|
Williams College Museum of Art Presents
Critical Encounters: Collecting Contemporary Photography
August 4–December 16, 2007
Williamstown,
MA—The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) presents Critical
Encounters: Collecting Contemporary Photography, now on view through
December 16, 2007. This exhibition features 48 photographs,
both from the museum's permanent collection and from New
York based art critic Phyllis Tuchman. Ms. Tuchman will speak
at WCMA on Tuesday, October 23 at 4:30 pm on how she amassed such
a broad collection of contemporary photography on a budget. Ms. Tuchman
has discovered through the years that “when you’re putting together a collection, everything
comes with a story.” Her presentation promises to be rich with
personal anecdotes. This is a free event and all are invited
to attend.
Critical Encounters: Collecting
Contemporary Photography assembles some of the most influential
photographers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, demonstrating
the breadth of Ms. Tuchman's eye for contemporary photography and
how a small private collection can be complementary to a museum's
collection. A selection of works in the exhibition are intended
as future gifts to the museum in honor of Deborah Rothschild, Senior
Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at WCMA, who is retiring
on October 1.
Ms. Tuchman’s collection
includes photography by Richard Billingham, who was short-listed
for the Turner Prize in 2001; Wolfgang Tillmans, a German photographer
known for his investigation of the abstract found in an ordinary
day; Cindy Sherman, one of the most famous contemporary photographers
today; and Justine Kurland, a young member of what Tuchman describes
as the Yale School. Also included is Annie Leibovitz, whose
current show, Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer’s Life is
currently on an international tour. Gregory Crewdson is
represented in this exhibition following WCMA’s 2006-2007
exhibition Drawing on Hopper: Gregory Crewdson/Edward Hopper,
which ended in April. Additionally, this exhibition features
renowned camp photographer Yasumasa Morimura, as well as historically
important photographers such as Eugene Atget and Hans Namuth.
This exhibition melds with WCMA’s
mission to provide a teaching facility for the students of Williams
College. By integrating the museum's permanent collection with
these recent gifts, WCMA is able to show how Tuchman's promised
gifts add depth and resonance to its present holdings. It also
demonstrates how living with art adds texture to one's daily domestic
experiences. Ms. Tuchman asserts “besides luck and confidence,
you need to be at the right place at the right time. You must trust
your heart. It’s like falling in love.”
Phyllis Tuchman’s prolific
career includes numerous contributions to journals such as Art
in America, Art News, Art Journal and Smithsonian, as well as exhibition
catalogues Dan Flavin (National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC,
2004), Minimalism (Chicago 1989), Mark di Suvero (Storm King Art
Center, 1985), and most recently Larry Poons (New York, 2007). Additionally
she wrote George Segal (Abbeville Press, 1983), a comprehensive
book on the artist, making her one of the leading experts on the
sculptor’s work. Having curated two important shows “Six
in Bronze” in 1984 and “BIG little SCULPTURE” in
1988, Tuchman is an important contributor to the Williams College
Museum of Art. In addition to this, she lectured for several
years in the Art History Department at Williams College. She received
the National Endowment for the Arts Critics Grant and was a Visiting
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow at Princeton University. Currently,
Tuchman lives in New York City where she is completing her dissertation,
The Rise of Minimalism: Andre, Flavin, Judd, LeWitt, Morris, at
the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.
Dr. Deborah Rothschild’s most recent project, Making it New: The Art
and Style of Sara and Gerald Murphy is currently on view through November
11, 2007. Her exhibition will travel to the Yale University Art Gallery (February
26-May 4, 2008) and the Dallas Museum of Art (June 8-September 14, 2008).
Programming
The Williams College Museum of Art will celebrate the opening
of all of its fall exhibitions with a Season Premiere Party, Tuesday,
September 25, from 4:00 to 7:00 pm. Additionally, WCMA will host "A
Critic Collects: An Informal Conversation with Phyllis Tuchman" on
Tuesday, October 23 at 4:30 pm. Both events are free and open to
the public.
The Williams College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through
Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission
is free and the museum is wheelchair accessible. Publicity images for
this and other current exhibitions are available for use by the press.
Contact: Suzanne A. Silitch, Director of Public Relations and External
Affairs, 413.597.3178
Publicity Images Available
Publicity images for Critical Encounters: Collecting Contemporary
Photography are available for use in connection with the exhibition.
These images are for members of the press only. Click the thumbnails
below for high resolution images and email
Suzanne Silitch, Director of Public Relations and External Affairs ,
once you have downloaded them. Please be sure to include the
correct credit information in your publication.
|

Cindy Sherman (American, b. 1954)
Untitled (Woman
in Sun Dress), 2003
color photograph
Collection of Phyllis Tuchman
Courtesy of the Artist
and Metro Pictures
TL.2007.74.38
|

Justine Kurland (American, b. 1969)
Gibraltar, 2000
satin laminated c-print in wood frame
Collection of Phyllis Tuchman
Courtesy of the Artist
TL.2007.74.19
|
|

Richard Billingham (British, b. 1970)
Untitled,
1995
C-print
Collection of Phyllis Tuchman
Courtesy of the artist
and Anthony Reynolds Gallery
TL.2007.74.6
|

Wolfgang Tillmans (German, b. 1968)
New Family, 2001
C-print
Collection of Phyllis Tuchman © Wolfgang Tillmans
TL.2007.74.42
|
|