Artscene Artscene Summer 2019 | Page 12

4 In The Studio | across the museum’s collection, and draw connections and inevitable comparisons between artists Pleasant T. Rowland Galleries instead to invite viewers to examine small details that reveal personalities, to see how common A conversation with artist Joe Fig. Chazen auditorium 6:30–8 PM the unique environments in which artists do their work. The objects on view are selected from June 1–August 11, 2019 June 13 5:30–6:30 PM Curated by the Chazen’s director, Amy Gilman, this exhibition focuses on the artist’s studio and | Reception. Mead Witter Lobby Sanford Biggers Jun 28–Sep 22, 2019 Leslie and Johanna Garfield Galleries of different times, cultures, and media. The purpose is not to “equalize” all artistic work, but studio practice (such as drawing from live models) has evolved (or not) over time, and to expose for close examination the preliminary work that leads to the finished objects we most closely associate with art in a museum. Along the way are enduring friendships and rivalries, humor, angst, and a great deal of hard work. This is a collections-based exhibition, and as such, it, of course, reflects the Chazen Museum of Art’s growth, its strengths, and also contains some wonderful surprises. Sanford Biggers uses a wide range of media—including painting, sculpture, video, film, multicomponent installations, and performance—to encourage meaningful dialogue around narratives in American history. Works in the Chazen exhibition include sculpture from the BAM series, video installation, and textile collage featuring antique quilts. For his BAM series Biggers draws from his varied collection of wooden African sculptures. He coats each figure with a layer of wax to obscure its individual identity before “sculpting” it at a firing range with gunshots. The figures are then cast anew in bronze and he renames each after a victim of brutality, imparting idiosyncrasy into the newly revitalized figures. Biggers acquires and alters antique quilts, calling the resulting artworks paintings. In contributing his own imagery to these patchwork quilts, Biggers, in effect, collaborates with the unknown quilters and forms a Sanford Biggers Courtesy Sanford Biggers and Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago. Photo: Alex Freund. dialogue between them, himself, viewers, the past and present. Sanford Biggers was organized for the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis by Lisa Melandri, executive director. Support for the catalog is provided by the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation. Presentation at the Chazen Museum of Art was generously supported by the Brittingham Trust and by a grant from the Wisconsin Arts Board with funds from the State of Wisconsin and the National Endowment for the Arts. Sanford Biggers (American b. 1970), BAM (for Terence), 2016, bronze with black patina, unique within a series of three, courtesy the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago