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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.

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  • Hauling: Love your blog, even though coming from me, the guy who loves everything green, it probably doesn’t...
  • Amy: Thank you, Teddy, for your encouraging words!
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Latest Posts from the Pulitzer

A Midsummer Night

A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935). Directed by Max Reinhardt.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935). Directed by Max Reinhardt. Shown from left: Mickey Rooney, Olivia de Havilland. Photographer; Mickey Marigold. Warner Bros./Photofest. © Warner Bros.

This Friday, June 26, we’ll be celebrating the summer solstice by projecting Max Reinhardt’s 1935 version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at 9pm in our courtyard. Doors open at 7pm.

Since it doesn’t get dark outside until 9pm, we’ll be entertaining our guests for the first two hours in a variety of ways. The most exciting of which, to me, is a reunion of the performers from the Pulitzer’s now finished series: Staging Old Masters: Former Prisoners Perform at the Pulitzer.

Select scenes, such as the St. Sebastian, Self-Portrait with an Easel, and As You Like It – Shepherd & Shepherdess, will be performed in our courtyard throughout the night. These performances were originally done in front of specific artworks in our galleries, but by moving them outdoors, we hope to accomodate a bigger audience than was allowed indoors. In addition to these skits, we’ll be serving free refreshments and as usual, our Old Masters exhibition will be on view for the duration of the evening.

Are you excited to come? Have you circled the date and time in red marker in your calendar? Are you waiting with baited breath? I am too, but never fear, Friday will be here soon enough!

Swift as a shadow, short as any dream;
Brief as the lightning in the collied night.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 1. 1

This event is free and open to the public, so bring your friends!

Visitor Services Manager on Staging Old Masters

The Staging Old Masters weekend performances are over at the Pulitzer, and I’m feeling more rested without the hectic work week it involved. Yet, somehow I felt healthier from the energy that came with each of those shows. 

As Visitor Services Manager, I had many roles before, during, and after each performance, but my favorite one was holding the doors open at the beginning of each performance. It was at this moment I could smile and participate with my loudest “boya, boya, yo!”–joining in the procession of actors’ chant and smiling with each performer as they entered the door. 

My least favorite part of Staging Old Masters was Read the rest of this entry »

Thomas Struth Joining Old Masters

Today’s post is more of a mini-announcement –

We recently extended our Old Masters exhibition through October 3rd.  Most of the works will remain on view, with the exception of the drawings in the Lower Gallery which will be going back home to Harvard.  In their place we’re installing photographs by Thomas Struth, on view beginning June 24th.  In the meantime, here’s why our director, Matthias Waschek, decided these works made sense within the context of this exhibition:

“The displacement of artworks can take place in the dimension of space and in that of time. We have chosen to “dis-”place Old Masters from the context of the Saint Louis Art Museum and Harvard Art Museum. But even before being acquired by these two collections, the paintings were within different contexts as well. The Pulitzer installation looks both towards the history of presentation in a pre-electrical world and towards a reconciliation of the old and the contemporary.

In my mind, Thomas Struth also confronts the old and the new. In contrast to the modernity of the visitors with their clothes, glasses and cameras, stands the “oldness” of the paintings. Seen optimistically, these works have an eternal value, and the reactions of the visitors transcend the time into which they were born. Seen pessimistically, the paintings look like dinosaurs or fossils, and the awe, curiosity, and sometimes the stressed expression on their faces show how little the visitors have in common with the world of the old masters.

Artworks need viewers. We hope that the the presentation of art at the Pulitzer invites the viewers to look afresh. Struth is an excellent fit for this exhibition, as he makes us view along with other modern viewers.”

We can’t officially announce which photos will be on view yet, but I’ll let you know as soon as we can!

Philly, the City of Brotherly Love

Greetings from a recent trip to Philadelphia, where I and several other PFA staff members attended the annual American Association of Museums Conference.  It was a typical conference complete with educational sessions, networking, and expo-walking.  However, it was special in that it was a time and place that I decided–museums are for me. 

