|
For a larger
view
of works of art,
click on images.
|
Newsletter
- Fall 1999
Future Exhibitions
Summit:
Vittorio Sella, Mountaineer & Photographer, The Years 1879-1909
29 January - 10 March 2000
In
1882, the 23-year-old Italian mountain climber Vittorio Sella
wrote to an English camera maker: "I beg you to undertake
immediately the camera for the 30 x 40 centimeter plates described
in my letter; I beg you to make it in the best mahogany, with
every care possible, as I will use it for taking views in the
high Alps.... Here we have splendid weather, and I burn with impatience
to start photographic excursions. From his home in the northern
Piedmont, not far from the peaks of Mont Blanc and Monte Rosa,
Vittorio Sella set out on the mountaineering and photographic
adventures that were to consume him for the next several decades.
His travels took him on expeditions to the Caucasus in 1889, 1890,
and 1896, to the Saint Elias range in Alaska in 1897, to Sikkim
and Nepal in 1906, and to the Karakoram and Western Himalayas
in 1909.
The exhibition Summit has been organized by the museum's
curator, Wendy Watson, and American mountaineer Paul Kallmes.
It will comprise about 100 of Sella's spectacular vintage photographs
and multi-plate panoramas borrowed from the Fondazione Sella in
Biella, Italy. Although he is well-known among the mountaineering
community worldwide, Vittorio Sella slipped into obscurity in
the history of photography over the past century. The last major
show of his work occurred in 1893 when the Appalachian Mountain
Club toured a group of photographs to 75 cities across the nation.
At that time, thousands turned out to view Sella's astonishing
pictures of the Alps and the Caucasus, but his major expeditions
with explorers Douglas Freshfield and the Duke of Abruzzi still
lay ahead of him.
In 1946, Ansel Adams - one of Sella's great admirers - wrote a
memorial tribute to him in the Sierra Club Bulletin: "The
memory of Vittorio Sella is closely embraced by the moods of the
world's great mountains, many of which are known to us chiefly
through the beautiful imagery of his lens. Mighty K2, shrouded
in the gray plumes of the Monsoon, the thundering avalanches of
Mount St. Elias, remote Ruwenzori glittering over the hot plains
of Africa, and the noble crag of Ushba towering above the ancient
Causcasian lands - these are revealed in all their sheer majesty
in Sella's masterful photographs."
A book by Watson and Kallmes, published by the photographic press
Aperture, will accompany the show. After leaving Mount Holyoke,
the exhibition will travel to New York City and Banff, Canada.
Chromaform:
Color in Contemporary Sculpture
7 April
- 15 July 2000
Works by 15 emerging,
midcareer, and established artists from the United States and
Mexican are featured in this vibrant exhibition that explores
the use of color in contemporary sculpture. Frances Colpitt, the
exhibition's curator, notes in her catalogue that color has recently
reasserted itself in three-dimensional work with a force that
has not been seen since the 1960s. Indeed, polychromy in sculpture
has not been traditionally embraced by Anglo-European artists
influenced by the imagined "purity" of Greek and Roman
marbles despite the fact that these antiquities were frequently
brightly painted. As Colpitt writes, "From Joachim Winckelmann
to Clement Greenberg, theorists have demanded that each art form
be true to its essential nature, with the implication that color
belongs to painting and is superfluous in sculpture." This
exhibition aims to explode that notion.
Included in the Chromaform show are Chris Finley, Caren
Furbeyre, David grant, George Stoll, and Carlos Mollura, all working
in Los Angeles; New Yorkers Polly Apfelbaum, Lillian Ball, Peter
Boynton, Jessica Stockholder and Daniel Wiener; Melanie Smith
and Thomas Glassford, both from Mexico City; Hills Snyder of San
Antonio; John McCracken of Mendales, New Mexico; and Richard Rezac
of Chicago. The exhibition's curator selected the artists based
on their innovative contributions to the expanded idiom of sculpture
and their bold use of color.
The exhibition was organized by the Art Gallery at the University
of Texas at San Antonio.
|