"On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century",
on
view at MoMA from November 21, 2010, through
February 7, 2011, will explore the radical
transformation of the medium of drawing
throughout the last century, a period when
numerous
artists critically examined the traditional concepts
of drawing and expanded the medium's
definition in relation to gesture and form.
The exhibition will bring together
approximately 300
works that connect drawing to selections of
painting, sculpture, photography, film, and dance
(represented by films and documentation). Making
the case for a discursive history of mark
making, On Line maps an alternative project of
drawing, with works by a wide range of artists,
both familiar and relatively unknown, from
different eras of the past century and from many
nations. The exhibition is organized by Connie
Butler, The Robert Lehman Foundation Chief
Curator of Drawings, The Museum of Modern Art,
and guest curator Catherine de Zegher, former
director, The Drawing Center, New York.
With almost half of the 300 works drawn from
MoMA’s collection, On Line will also present
a wide, international scope of art practices,
including artists from over 20 nations, such as
Aleksandr Rodchenko (Russian, 1891–1956), Lygia
Clark (Brazilian, 1920–1988), Edward
Krasinski (Polish, 1925–2004), and Ranjani Shettar
(Indian, b. 1977). Additionally, major site-
specific projects by contemporary artists will be on
display, including pieces by Luis Camnitzer,
Monika Grzymala, and Giuseppe Penone.
The exhibition will also explore the relationship
between line-making and dance. Within
the galleries works by prominent dancers will be on
view, including a large-scale drawing by
Trisha Brown, Untitled (2007), along with films of
William Forsythe and Anne Teresa de
Keersmaeker. These will be joined by a range of
works which specifically address the medium of
dance, including Gino Severini’s Dancer (1912),
Vaslaw Nijinsky’s Tänzerin (1917–18), and
Françoise Sullivan’s Danse de la Neige, #1–17
(1948).
In conjunction with On Line, five choreographers
and performers will stage works within
the Museum’s Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron
Atrium in January 2011. As installments of
MoMA’s ongoing Performance Exhibition Series,
these performances address the idea of line as a
trajectory of the human body through space. The
featured choreographers and performers include
Trisha Brown, Ralph Lemon, Anne Teresa de
Keersmaeker, and Marie Cool and Fabio Balducci.
Photos from above: Françoise
Sullivan; Alexander Calder; Julie Mehretu; Cildo
Meireles; Georges Vantongerloo
On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century
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- Elena Sommariva
- 28 October 2010