The curator Aileen June Wang and I first met in New York in 2013 when she came to see my project Aeromural at Clocktower Gallery in New York City’s TriBeCa district. Since then, we have become really good friends. We had many conversations about doing a project together. The first idea she raised was a two-person show with Japanese American visual artist Alex Kukai Shinohara. I was excited. She tried to find a venue for the show but it was not easy.
Then, Aileen was invited by a gallerist to propose a mural for a car wash with a large wall at the corner of West 24th Street and 10th Avenue in Chelsea, New York City’s gallery district. She and I worked on a proposal with a mock-up of the mural for the owner, but this didn’t happen neither.
Aileen was invited by the NARS Foundation in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, to curate a group show that would have included my works, but soon after, she was offered the job as associate curator at the Beach Museum of Art. I remember the moment when she told me about her new job. We were having lunch together near the Museum of Modern Art. I was excited for her new journey.
From August to October of 2015, I did a residency program at Chelsea College of Arts in London. Right after I returned to New York in November, I got an email from Aileen when I was in Strand Book Store near Union Square to find some nice second-hand books on New York Writing Culture. I noticed right away that this message is about something special. Aileen was talking about a possibility of my solo show at the Beach Museum of Art. Somehow, I had a good feeling that this time it was going to happen. After a while, she confirmed that the show was officially on the museum’s calendar.
Our productive conversation and a few trials of doing a project together over the past few years resulted in something really exciting. I deeply thank Aileen for giving such an amazing opportunity to a young artist like me and everyone at the Beach Museum for their effort and labor to make this exhibition happen.
Friends of McCain Auditorium and the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art took a special trip to New York. Guests were offered many unique and behind the scene experiences only few get. Follow as curator Aileen Wang shares her stories and pictures.
At the Whitney Museum of Art in New York, we had the pleasure of enjoying the work of Bruce Conner, who was born in McPherson, Kansas and grew up in Wichita. Conner’s Crossroads is a montage of declassified military film footage of the U.S. government’s underwater test explosion of an atomic bomb at Bikini atoll in the Marshall Islands in July 1946, as part of Operation Crossroads. Conner pieced together footage taken from different vantage points and slowed it down, enabling viewers to appreciate the beauty of the mushroom cloud, as well as register the horror of the spectacle. While we were so far away from our homes in Kansas, it was a delight to see such awe-inspiring artwork by a fellow Kansan.
Also at the Whitney Museum of Art, we saw Carmen Herrera’s show. Herrera was a woman abstract artist from Cuba, who settled in New York and was active at a time when the abstract art scene was dominated by men. At this show, we had the pleasure of listening to New York Arts Adventure participant and artist Margo Kren talking about her response to Herrera’s works. During the 1970s when Herrera was exploring geometric shapes and lines, Margo, too, was investigating similar ideas, as demonstrated by a painting that she recently donated to the Beach
Museum of Art. Stay tuned for when that painting will be on display at the museum! Margo is a prominent Kansas artist based in Manhattan and was the first woman to be promoted full professor at the K-State Department of Art. It was a privilege to hear Margo share her ideas!
As we left the Whitney Museum, some of us headed to the High Line Park next to the museum. The park was built on a historic freight rail line elevated above the streets where art from various artists is displayed. What we found particularly interesting was Zoe Leonard’s “I want a president” piece that is displayed under a bridge. “I want a president” was written by Leonard in 1992, the year that poet Eileen Myles ran for president as an independent candidate.
On the next day of our trip, we had a studio visit with Chinese American
artist Zhang Hongtu and his artist wife, Huang Miaoling. He is known for his satirical political artwork, and we were honored that he welcomed us to his studio in Queens, New York. Zhang was honored with a major retrospective
at the Queens Museum last year. His works can be found in the collections of Princeton University Art Museum, The Bronx Museum of the Arts, and many other museums.
