Thursday, February 23, 2017

Person Of The Crowd: The Art Of Flanerie At The Barnes Foundation In Philadelphia, February 25th-May 22nd 2017 #Personofthecrowd

PERSON OF THE CROWD: THE CONTEMPORARY ART OF FLÂNERIE

February 25–May 22, 2017
Roberts Gallery

Tania Bruguera (b. 1968). Displacement, 1998–1999. Courtesy Studio Bruguera
Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie features work by more than 50 international artists who have taken to the street to play detective, make fantastic maps, scavenge and shop for new materials, launch guerrilla campaigns, and make provocative spectacles of themselves to speak to issues as diverse as commodity fetishism, gentrification, gender politics, globalization, racism, and homelessness. The exhibition is on view February 25 through May 22, 2017, and features works, new performances, and historical pieces by Marina Abramović, Vito Acconci, Eleanor Antin, Constant, David Hammons, and Zhang Huan, among many others.

While much of the exhibition will be presented in the Barnes Foundation's Roberts Gallery, Person of the Crowd will also reach into the city of Philadelphia. A series of performances—by artists including Sanford Biggers, Tania Bruguera, Ayana Evans, Zachary Fabri, and Wilmer Wilson IV—will take place on the streets of Philadelphia, and billboard and street poster projects will activate the city throughout the exhibition run.

The Barnes has also commissioned New York-based artist Man Bartlett to create a project site and digital artwork exploring themes related to the exhibition and the concept of "cyberflânerie." Bartlett will act as a flâneur by documenting the street performances taking place throughout the run of the exhibition and inviting the general public to step into the position of the flâneur and share their perceptions of everyday urban life via social media using the hashtag #personofthecrowd. He will also work with teens in the Philadelphia region to develop videos documenting their own experiences as flâneurs inspired by their engagement in the public spaces of the city.

Bartlett will weave together this rich digital content—his documentation of the performances, the public's social media posts as interpreted by a custom-built machine learning application, and Philadelphia students' videos—to create the final piece which will live on a project site and will be projected inside the Barnes Foundation's Annenberg Court.
View Bartlett's evolving piece and exhibition information at personofthecrowd.org.

ARTISTS
Marina Abramović
Vito Acconci
Franz Ackermann
Francis Alÿs
Eleanor Antin
Arman
Man Bartlett
Sanford Biggers
Slater Bradley
Stanley Brouwn
Tania Bruguera
Ingrid Calame
Sophie Calle
Papo Colo
Constant
Guy Debord
Allan Espiritu
Ayana Evans
Daphne Fitzpatrick
Zachary Fabri
Guerrilla Girls
Kendell Geers
Adler Guerrier
David Hammons
Keith Haring
Hi Red Center
Jenny Holzer
Tehching Hsieh
Zhang Huan
Allan Kaprow
Kimsooja
Moshekwa Langa
Lynn Hershman Leeson
Virgil Marti
Lee Mingwei
Annette Messager
Ivan Cardoso / Hélio Oiticica
Jefferson Pinder
Adrian Piper
William Pope.L
Robert Rauschenberg
Martha Rosler
Christy Rupp
Ed Ruscha
Carolee Schneemann
Dread Scott
Jean Shin
Mierle Laderman Ukeles
Gillian Wearing
Wilmer Wilson IV
Brett Day Windham
David Wojnarowicz 

IN THE NEWS

"The Barnes Foundation, in a notable expansion of its historical purview, has assembled artworks stretching from the post-war era to today that were made with the flâneur's most esteemed qualities in mind: alacrity, an openness to the public and social discourse, a focus on daily life, and a flair for performance." — Artforum, January 2017
"The Barnes Foundation will celebrate more than 50 artists' engagement with different communities in Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie, opening Feb. 25." — The New York Times: Style Magazine


Major support for Person of the Crowd: The Contemporary Art of Flânerie has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage 
PCAH Logo
with additional support from
Comcast NBCUniversal
This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.
NEA
The exhibition is also made possible by the generosity of individual contributors to the Barnes Foundation Exhibition Fund, the Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Exhibition Fund, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, and the Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation.

No comments:

Post a Comment