June 25, 2009
VCUarts Anderson Gallery hosts summer exhibition, “Travelogue”
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VCU Communications & Public Relations
Artists’ response to place covers a wide terrain in Travelogue, a four-part summer exhibition at the VCUarts Anderson Gallery that runs through Aug. 1.
The exhibition devoted to themes of travel and tourism was organized by Ashley Kistler,
director of the Anderson Gallery, and Michael Lease, gallery associate.
With wit and verve, photographs by Martin Parr and a video by Olaf
Breuning probe our understanding of cultural difference and dislocation
in an ever-shrinking, increasingly well-traveled and consumer-driven
world. A photographic journey assembled by VCU alumna Michelle Van
Parys over 20 years explores our collective cultural imprint on the
landscape of the American West. Selected from the gallery’s permanent
collection by Traci Horne, intimate sketches by Theresa Pollak capture
her immediate observations of places visited and people encountered.
Summer
hours for the Anderson Gallery are Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 5
p.m. The gallery is closed on Sunday and Monday. The gallery is located
at 907 ½ W. Franklin St.
Martin Parr: “Small World & Autoportraits”
Often
called the most important British photographer working today, Martin
Parr is well known for his humorous, highly saturated color images that
tackle the inexorable phenomena of mass consumerism and global tourism.
Parr has traveled the world —frequently on assignment for the photo
agency Magnum — photographing tourists (and having himself
photographed) in the widest array of locations imaginable.
This
exhibition will feature images from “Small World” and “Autoportraits,”
along with selections from “The Last Resort,” “Think of England” and
“Mexico.” The pictures of “Small World” offer an engrossing excursion
to mostly familiar tourist spots made newly strange and compelling when
viewed from Parr’s idiosyncratic perspective.
“Tourism is the
biggest industry in the world,” he notes. “You can’t ignore it. I like
to explore the problem with it, which is the difference between the
myth and the reality of the place.”
Parr
continues to address this subject in his series “Autoportraits,” a
hilarious compilation of images initiated in the 1990s when he began
having his own picture taken by a local studio or street photographer
in whatever location he happened to be working.
Michelle Van Parys: “The Way Out West”
Over
the last two decades, traveling west from her home in Charleston, S.C.,
Michelle Van Parys has trained her camera on the terrain of the
American West and its changing identity.
In the toned
gelatin-silver prints making up this captivating photographic journey
through Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, Utah and California, she
suggests a range of possibilities for these interactions, from humorous
and ironic to dangerous and fatalistic.
Recently published by
the Center for American Places at Columbia College, Chicago, a 94-page
exhibition catalogue with essays by Lucy Lippard and Geoffrey Batchen
is available from the gallery for $30.00. Van Parys received her MFA in
photography from VCU in 1986 and currently teaches in the School of the
Arts at the College of Charleston.
Olaf Breuning: “Home 2”
Olaf
Breuning, a young Swiss artist now living in New York City, creates
videos, photographs, sculptures and installations that draw heavily
from popular culture. Breuning’s latest video, “Home 2” — a hit at the
2008 Whitney Biennial — addresses themes of dislocation and cultural
identity. The narrator of this over-the-top spoof, played by actor
Brian Kerstetter, joins a tourist group traveling through Papua New
Guinea and stumbles his way through assorted villages, variously
charming or insulting his fellow tourists and the “natives” he
encounters. As Stacey Goergen observed in the Biennial catalogue,
“Contextualizing the helplessness of today’s global citizen, Breuning
examines a basic human quest for commonality in an increasingly global,
but ever more fragmented, world.”
Theresa Pollak: “On Location”
Theresa
Pollak (1899-2002), a founder of the VCU School of the Arts, often made
sketches and studies depicting the places she visited and the people
she encountered. The drawings in this exhibition, selected from the
gallery’s permanent collection, document Pollak‘s keen interest in the
world around her. From portraits of bus passengers and landscapes from
airplane windows to train stations and well-known museums, she captured
her observations and experiences on paper, sometimes with notations for
future paintings. Drawn with a sense of immediacy of time and place,
these works are a candid account of one tourist and traveler.
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