Zhang immigrated to New York from Beijing, China in 1982 to study at the
Art Students League and soon called New York City his home. He is internationally renowned for creating works that blend elements of Chinese and Western painting traditions, resulting in a unique style that expresses at once both his Chinese heritage and the American culture he has adopted. One example of that painting can be seen in the front section of his studio, where he welcomed us. The painting adopts the composition of a classic Chinese landscape painting, rendered in a style that reminded us of French Post-Impressionist artist Paul Cézanne.
Zhang is also famous for a sculpture he made called Ping Pong Mao, a ping pong table with cutouts of Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong’s silhouette. During our visit, we spotted the famous table folded up in the back of his studio and convinced him to bring it out for us. Several people in our group got up the courage to play Zhang’s modified ping pong game. Having big holes in the middle of the table required special attention and finesse. We all had fun with the game, but it reminded us in concrete terms how the authoritarian rule of Mao made it hard for Chinese citizens to live. Even though the interactive sculpture specifically references life in China during Mao’s reign in the 1960s and 1970s, its insight into life under a dictatorship is universal and just as relevant now.
The next stop of our trip was to Brooklyn, New York where we had a studio
visit with artist Enrico Isamu Ōyama. Ōyama represents a contemporary generation with a distinctly global perspective. He was born in Tokyo to an Italian father and a Japanese mother and spent extended periods of time in
North Italy, his father’s home. He has developed a signature style inspired by his love of Tokyo and New York street cultures and graffiti. We were very excited to bring our K-Staters to see this phenomenal artist and his recent work.
After the studio visit with Enrico, we got an exclusive tour of the Brooklyn Museum with Sharon Matt Atkins, Vice Director of Exhibitions and Collections, while the museum was closed to the public. One thing that stood out to us the most at the museum was the visible storage facility recently built by the museum. This unique way of storing artwork through see-through glass was one of the many reasons we found the Brooklyn Museum to be so interesting. Sharon gave us a gallery talk of the new show she curated, “Iggy Pop Life Class” by British conceptual artist Jeremy Deller, who won the prestigious Turner Prize in 2004.
On the final day of our Arts Adventure Trip, we headed to the West Village to tour “Exhibitionism: The Rolling Stones” with internationally recognized
designer Abbott Miller. Miller is a partner of the world’s largest independent design consultancy, Pentagram, and leads a team designing books, magazines, catalogs, identities, and exhibitions such as The Rolling Stones one that we viewed.
This exhibit features over 500 Rolling Stones items with 50 years of fashion, original artworks and vintage instruments. If you love Rock n’ Roll, this is the place to be. We had so much fun seeing the history of the Rolling Stones and finding the famous and iconic tongue logo all over the exhibit.
This blog was co-written by Aileen Wang, Curator
and Maddie Allen, student curatorial assistant.
To learn more about the becoming a Friend of the Beach Museum or making a gift please contact Linda Duke, Director at lduke@ksu.edu or Tracy Robinson, Development Officer at tracyr@found.ksu.edu.
Large format film-based photography brings back the term ‘making a photograph’ in contrast with the contemporary term ‘taking a photograph.’ Working with a large format camera is cumbersome, slow and yet ultimately a very rewarding process. There are many variables including darkroom chemicals, which shape the resultant image. This technique belongs in the tradition of 19th century survey photography in the American West, and is still practiced by many visual artists. The exposure captured on the film has a very wide latitude due to the use of a specialized staining developer. This gives the negative its distinctive low contrast and high acutance. The prints are made using a warm-tone paper, processed to museum standards. Besides the formal sophistication of analog prints this process has a phenomenological advantage over the digital image capture: it puts temporal distance between the lived moment and its representation. Unlike the instantly gratifying digital images, which tend to compete and sometimes overshadow the lived experience, this process allows the photographic representation to stand independently from the lived moment; whereby the memory of the moment is not replaced by the image made in that moment.
This post was written by Assistant Professor of Art at Kansas State University Shreepad Joglekar. The Beach Museum of Art staff thanks Professor Joglekar for his amazing work and the unique experience.
About Us
The Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art furthers the teaching, research, and service missions of Kansas State University by collecting, studying, caring for, and presenting the visual art of Kansas and the region.