cut-paper compositions; Tom Hall‚s landscape paintings with their found-paper elements; and Aaron Stephan‚s portraits composed of deconstructed anatomy book illustrations.
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