St. Louis Beacon

  • Edward Backs The Beacon
Wednesday
Feb 08th






      
 
Home

Cialis Online

Parts of Kemper's collection given deserved, thoughtful display Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, Special to the Beacon   
Posted 4:21 pm Sun., 8.22.10

Preparing for its major fall season opener, the Rivane Neuenschwander survey, the Kemper Art Museum is playing out the summer with “Gesture, Scrape, Combine, Calculate: Postwar Abstraction from the Permanent Collection.” 

mccollum300pam_beale.jpg

Allan McCollum, Pam Beale, 1971

When: Through Sept. 20

Where: Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University, One Brookings Drive

Information: 314-935-4523, www.kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu

But this show is anything but a placeholder in the exhibition schedule. It’s a solid survey of mid-century modern painting and sculpture that reveals some surprises and reminds us of the excellent quality of the Kemper’s collection.

Several of the works depart from what we have come to expect of these artists. John McCracken’s “Mandala VI” (1972) is target-style arrangement of circles on canvas, evoking Kenneth Noland, Frank Stella or Jasper Johns; the artist is better known for making minimalist planks that lean against the wall.

Allan McCollum’s “Pam Beale” (1971) engages themes of repetition, singularity, and difference that the artist pursues in more recent sculpture, but it’s a wall piece made of strips of torn and stained canvas. “Pam Beale” actually recalls the sewn and distressed burlap works of Italian artist Alberto Burri, and here curator Meredith Malone has cannily paired it with a Burri — but one made of sheets of rolled iron, rather than fabric.

Another inspired passage in the exhibition is a sequence of paintings by Roberto Matta, Arshile Gorky, Richard Diebenkorn and Grace Hartigan, which makes for a mini-lesson in Abstract Expressionism, its roots and its legacy.

The modestly scaled exhibition also features works by Eduardo Chillida, Antoni Tapies, Gene Davis, Jules Olitski, John Chamberlain, Max Bill, Ibram Lassaw and Anne Truitt.

Ivy Cooper, a professor at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, is the Beacon art critic. To reach her, contact Beacon features and commentary editor Donna Korando.

 

Only registered users can comment on an article. Please login or register.

  • Thank you for reading the St. Louis Beacon, a non-profit news organization dedicated to reporting and discussing "news that matters" to the St. Louis region. You can support the Beacon by attending our events, becoming a source in our Public Insight Network or making a donation.

Editors' Picks

 

'The Road Show' improv

Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon

This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.

We talked to Eric Christensen, producer of the Road Show and member of local improv team "Ted Dangerous"; Katie Nunn, member of "Ted Dangerous" and improv coach; and Melanie Penn and Ranjan Khan, members of local teams "Melanj" and "Magic Ratio"; about the St. Louis improv scene and why it's important to welcome teams from other cities to perform here.

See a larger version of the slideshow

Topics

Voices

  • M.W. Guzy fears his daughters' affection for trash TV might have been genetically inherited, as he finds himself drawn to the anybody-but-Mitt show, playing on a loop on cable "news' channels.

  • Miguel Dulick recounts a trans-Honduras tour that, again, reminded him of the power and joy of keeping siblings and parents connected.

  • Ken Schechtman says that publicly traded business will not -- perhaps cannot -- put doing the right thing ahead of legally maximizing profits.

Beacon Roundtable

Beacon Blog

On chess


@

Register to receive our daily email of new content.  If you're already registered, email us at [email protected] with the subject line "subscribe".

Barroom Conversations

The Beacon's nationally recognized Barroom Conversations program on race, class and other issues that divide will be held on Monday, Feb. 13, 2012, at 7:30 PM discussing Education and Class. RSVP on Facebook and invite your friends! We'll pick up where we left off at Six Row Brewing Co., 3690 Forest Park Avenue at Spring. We look forward to seeing you again!

FAcebook
Twitter
Google+
RSS
inn_125x125_white_rounded_square2

The Investigative News Network is a consortium of nonprofit news organizations dedicated to watchdog and public interest reporting.

See our other partners.