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Institute of Contemporary Art 118 S. 36th Street |
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ARTURO HERRERA "You go first" ICA's Ramp Project March 2 - April 21, 2002 |
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About the Exhibit Although the three-part wall painting can be seen by pedestrians on 36th Street, the viewer's experience of walking either up or down the ramp has been integral to Herrera's conception of this project. The dark to light tones created by the artist's large paintbrush-like strokes keep pace with the viewer and echo the visitor's passage from the tunnel-like lower level entrance, to the bright, naturally lit upper portion. The large swathes of color also match the rhythm inherent in the earthy red divides of ICA's trapezoidal 36th Street window. Inspired by Disney cartoons, advertising, and art history, the Venezuelan-born Herrera uses a hybrid line that moves between references to animation and traditional painting. At the ramp's turn the viewer meets their own surrealist portrait, a hybrid character based on cartoons and figures from abstract painting and design, complete with stockinged feet. Herrera's work will be in the Whitney Museum of American Art's 2002 Biennial Exhibition and has been widely exhibited around the country, including solo projects and exhibitions at the UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA (2001); The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN (2001); P.S. 1/MoMA, Long Island City, NY (2000); ArtPace, San Antonio, TX (2000); Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp, Belgium (1999); The Art Institute of Chicago, IL (1998); The Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, IL (1998); Worcester Art Museum, MA (1998); the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. IL (1995); and the Drawing Center, New York, NY (1994). ICA acknowledges the generous support of the William
Penn Foundation for this project. Additional funding support has been
provided by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Council on the Arts, the Dietrich Foundation Inc., the Overseers Board
for the Institute of Contemporary Art, friends and members of the ICA,
and the University of Pennsylvania. |
| About the ICA Founded in 1963 at the University of Pennsylvania, the Institute of Contemporary Art provides a forum for the presentation and documentation of recent developments in the visual arts. ICA challenges the public's understanding of contemporary art by presenting innovative work of established artists and the work of emerging artists through critically-acclaimed exhibitions, educational programs, and publications. New this year is a Project Space gallery designed to present smaller, one-person shows of emerging artists, and to serve as a laboratory for artists at various junctures in their careers to test new ideas and create experimental works. |
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See the ICA's previous
exhibition
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