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Roger Brown, 3-D Doings: The Imagist Object in Chicago Art, 1964-1980: Tang Art Museum | Saratoga Springs, NY

Past exhibition
8 September 2018 - 6 January 2019
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
Overview
Roger Brown Twin Towers, 1974 Paint on wood 108 x 48 x 24 in 274.3 x 121.9 x 61 cm
Roger Brown
Twin Towers, 1974
Paint on wood
108 x 48 x 24 in
274.3 x 121.9 x 61 cm
3-D Doings: The Imagist Object in Chicago Art, 1964-1980 explores the sculptural work and dimensional paintings of a group of Chicago artists collectively known as the Chicago Imagists. Contemporaneous with the Pop art movement, Chicago Imagism can be characterized as warm and wacky—a stark contrast to the cooler, more aloof Pop styles in New York and London. The Imagist movement (a term coined by art historian Franz Schulze in 1972) was propelled by a core group of artists—all graduates of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago—that exhibited their work together as The Hairy Who between 1966 and 1968 at the Hyde Park Art Center on Chicago’s South Side. The Hairy Who exhibitions were among a number of group shows held throughout the 1960s and 1970s, including False Image and the Nonplussed Some in 1968 and 1969, Marriage Chicago Style in 1970, and Chicago Antigua in 1971.

 

Although each artist had their own fiercely unique style, they shared a similar interest in popular culture, comics, and material objects. Some artists, like Suellen Rocca and Roger Brown, worked with mass-produced materials, manipulating and augmenting everyday household items. Other artists used materials associated with craft: Karl Wirsum, Christina Ramberg, and Philip Hanson, for instance, made extensive use of papier mâché, and Barbara Rossi used sewn fabrics in her printmaking. Some artists, including Art Green and Eleanor Dube, painted on shaped canvases. In addition to members of the original Imagist groups, the exhibition will include work by Don Baum, the chief curator of the Imagist moment; Ray Yoshida, the teacher with whom many Imagists studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; H.C. Westermann, arguably the point of origin of Chicago Imagism; and Red Grooms, whose large-scale installation City of Chicago links the Windy City to artists in New York City and beyond.
 

3-D Doings is organized by Tang Museum Dayton Director Ian Berry and Chicago-based curators and scholars John Corbett and Jim Dempsey. The exhibition and subsequent catalogue are funded in part by The Andy Warhol Foundation, and the Terra Foundation for American Art, as part of Art Design Chicago.

 

Art Design Chicago is a wide-ranging initiative to explore the breadth of Chicago’s role as a catalyst and incubator for innovations in art and design. Spearheaded and funded by the Terra Foundation, with significant support from The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, Art Design Chicago was developed in partnership with more than 40 cultural organizations to celebrate Chicago’s artists, designers, and creative producers. Art Design Chicago will feature more than 25 exhibitions and hundreds of public programs, presented throughout 2018, as well as the creation of several scholarly publications and a four-part documentary. 

 

John Corbett and Jim Dempsey are longtime Chicago scholars and curators, having organized shows at the Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago, the School of the Art Institute, Chicago, and the Chicago History Museum, among others. They are the co-owners of the Corbett vs. Dempsey Gallery in Chicago.

  • Official Tang Site
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Works
  • Roger Brown Twin Towers, 1974 Paint on wood 108 x 48 x 24 in 274.3 x 121.9 x 61 cm
    Roger Brown
    Twin Towers, 1974
    Paint on wood
    108 x 48 x 24 in
    274.3 x 121.9 x 61 cm
  • Roger Brown, Foothills Footstool, 1975
    Roger Brown, Foothills Footstool, 1975
Installation Views
  • 3Ddoings 16
  • 3Ddoings 12
  • Img 1123
  • 3Ddoings 07
  • Img 1308
  • Tang14
  • B3 Bu753 Chicag 1000V 20180918142724 1
  • Img 1244
  • 3Ddoings 11
Press
  • ART REVIEW ‘3-D DOINGS: THE IMAGIST OBJECT IN CHICAGO ART, 1964-1980’ REVIEW: A CELEBRATION OF THE WEIRD (EXCERPT)

    Peter Plagens, The Wall Street Journal, September 18, 2018

Related artist

  • Estate of Roger Brown

    Estate of Roger Brown

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