The talks I went to ranged from the Public Relations aspects, finance, volunteer services, etc.  I covered multiple topics and found out more than I probably ever need to know on running a museum.  I also learned about wonderful experimental programs being developed at museums around the United States.  In fact the theme of experimentation was wound throughout the conference and I found myself feeling like the Pulitzer isn’t the only Laboratory in the world.  

It wasn’t all seriousness though–there were museums a plenty to visit! The Mütter, The Fabric Workshop and Museum, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art were all wonderful and made me have those great moments that only art provides for me.  Each is a very different type of institution and each shows a very different type of art or artifact–but each is reliant upon ideas and viewers to witness them. 

In a full wall at the PMA, I discovered the brother to one of the current paintings at the Pulitzer.  St. Sebastian, off his tree stump and being healed by St. Irene, opened my eyes to the rest of the story presented on our walls.  Art is a dialogue and museums are necessary to house the story. It was a wonderful treat to hear so many other stories and ways of making them available. 

St. Sebastian cured by St. Irene, by Luca Giordano at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

St. Sebastian

The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian, by Giovanni Battista Caracciolo, Harvard Art Museum, Fogg Art Museum, Gift of Herbert Pope, Edward W. Forbes and Paul J. Sachs, 1924.31, Photo by Imaging Department, President and Fellows of Harvard College

A Look at Let’s Look: Making Connections at the Pulitzer

Buddies

In Bob’s post “Day 1 of Alzheimer’s Program: I Doubt It’s Too Late,” Bob briefly introduced Let’s Look: Making Connections at the Pulitzer, a program designed for people with early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Carol North, Director of the Metro Theater Company, and JoAnn Sanditz, a docent at the St. Louis Art Museum, led the fourth meeting of the workshop this Monday afternoon. The session covered basics of sculpture and portraiture, while interweaving exercises in teamwork. Most significant about this week was that it was the first time the participants met with their “art buddies,” third, fourth, and fifth grade students from Cole Elementary School.

The activities began with creating a sculpture out of wooden blocks:

http://www.vimeo.com/3926561

If you want to learn more about Let’s Look and what happened on Monday, please visit the Let’s Look blog, where we will continue to post the program’s progress along with videos and photos.

Words from a French-Speaking Tour Guide

Since January 16, there have been two more tours given by the Lindenwood students, who are studying French. The tour guides agreed to write a few words, summarizing their experience with the French program so far. Here are the thoughts of Raissa Leite:

“Having the opportunity to participate in the French Project is great! I not only get to know more about art but also am involved with this great foundation. Before taking this course (we take this as a class during our January intersession at Lindenwood), I had never heard of the Pulitzer Foundation and now, I have the chance to be part of it, even though it is just for a short time. It has been a great opportunity to practice my French. I feel very blessed for having this opportunity and I wish I could do this again.”

1-20-08-058.JPG

Tilting the Paintings

The installation is finished, and we are just about set for tomorrow night’s opening!  I took one final video of the installation (check out our talented art handlers hanging one of the final works!) and interviewed Matthias about the tilt of the paintings in the Main Gallery.  Please excuse the quality in this video – my little Flip Video Camera didn’t like the lighting that day.  I also wanted to show the paintings from the side – both so you can get a good look at their tilt and so I don’t give away too much yet.  You’ve gotta come to the opening tomorrow night for that!

http://www.vimeo.com/2033362

Natural Lighting with Old Masters

Here’s a video of Matthias, standing in front of what will no doubt be the darkest gallery in the Old Masters exhibition, the Cube Gallery. Why so dark you ask? Click on the video to find out!

http://www.vimeo.com/2020680

Old Masters: Questions and Answers

Lauren’s post last week on the digital mock-ups for our upcoming Old Masters exhibition prompted an excellent question in the post’s comments section. So excellent in fact, that I decided to get an answer on from our director, Matthias Waschek, and make it today’s blog post! Here’s what she asked:

