Washington, DC – The 48th Corcoran Biennial: Closer to Home takes as its
focus contemporary artists making use of traditional arts methods, favoring earnest
individual expression and historically resonant aesthetic dialogue over high-tech
media. While recent Corcoran Biennial exhibitions have dealt with the legacy
of conceptual art and new media, Closer to Home marks a return to the exhibition’s
origins and considers the familiar territories of traditional media – such
as canvas, paint and wood – while giving prominence to the work of Washington,
DC-based artists. The Corcoran Biennial, among the oldest continuous biennials
in the world, was founded in 1907 and since its inception has retained a focus
on new American work of exceptional quality. The 48th Corcoran Biennial: Closer to Home is on view at the Corcoran Gallery of Art from March 19 through June
27, 2005.
Closer to Home showcases the following artists, whose choice of materials,
subjects or styles are all in some way informed by the traditional arts: Rev.
Ethan Acres, Chakaia Booker, Matthew Buckingham, Colby Caldwell, George Condo,
Adam Fuss, James Huckenpahler, John Lehr, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, Richard
Rezac, Dana Schutz, Jeff Spaulding, Kathryn Spence, Austin Thomas and Monique
van Genderen.
The exhibition’s title, Closer to Home, deliberately invites various
levels of interpretation, suggesting foremost a literal reference to domesticity,
warmth and comfort – ideas and feelings that several Biennial artists
evoke in their work. New York-based artist Austin Thomas constructs homespun
architectural perches that are evocative of indoor tree houses and allow museumgoers
to share space, sit and relax. Kathryn Spence, who works in San Francisco,
makes use of quotidian materials and familiar household products, positioning
objects such as rolls of paper towels as starting points for her intricately
detailed embroidery.
This focus on domestic themes is also evident in the work of Washington, DC-based
photographer Colby Caldwell. Using 8mm movies, the staple of late-century family
gatherings, Caldwell creates manipulated stills and videos that express his
fascination with the way history and life stories are passed among generations.
Creating a pastiche of vintage footage from his childhood and contemporary
footage captured with an antique Super 8 camera, Caldwell attempts to distill
and re-evoke the feeling of a place or moment in a single emotional record.
Eschewing the present-day fashion for computers and multi-media extravagance,
the artists of this Biennial – like influential New York-based painter
George Condo – tend to embrace an aesthetic that speaks to time-honored
traditions and the history of art. Condo’s fantasy portraits interweave
painterly styles that range from the 18th to the 20th centuries; he calls this
work “artificial realism” for its contemporary treatment of art
historical convention. The resultant disconcerting character of his pictures
seems to transform the moribund Old-Master portraits into a relevant expression
of contemporary malaise.
This year’s Biennial takes as another part of its focus artists who
live and work in the Washington, DC area. Remarks Corcoran Associate Curator
of Contemporary Art and exhibition co-organizer Stacey Schmidt, “As the
first museum in the nation’s capital, the Corcoran is especially committed
to supporting the work of DC-based artists.” Among these are photographers
Caldwell and John Lehr, digital artist James Huckenpahler and sculptor Jeff
Spaulding.
“Importantly, technology was never precluded from our selection process,” notes
Corcoran Curator of Contemporary Art and exhibition co-organizer Jonathan P.
Binstock. “In fact, several of the Biennial artists do use video, digital
or computer technology in their work. Nonetheless, we were most interested
in artists whose choice of materials, subjects or styles have a strong relationship
to more traditional modes of artmaking and evoke the familiar beginnings – or
home – of various forms of aesthetic practice.”
CATALOGUE
The Corcoran Gallery of Art will publish an 80-page hardcover catalogue to
accompany Closer to Home. This catalogue features full-color reproductions
of the artworks, a foreword by Corcoran Chief Curator Jacquelyn Days Serwer
and an essay by the exhibition’s co-organizing curators, Jonathan P.
Binstock and Stacey Schmidt.
EXHIBITION SPONSORSHIP
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.
ABOUT THE CORCORAN BIENNIAL
Since its founding more than 90 years ago, the Corcoran Biennial has been a
barometer of major trends in American art. The sixth oldest continuous exhibition
series in the United States, the Corcoran Biennial has taken many forms, from
on-site selections by a jury of artists, to invitationals chosen by a single
curator; from extensive presentations by more than 400 artists, to selected
bodies of work by as few as five artists. The 45th Biennial, in 1998, signaled
the end of an era: after many decades of showcasing American painting, the
museum decided to expand the boundaries of subsequent Biennial exhibitions
to include various media and artists of other nationalities. This more expansive
approach continues today.
ABOUT THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART
A privately funded institution incorporating both a museum and college of art
and design, the Corcoran Gallery of Art was founded in 1869 as Washington’s
first museum of art. It is one of America’s oldest art institutions,
predating both New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts and is known internationally for its distinguished collection
of historical and modern American art as well as European painting, sculpture,
photography and decorative arts.
Founded in 1890, Corcoran College of Art + Design is Washington’s only
4-year college of art and design, offers a four-year Bachelor of Fine Arts
(BFA) degree program in Fine Art (painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking,
ceramics and digital art), Graphic Design, Digital Media Design, Photography
and Photojournalism; a two-year Associate of Fine Arts (AFA) degree program
in Fine Art, Photography, Graphic Design, Interior Design and Digital Media
Design, a Masters of Arts (MA) degree in Interior Design, Teaching and Education,
as well as a 5 year combined BFA/MA in Teaching; and a Continuing Education
Program encompassing more than 250 courses and seven certificate programs aimed
at meeting the needs of part-time adult students; as well as year-round classes
designed especially for children and teens. The Continuing Education Program,
which offers part-time credit and non-credit classes for children and adults,
draws more than 3,500 participants each year.
The Corcoran Gallery of Art is located at New York Avenue and 17th Street,
NW, Washington, DC, and is open every day, except Tuesday, 10 am – 5
pm and until 9 pm on Thursday. The museum is closed every Tuesday. Admission
to the Corcoran is: $6.75 for adults; $4.75 for senior citizens; $3 for students
with current ID; and $12 for families. Admission is free for Members and children
under 12. Admission is “pay as you wish” on Monday all day and
on Thursday after 5 pm. A satellite educational facility is located at the
Corcoran’s historic Fillmore School in Georgetown at 1801 35th Street,
NW. The public information line for the museum is (202) 639-1700. The public
information line for the college is (202) 639-1800; the website address is www.corcoran.edu.
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CONTACT: Kristin Guiter Manager of Media Relations (202) 639-1867, kguiter@corcoran.org

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Curator Stacey Schmidt and Jonathan Binstock
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