Public Relations Office · 500 University Avenue · Rochester, NY 14607-1484 585.276.8900 · 585.473.6266 fax · mag.rochester.edu Contact: NEWS Meg Colombo (585) 276-8934 / [email protected] Patti Giordano (585) 276-8932 / [email protected] June 24, 2015 MEMORIAL ART GALLERY EXHIBITIONS: 2015–16 Through June 28, 2015 in the Grand Gallery The Human Touch: Selections from the RBC Wealth Management Art Collection Over the past two decades, RBC Wealth Management has collected more than 400 works of art that reflect the diversity of the society in which we live and work. The 45 paintings, prints, and photographs selected for this exhibition all focus on the human body because, as collection curator Don McNeil points out, the age-old need to understand the human condition is still vital and the human form remains its most direct manifestation. Among the artists represented are Kerry James Marshall, Elizabeth Peyton, Vic Muniz, Hung Liu, Roy Lichtenstein, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith and Alex Soth. Sponsored in Rochester by COMIDA, with additional support from Willy and Bob Hursh, the Robert L. and Mary L. Sproull Fund, and an anonymous donor. Pictured: Roland Fischer, Untitled (L.A. Portrait) (1994–2000). May 8–August 16, 2015 in the Lockhart Gallery In Search of Shadows This exhibition draws from the wealth of paintings, drawings and prints in MAG’s permanent collection to explore that most enigmatic of visual forms, the shadow. For centuries, artists have used the shadow—the physical counterpart to the absence or dimming of light—as a way to depict the visible as well as the symbolic, metaphorical and psychological worlds. The works on display cross geographical and chronological boundaries to showcase the power and breadth of artistic interpretations of light and dark in all its myriad forms. This exhibition is presented in recognition of 75 years of service from the Gallery Council of the Memorial Art Gallery. Pictured: Guy Pene du Bois, Jane (ca. 1948). Gift of Thomas H. and Marion J. Hawks, by exchange. July 26–September 13, 2015 in the Grand Gallery 65th Rochester-Finger Lakes Exhibition Every two years, Rochester’s oldest and longest-running juried exhibition showcases the talents of emerging and established artists from a 27-county region. This year’s show features 68 works by 46 artists—including 23 who are new to Finger Lakes. They were chosen from a field of 920 entries by 330 artists by juror Michael Rooks, Wieland Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at Atlanta’s High Museum of Art. These artists are eligible for nine cash awards, among them the $1,500 Memorial Art Gallery Award, selected by the juror; the Alice Koret Award, presented by museum docents; and the Harris Popular Vote Award, selected by visitors during the first two weeks of the exhibition. This exhibition is sponsored by M&T Bank, with additional support provided by the Elaine P. and Richard U. Wilson Foundation and the Rubens Family Foundation. Pictured: Spring Flowers, Jellybeans is by Kate Timm of Sterling, Cayuga Co., who is returning for her fourth Rochester-Finger Lakes Exhibition. more. . . Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester Exhibition Schedule page 2 October 18, 2015–January 3, 2016 in the Grand Gallery Art for the People: Carl W. Peters and the Rochester WPA Murals Between 1933 and 1943, the federal government funded the arts through the Works Progress Administration. Rochester’s program, termed “the most interesting and effective outside of New York City,” was hosted by Memory Art Gallery and administered by then-director Gertrude Herdle Moore.This exhibition will highlight a group of recently-restored mural studies by Rochester artist Carl W. Peters for 13 extant WPA murals, most of which were done for the Rochester City School District. Also featuring additional work by Peters and a series of WPA posters on loan from the Library of Congress, this exciting project will illuminate an important moment in local and national history. This exhibition is sponsored by the Gallery Council of the Memorial Art Gallery, with additional support from the University of Rochester School of Arts and Sciences, Paul Marc & Pamela Miller Ness, and Marguerite & James Quinn. Additional support is provided by New York State Council on the Arts and administered by Museum Association of New York. Pictured: Carl W. Peters, Study of Hands (ca. 1940). January 31–April 24, 2016 in the Grand Gallery Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony Fashion Fair The first-ever exhibition devoted to the Ebony Fashion Fair, Inspiring Beauty explores the 50-year history of the fashion spectacle that redefined the concepts of beauty, style, and empowerment for African Americans. Ensembles and accessories by designers such as Christian Dior, Stephen Burrows, Christian LaCroix, Bob Mackie, Jean Patou, Nina Ricci, Emanuel Ungaro and Vivienne Westwood illustrate themes of vision, innovation, and power as exemplified by the legendary Eunice Johnson, publisher of Ebony magazine. This exhibition was developed by the Chicago History Museum in cooperation with Johnson Publishing Company, LLC, presented by the Costume Council of the Chicago History Museum, and toured by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC. In Rochester, it is presented by the Gallery Council of the Memorial Art Gallery, Abigail Riggs Collection and Canandaigua National Bank & Trust. Additional support is provided by the City of Rochester, COMIDA and Nocon & Associates, a private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. Pictured: Chloé (France) by Karl Lagerfeld, evening dress, ready-to-wear, fall/winter 1983–84. Photo by John Alderson © Chicago Historical Society. Long term installation in the Dorothy McBride Gill Discovery Center Renaissance Remix: Art & Imagination in 16th-century Europe See the world of the Renaissance through the eyes of a young boy growing up in mid 16th-century Europe—a time of political, cultural, religious and social change. At the center of this long-term installation is MAG’s much-loved Portrait of a Boy of the Bracciforte Family, but it also showcases 30 other works from the Gallery’s collection, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Corning Museum of Glass. Hands-on activities, videos, touch screen displays and listening posts explore the Renaissance “spirit of change.” Mad possible by funding from Dan and Dorothy Gill. Additional support has been provided by the Thomas and Marion Hawks Memorial Fund, the Mabel Fenner Lyon Fund, the estate of Emma Jane Drury, and an anonymous donor. Pictured: Detail of Girolamo Bedoli, Portrait of a Boy of the Bracciforte Family of Piacenza (Italy, ca. 1560). MAG, Marion Stratton Gould Fund. # # #
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