'Persona: A Body in Parts' at the Weatherspoon Art Museum
Barbara Probst, 'Exposure #69: N.Y.C., 555 8th Avenue, 02.24.09, 6:16 p.m.', 2009, inkjet print (triptych), 66 x 44 in. each; 67 x 143.5 in. overall. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Gift of the Stanford and Joan Alexander Foundation,courtesy of Joan and Stanford Alexander in memory of Joan Lacy. Image courtesy of the artist and Murray Guy, New York, NY. |
Persona: A Body in Parts
|
Info
September 17 - December 11, 2011
Artist Talk + Opening Reception: Friday, September 16, 6-9pm
Museum Hours:
Tues, Wed, Friday: 10am-5pm; Thur: 10am-9pm, Sat + Sun: 1-5pm
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Contact
weatherspoon@uncg.edu
Loring Mortensen
336 334 5770
336 334 5907
Address
http://weatherspoon.uncg.edu/exhibitions/show/?title=persona-a-body-in-parts
Weatherspoon Art Museum
500 Tate Street
Greensboro, NC 27412
U.S.A.
'Persona: A Body in Parts' explores alternate and multiple representations of the self in current visual art. Organized by Weatherspoon Curator of Exhibitions, Xandra Eden, the exhibition includes a striking selection of work in which the body, whether the artist's own or another's, becomes a plastic, surrogate form from which multiple and complex identities are projected. Artists participating in the exhibition include Barbara Probst, Nikki S. Lee, Carter, Kate Gilmore, Nick Cave, and Gillian Wearing.
The artists in 'Persona' adopt chameleon-like personas, don self-made 'second skins,' and project fragmented views of the body, to create a view of identity similar to the effect of light shining through a prism, each part separating out into different, though often enigmatic, representations of the self.
The work in 'Persona: A Body in Parts' has its historical roots in early body and performance art of the 1970s, such as that of Ana Mendieta and Rebecca Horn, and later artists who explored more artificial or media-driven selves, including Cindy Sherman and Yasumasa Morimura. Each artist in the exhibition provides valuable insight into thinking about the body as participating in a series of knowledge-producing relations, rather than as a distinct, static entity.
'Persona: A Body in Parts' is organized by Xandra Eden, Curator of Exhibitions. This exhibition and related public programs are made possible through the support of the North Carolina Arts Council, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, and Jaguar Land Rover of Greensboro, a Flow Automotive Company. Special thanks to Heather Flow and to Carol Cole and Seymour Levin.