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2005 Exhibition Year
48th Corcoran Biennial Closer to Home
3/19/2005 to 6/27/2005 :: press
For most of its nearly century-long history, the
Corcoran Biennial has, with a few exceptions, featured only American
painting. With the 46th Biennial in 2000, this venerable tradition
was altered as art in other media, including sculpture, photography,
video, and computer-driven work, also became eligible for inclusion.
That millennial exhibition, Media Metaphor, marked the beginning
of what has since become in the context of this biennial series an
extended dialogue on technology as medium in contemporary art.
The 48th Corcoran Biennial: Closer to Home is organized
on the basis of a preference for work that reflects ideas or raises questions
relevant to the biennial series as it has recently evolved. After two Biennials
that highlighted a great deal of multi-media, interactive, and, at times,
even raucous high-tech art, the organizing curators of Closer to Home decided
to let the pendulum swing in the other direction.
This exhibition explores the work of artists who, for a variety
of reasons, utilize primarily low-tech and traditional media. This conception
was inspired by the belief that a significant amount of important contemporary
art examines the flipside of the high-tech coin through earnest individual
expression, historically resonant aesthetic dialogue involving, for example,
portraiture and landscape, the reinvention or revival of “old-tech” methods,
or the poetic use of prosaic materials. While not a guiding theme of the
project, domestic issues do figure into some of the featured work, suggesting
yet another interpretation of the exhibition’s title.
Advanced technology was never precluded from inclusion, and
several of the artists finally selected for the exhibition do use video,
digital media, or computers to create or present their work. Nonetheless,
all of the work in this exhibition shows evidence of a strong relationship
to more traditional modes of artmaking, evoking the familiar beginnings—or
home—of visual art practice.
The 48th Corcoran Biennial: Closer
to Home is organized by the Corcoran Gallery of Art and generously
supported by the Bedford Falls Foundation, Deane and Paul Shatz, the
Anna E. Clark Fund, the William A. Clark Award Fund, the Elizabeth Firestone
Graham Foundation FUNd, Brian Aitken, and The President’s Exhibition
Fund. Additional thanks are due to in-kind donor Kimpton Hotels.
Curator
:: Stacey Schmidt and Jonathan Binstock
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