Archive for 'Preparations'

Somewhere a Shanghai garden grows

"Vestiges of a Process: Shanghai Garden" part-way through installation.

"Vestiges of a Process: Shanghai Garden" during installation.

Shanghai has been up a little more than a week, long enough for a number of media reviews, blog posts, and general discussion points to emerge. One piece that seems to elicit particular comment is Zhang Jian Jun’s installation Vestiges of a Process: Shanghai Garden (2009).

Down in the shadowy basement and back halls of the museum services division, this is known affectionately as the piece with the bricks. Not just your garden variety red clay bricks, but some 3,000 antique grey bricks taken from the remains of buildings dating to the high-times of 1920s Shanghai, recently demolished to pave the way for new construction.


Read more

Print, e-mail, bookmark, share:
  • email
  • Print
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Shanghai update

Whew! Our first week of installation for Shanghai is over, and week two is about to begin. All of the objects have arrived safely and the galleries are beginning to really take shape. The exhibition crew has been busy condition checking artwork, hanging paintings, dressing mannequins, and dealing with all of the assorted surprises that emerge with a project of this complexity. Here a few behind the scenes images from the past week.

shinstall_shenfan2

A detail of the neon tube components of Shen Fan's installation "Landscape—Commemorating Huang Binhong—Small Scroll."



Read more
Print, e-mail, bookmark, share:
  • email
  • Print
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Shanghai remodeling

With Shanghai right around the corner, museum preparation staff have been busy reconfiguring the museum in ways we haven’t quite seen before.

Objects selected  for Shanghai include not only the 2-D paintings and works on paper that visitors might expect, but a wide variety of furniture, textile arts, video works, and contemporary installations by leading Shanghai artists. This variety of object types can be a challenge for our designer. In particular, the museum’s existing gallery spaces were not originally designed to fit contemporary installation art or to display video art.

As a result, various spaces around the museum have been receiving substantial Shanghai makeovers.

shcons_vinson

Windows to north court are covered with new walls to create additional display space.


Read more

Print, e-mail, bookmark, share:
  • email
  • Print
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Countdown to Emerald Cities

Putting together a major art exhibition is not a quick process, with the planning for most shows starting years in advance. But no matter how ahead we begin work, the final two months before an exhibition opens will always be crunch time.

Mythical wild goose (hamsa), approx. 1850-1925, Thailand, Brass, Gift from Doris Duke Charitable Foundation's Southeast Asian Art CollectionEmerald Cities does not debut until October 23, but its installation is complicated by the concurrent deinstallation of Lords of the Samuari (ending September 20). This is not atypical — we try and keep the turn around time (or “dark time”) between exhibitions as short as possible. Since these two exhibitions share many of the same behind-the-scenes staff, the result is a whole lot of people running around with brains and workspaces messily split between Japan and Southeast Asia.

So here are a few pics of this ongoing mayhem, as museum staff work to complete as much Emerald Cities prep as possible before jumping into packing up Lords of the Samurai.


Read more

Print, e-mail, bookmark, share:
  • email
  • Print
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Wearable Art

2008.77.A.J mannequin

A peek behind-the-scenes at Emerald Cities:  Chief Curator Forrest McGill and Textile Conservator Denise Migdail examine a partially completed costume mount. With the help of museum preparation staff, Denise has designed and built this diminutive torso and a set of elaborately cut rigid supports (only one is shown here) to show off an embroidered and sequined nineteenth-century Burmese court costume.


Read more

Print, e-mail, bookmark, share:
  • email
  • Print
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon