Friday, January 11, 2013

CINDY SHERMAN: GUCCI MUSEO FLORENCE

The Gucci Museo in Florence is having a solo exhibition of the early works of American artist Cindy Sherman. On display are three bodies of Sherman’s work: a short film, Dollhouse, and two photographic series, Murder Mystery People and Bus Riders. The work comes from her final year at Buffalo University and her first year after graduation when, along with a group of fellow artists, she established an artist commune and gallery space called Hallwalls. The body of work on display is evidence of Sherman’s long-standing fascination with gender and identity, themes that became integral to her work. The prints from both the Murder Mystery People series and the Bus Riders series were lost or discarded after they were exhibited in the late seventies. The former, originally 250 photographs, was created as a film noir-style narrative in which Sherman plays different characters, with the plot unfolding in a series of frames. In Bus Riders, Sherman recreated every day characters that rode the Metro Bus 535 in Buffalo—the pimply teenager, the grandmother, the working woman—and photographed them in various ‘bus travel’ posses. The two photographic series show many crucial developments in Sherman’s career. The two photographic series show many crucial developments in Sherman’s career. It was not long after she completed this work that Sherman moved to New York and began the Untitled Film Stills series that ultimately launched her career.

Wednesday, January 09, 2013

ADA LOUISE HUXTABLE (1921–2013)

Ada Louise Huxtable, the first architecture critic of the New York Times, who championed buildings that celebrated civic history and whose writing forged a place for architecture in the daily press and mainstream public dialogue, has passed away at the age of ninety-one. Huxtable began her post at the New York Times in 1963. Before that, Huxtable had acted as assistant curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art and was also a Fulbright and a Guggenheim fellow. She quite simply, changed the way most of us see and think about man-made environments. Even though knowledgeable about architectural styles, Huxtable often seemed more interested in social substance. She invited readers to consider a building not as an assembly of pilasters and entablatures but as a public statement whose form and placement had real consequences for its neighbors as well as its occupants.” Among many awards, Huxtable won the first Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism in 1970. She has written several books and was most recently the architecture critic of the Wall Street Journal. Said Huxtable in 1971: “I wish people would stop asking me what my favorite buildings are. I do not think it really matters very much what my personal favorites are, except as they illuminate principles of design and execution useful and essential to the collective spirit that we call society. For irreplaceable examples of that spirit I will do real battle.”