Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, 3750 Washington Blvd.

2buildings1blog.org

View The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts Blog Archives

Pulitzer Image Set

View The Pulitzer on Flickr

Contemporary Image Set

View The Contemporary on Flickr

About The Blog

The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts and Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis have joined together to create the Contemporary-Pulitzer blog which, for the first time, combines the perspectives of two separate institutions with differing missions within the same blog.


Offering alternating posts each day from the Pulitzer and Contemporary, the blog provides a candid look at the behind-the-scenes workings of both arts organizations.

Links and Resources

Art Blogs
STL Blogs
St. Louis Museums
St. Louis Galleries
Arts Internships

Sort Pulitzer Archive

Recent Comments

  • a50 bpi: I have to show some appreciation to you just for bailing me out of such a predicament. As a result of...
  • TIM BOLT: I can not attach an image of my work to the studio tour call for artists registraction. it will not take...
  • Ezra Neugebauer: For those who order various minor solutions regarding behavioral instinct it is possible...
  • Joel Conner: awesome news!
  • Reynaldo Pieffer: in my experience the ideal is applying your club to try and do pullups, chin-ups yet others.

Latest Posts from the Pulitzer

The Contemporary’s Happy Holiday email message

happy holidays

The Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis wishes you a very happy holiday season and a very happy winter!

One week from today is the winter solstice, which means that every day from December 21 until June 21 will be a little longer than the day before. What an exciting feeling! 

However, your days left to see For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there, are getting shorter and shorter! We encourage you to show your out-of-town guests a little bit of St. Louis art and culture and bring them by the Contemporary to view the exhibition. Remember the museum is always free on Wednesday and Saturday and Contemporary memberships include four or more guest passes each year.

If you are in a bind for some last minute holiday gifts, consider the gift of art. You can purchase a gift membership online quickly and easily! Or, come to the Museum to spend some time exploring our Flat Files which holds a sample of works by a variety of St Louis artists. The Flat Files also contains contact information to get in touch with the artists, view additional works and make a purchase! While you are here, stop by MUSE, the Contemporary’s gift shop for exciting, unique gifts! Have a wonderful and safe holiday! We hope to see you at the Contemporary soon!

Get more messages like these by signing up for the Contemporary’s emails.

Artist Blog Series: Jimmy Raskin

Jimmy Raskin / Tessa Rehkop

For the Blind Man...

Jimmy Raskin was born in 1970 in Los Angeles where he currently lives and works.  Since 1989, the artist has been studying, through various mediums, the idea of a universe split between the Poet and the Philosopher. Focusing on the Prologue of Nietzsche’s philosophical novel, Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883-85), Raskin interprets Zarathustra’s understanding of how to move forward as the New Being –the merging of the philosopher and the poet into the Philosopher-Poet. His latest multi-media sculpture and video installation, The Annunciation, is part of the current exhibition For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there. In what the artist calls a “fighting sculpture”, Raskin continues his dual mode of expression between the Philosopher-Poet and the Poet with a battle scene represented by black vinyl silhouettes of an eagle-serpent and a donkey reflecting how the artist struggles with art as a form of critical thought while still trying to be poetic. In the past, Raskin has represented this duality through a series of lectures, audio-visual performances, publishing a book entitled The Poet, The Poltergeist & The Hollow Tree, and producing countless texts, drawings, diagrams, sculptures and cartoons.  His research seems to be seeking truth by combining the thinking of the Philosopher and the Poet-in-Part in order to have more than just faith in meaning.

Celebrating the holidays and exploring curiosity

Next week the Contemporary will host two events, one to celebrate the holidays, and the other to explore the topic of curiosity and how it relates to a child’s desire for learning. Holiday Open House will take place on Thursday, December 10 from 6:00 – 9:00. There will be light bites and drinks, a chance to walk through the exhibition, For the blind man… and shopping! MUSE gift shop will offer a 25% discount to everyone and a 35% discount to members on all purchases (even sale items!). There will also be an art and craft sale throughout the evening, making for plenty of chances to purchase unique, handmade gifts. Two days later, on Saturday, December 12, from 10:00 am – 12:00 pm and 1:00 – 3:00 pm, the Contemporary will host Curiosity and Knowledge: the Heart of Learning. This is an event facilitated by The St. Michael School of Clayton, a Reggio-inspired school for preprimary and elementary age children with interactive educational activities for children, adults, and educators. At 2:30 pm, Chief Curator Anthony Huberman and Co-founder of the Cadwell Collaborative Louise Cadwell will end the day with a reflection about “curiosity and knowledge.”