“I appreciate the digital mock-ups for the Old Masters Installation & the exhibit itself. However, I would like to know why? It seems rather anti-Pulitzer to mount an Old Masters exhibit at an art museum where the building itself is a masterpiece of modern architecture. I am an art professional, have taught many students about modern and contemporary art and have a background in western art. We see references to, merges with and criticism about Old Master artworks, but I cannot recall placing OM in Modernity & Post-Modernity- one complementing the other, juxtaposing, or offering a fresh, new view on OM. This upcoming exhibit does not seem to complement nor extend past Pulitzer exhibits. Please explain. Thanks.”

Here’s Matthias’s reply:

Although the Pulitzer’s main focus is Modernism, we have a track record of showing artworks from other periods and cultures, as demonstrated in our exhibition Exploring Ando’s Space: Art and the Spiritual. Those who had a chance to see it remember juxtapositions of Asmat Ancestor Poles from Papua New Guinea with Kelly’s Blue Black, Durer’s Apocalypse with Salcedo’s Atrabiliarios and Pierre Raymond’s 16th century enamels with Beckmann’s Christ and the Adulterous Women. The installations shots are archived on our web catalogue (click here).

However, as opposed to a Kunsthalle where everything can be on view, our exhibitions are co-determined by the building. The exhibition Water was inspired by our watercourt, Portrait/Homage/Embodiment was inspired by two Serra works that were already reacting to the building (Joplin and Joe), etc.

The upcoming exhibition, Ideal (Dis-) Placements: Old Masters at the Pulitzer, is based on a fewideas relating to the Ando building. The building lets in different degrees of natural light, which corresponds to the way these works were originally viewed. The specific placement of the artworks transforms the modernist galleries into abstracted dark Roman side-chapels from the 16th century, light princely galleries from the 18th, obscured medieval churches, and so on.

Due to construction on both of their buildings, the opportunity came up to show Old Masters from the collections of the Harvard Art Museum and Saint Louis Art Museum.  The Pulitzer is both a laboratory and a sanctuary, and this was a chance to explore what Ando’s architecture can do to revitalize this legacy.  It allows us to think about a mutually beneficial relationship between the contemporary and the old, which might be of interest for future expansions for museums in the country and beyond.

I disagree that Modernism and the legacy of Old Masters cannot interact. On the contrary, a lot of attempts have been made to reconcile both. Particularly in the 1960s, various initiatives were presented to ‘re-actualize’ Old Masters via contemporary architecture. The two most prominent examples are the Goulbenkian’s brutalism-building in Lisbon and Scarpa’s addition to the Museo del Castelvecchio in Verona. In the first case, works were isolated in such a way that 18th century cabinets, 16th century paintings or Egyptian funeral gifts alike could be enjoyed and studied for their material and formal qualities, in the second case the use of concrete highlighted the medieval stonework – even translated it into modernity – and therefore contextualized the Old Master paintings in a old/new language. The Libon example might appear dated to our postmodern eyes, the Verona example is likely to still “work”, as it is about contextualization and not its opposite. So, in a way, Scarpa is the big master behind our thinking of Old Masters at the Pulitzer.

Digital Mockups for the Old Masters Installation

Back in May, I posted a blog about Installing Art Electronically – where I described working with curators to design the Pulitzer’s upcoming Old Masters exhibition by hanging electronic paintings on electronic versions of the Pulitzer’s gallery spaces. The images that I posted in that blog were nondescript, only showing gray squares where artwork should have been. Since that post we have gone through many different gallery mockup scenarios, which were determined by a constant flow of ideas but also by the availability of works from the St. Louis Art Museum and Harvard.Well, for those of you that were frustrated by the lack of details from my previous posting, I am here to show you light and color! I have permission to share with everyone the next step in that digital process. Using pictures taken of the Pulitzer galleries, I inserted the Old Master paintings onto the walls to give the curators an even better view of how these paintings will look when hung.

entrance_gallery1.jpg

Read the rest of this entry »

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