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Born to a prominent family in Havana but exiled to the United
States as a girl, Ana Mendieta (1948-1985) is regarded as one of
the most significant artists of the postwar era. During her
too-brief career, she produced a distinctive body of work that
includes drawings, installations, performances, photographs, and
sculptures. Less well known is her remarkable and prolific
production of films. This richly illustrated catalogue presents a
series of sequential color stills from each of twenty-one original
Super 8 films that have been newly preserved and digitized in high
definition for the 2015 exhibition, combined with related
photographs, and reference still images from all of the artist's
104 filmworks; together these illustrations sample the full range
of the artist's film practice from 1971 to 1981. The book includes
Mendieta's first published comprehensive filmography resulting from
three years of collaborative research conducted by the Estate of
Ana Mendieta Collection and the University of Minnesota as well as
original essays by John Perreault, Michael Rush, Rachel Weiss, Lynn
Lukkas, Raquel Cecilia Mendieta, and Laura Wertheim Joseph. The
first book-length treatment of Mendieta's moving-image practice,
Covered in Time and History aims to locate her films centrally
within her larger oeuvre and at the forefront of the
multidisciplinary shifts that characterized visual arts practice
during the 1970s. Published in association with the Katherine E.
Nash Gallery at the University of Minnesota. Exhibition dates:
University of California, Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film
Archive (BAMPFA): November 9, 2016-February 12, 2017 NSU Art Museum
Fort Lauderdate: February 28-July 3, 2016 Katherine E. Nash
Gallery, University of Minnesota: September 15-December 12, 2015
Throughout the 20th century, there were increasing numbers of
artists who chose to work within a fine art aesthetic (i.e.,
expressive, communicative, innovative, unique) while simultaneously
embracing qualities associated with craft production (i.e.,
intimacy, materiality, labor, ritual). At the periphery of their
world loomed issues of status, gender, community, and economics.
This fluid situation made for an exciting mix of ideas that helped
perpetuate an ongoing debate within an art world no longer as
monothematic as it appeared in print. Objects and Meaning expands
upon a national conversation questioning how various academic
disciplines and cultural institutions approach and assign meaning
to artist-made objects in postmodern North America. Although most
of the discourse since the mid 20th century revolved around the
split between art and craft, the contributors to this collection of
essays take a broader view, examining the historical, cultural, and
theoretical perspectives that defined the parameters of that
conversation. Their focus is on issues concerning works that
appeared to 'cross over' from mainstream art to an amorphous and
pluralistic aesthetic milieu that has yet to be defined. The essays
collected for this volume, loosely organized into three
groupings_Historical Contexts, Cultural Systems, and Theoretical
Frames_contribute to a deeper understanding of the meaning of
objects and how that meaning comes to be defined. Although the
style of writing in this collection ranges from passionate
conviction to cool observation with points of view from different
professional backgrounds, each essay reflects original ideas
introduced into the cultural dialogue during this period.
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