Artist Blog Series: Bruno Munari and David William

Bruno Munari and David William / Tessa Rehkop

Two artists that truly capture the theme of “not knowing” in the current exhibition For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there are Bruno Munari and David William. Bruno Munari was born in 1907 in Milan. He was an artist, graphic designer, industrial designer, poet, and illustrator. After a seventy year career, gaining the title of “founding father of Italian design,” Munari died in Milan in 1998. In a sequence of twelve grainy black and white photographs entitled Seeking comfort in an uncomfortable armchair, Munari shows a man attempting twelve different ways to sit in an armchair while trying to read a newspaper. The man never seems to figure out the correct way to sit. This reflects Munari’s curiosity about the most common things in life.

YouTube Preview Image

David William is a composite name of graphic designers David Reinfurt and Will Holder. David Reinfurt was born in 1971 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. He works as an independent graphic designer, writer and critic in New York. Will Holder was born in 1969 in Hatfield. He works as a writer, editor, performer, and book designer in London. Together they designed a game, Towards an Intuitive Understanding of the Fourth Dimension, to help children understand the complex idea of the fourth dimension: time in relation to the other three dimensions. Players are presented with several squares and a timer, but they are given no rules. So by having no previous experience with the game, players must develop their own rules. By not knowing how to play the game visitors of the current exhibition can get an idea of what it’d be like to experience common everyday objects for the first time, like how to sit in an armchair.

Video 5 0 00 00-07 

Click here to view Munari’s gallery guide and here for William’s gallery guide.

Opening in London

On Thursday, December 3 a slightly modified version of the exhibition For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there will open at Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. The exhibition will be on view there from December 3, 2009 through January 31, 2010. The For the blind man… exhibition will also travel to an additional American venue, and will simultaneously travel to two other European venues. Click here to see a list of other venues and schedules.

Artist Blog Series: Eric Duyckaerts

Eric Duyckaerts / Gilian Rappaport

Eric Duyckaerts was born in 1953 in Llege, Belgium and currently lives and works in Nice, France. Working in the disciplines of both video and visual arts, Duyckaerts employs mixed media to explore analogs like the square and labyrinth, as well as questions of advanced logical analysis. Duyckaerts uses humor to situate his persistent curiosity and exploration into preconceived systems of knowledge. He questions human construction of the world by investigating pattern making and ways of thinking, including functions of symbolism, repetition, process, meaning, and use.

Duyckaerts’ 1993 exhibition, The Hand with Two Thumbs, explored the precise numbers of bones present within all human arms, hands, and fingers. Noting that the human hand has five digits, namely, four fingers and one thumb, Duyckaerts proposes the possibility of two thumbs, totaling six digits, per hand, through a lecture, video, a selection of drawings, and a cast model of a hand possessing two thumbs. The effect is an alluring combination of humor and gravity into a proverbial “Why not?” In For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there, film depicts Duyckaerts posing a seemingly nonsensical argument based on a network of undeniably logical ideas.

For images of Duyckaerts’ work, click here. To view the gallery guide, click here.

Artist Blog Series: Dave Hullfish Bailey

Dave Hullfish Bailey / Tessa Rehkop

Dave Hullfish Bailey was born in 1963 in Denver, Colorado, and he currently lives and works in Los Angeles. His work To do with a wide spot along a dusty road crossing a dry channel, between the old end of Old Red and the dead end of the New West is being presented at the Contemporary in the current exhibition For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there.  This project, consisting of a boat trailer with varying types of equipment ranging from a garden hose to a computer scanner, was designed for the purpose of exploring the Colorado River Delta.  Bailey is interested in the idea of a river as something that organizes material, constantly shifting and re-shifting it around in a way that’s not random, but still hard for us to understand.  He describes the work as existing between the gap of organizing things in a rigid, rational way and a more organic, natural way. This gap is limiting but we can also take pleasure from it because understanding that there is a gap, we can develop our own ways of understanding. 

Click here to hear more of Bailey’s explanation of his work and here to view the gallery guide.

YouTube Preview Image

Curator Talk and Film Screening

Coming up this Wednesday, November 18, the Contemporary’s Chief Curator, Anthony Huberman, will give a special lecture about his curatorial process behind the exhibition For the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn’t there. Huberman will present artists, artworks, and his ideas about art. Following the lecture will be a film screening of Fischli & Weiss’ “The Way Things Go.” Peter Fischli & David Weiss are both artists in the exhibition For the blind man… pursuing “their urge to understand the world by asking large metaphysical and ethical questions about the human condition.” The lecture and the film screening are both free. The evening begins at 6:00 pm.

contemp convers

Artist Blog Series: Marcel Broodthaers & Sarah Crowner

Marcel Broodthaers & Sarah Crowner / Gilian Rappaport

blindman_home

Belgian painter, sculptor, printmaker, draughtsman, and filmmaker, Marcel Broodthaers, was born in Brussels in 1924. He began his career as a poet, with connections to the Belgian Surrealists such as René Magritte. After living as a poverty-stricken poet for twenty years, he decided to become an artist, though he had no artistic training. A rather ironic gesture, on the invitation to his first solo show in 1964 at the Galerie St. Laurent in Brussels, he explained: “I, too, wondered if I couldn’t see something and succeed in life…The idea of inventing something insincere finally crossed my mind and I set to work straightaway.” Often using found or discarded materials, he exhibited banal objects, words, lettering, child-like drawings, books, catalogues, and prints on a range of surfaces from canvases to plastic relief. Between 1957 and 1967, he began making short films.

Broodthaer’s Interview with a Cat is exhibited in For the blind man…, allowing visitors to listen to his 1970 recording of his attempts to understand artwork by asking a cat whether it is “good.” This recording took place within his Musée d’Art Moderne, Département des Aigles (Museum of Modern Art, Department of Eagles), created in 1968 in his home in Brussels and later transported to a variety of institutions. Consisting of a series of “sections” appearing at different times and locations, these exhibitions of work were created under imaginary departments and housed neither a permanent collection nor location. Each section held reproductions of works of art, wall inscriptions, and film-elements, complete with labels and a catalogue. This work illustrates Broodthaers innovative, pioneering exploration of the art context and dispute of the function of art institutions by appropriating and altering them.

Broodthaers_shadowCat2-300

Born in 1974 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Sarah Crowner currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She has participated in international exhibitions for the past decade, most recently, in Berlin, New York, Lisbon, and Paris.

In For the blind man…, Sarah Crowner has re-released both issues of The Blind Man, a small satirical magazine published by Marcel Duchamp, Beatrice Wood, and Henri-Pierre Roche. On a very different note, Crowner had her first New York solo exhibition, Paintings and Pots, earlier this year at the Nicelle Beauchene Gallery. The exhibition presented Crowner’s paintings and hand-built ceramic vessels, both of which deeply question the nature of Modernist art. The former revolutionizes the strict, systematic methods of 1950s-era hard-edged painting through her sewed combination of painted canvas panels with blocks of monochromatic fabrics and raw linen. On the other hand, her freeform vessels tread an intriguing line between traditional cultural craft and contemporary sculpture.

To explore Paintings and Pots, click here.

Crowner1-300

Click here to view the gallery guides.

Artist Blog Series: Matt Mullican and Patrick van Caeckenbergh

Matt Mullican and Patrick van Caeckenbergh / Gilian Rappaport

Berlin-based American artist Matt Mullican works in a diverse range of media, from drawing and sculpture, to electronic media, installation, and even performance art. His pervasive use of hypnosis contributes to his overall exploration of the subjective and the restrictions and benefits of separating creativity and rationality. He is well known for his long-time practice of creating series of charts, documenting his un-evidenced perspective on the origin and nature of life as we know it. It’s an elaborate attempt at duplicating externally the large network of internal processes that contribute to individual reception of universal signs and symbols. In For the blind man…, viewers enter into a complex world of Mullican’s seemingly comprehensible systems, only to find themselves deep within the artist’s distinctly personal, illogical universe.

For his performance work, as seen in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, Mullican maintains a hypnotic state of trance for multiple hours at a time, though this is expressed in a range of behaviors: from pouring himself coffee, repeating phrases ranging from curses to emotional outcries, or even using black acrylic ink to draw or paint on a range of surfaces. Click here to watch one of Matt Mullican’s performances.

blindman6

Conceptual artist Patrick van Caeckenbergh, was born in 1960 in Aalst, Belgium and lives and works in Sint-Kornelis-Horebeke, Belgium. Through both sculpture and collage, van Caeckenbergh presents his unique perception of the world through his eccentric, uncontrollable desire to collect and order. In effect, his work emerges with surreal, fantastic answers to the consideration of broad, epistemological questions.  Like Mullican, van Caeckenbergh’s complex systems are based on his own personalized system of random ordering, rather than any rational logic or pre-determined codification.

The Bum, a 1995 collage by van Caeckenbergh, is a representation of the earth as a digestive system. As a pair of buttocks discharges clouds of gas into the atmosphere, it is continuously fed by pairs of winged hands. The detailed complexity of the work likens it to an intricate ancient manuscript, with references to philosophers, writers, and poets, and oral tradition in general. Though often producing creations that are literally unbelievable, his unbounded search for solutions is incredibly alluring. Click here to see The Bum and other van Caeckenbergh images.

blindman7

Previous Entries | Next Entries
Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts 3716 Washington Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.pulitzerarts.org
Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 3750 Washington Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.contemporarystl.org
Copyright © 2007 All Rights Reserved
Powered by Wordpress
TOKY Branding + Design