See complete photo credits below
September 10, 2009 to January 10, 2010
Sponsorship for the exhibition has been generously provided by the
Artists’ Legacy Foundation, the Nancy Hoffman Gallery, the Bransten
Family Charitable Trust, the National Endowment for the Arts, Friends
of Contemporary Ceramics, the Hal Jackman Foundation and PACART.
California-based artist Viola Frey (1933 – 2004) broke new ground by creating monumental figurative sculptures in clay that served to elevate the status of ceramics as an art form in the second half of the 20th century.
The Gardiner Museum is proud to present BIGGER, BETTER, MORE: THE ART OF VIOLA FREY (September 10, 2009 to January 10, 2010), the first comprehensive assessment of Frey’s career and legacy since her death in 2004.
This groundbreaking exhibition features 22 works in a variety of media from leading public and private collections in the United States including the Artists’ Legacy Foundation, the Nancy Hoffman Gallery, the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Frey first established her reputation in the late 1960s with a series of ceramic sculptures featuring quirky assemblages of images inspired by objects found in local flea markets. In the late 1970s, she began to move away from assemblage sculptures and concentrated on creating large-scale figures. These larger than life sculptures typically depict contemporary men and women in stiff, awkward poses that directly engage and involve viewers. The surfaces are usually painted in bold primary colours that further enhance their visual appeal and emotional impact.
Frey was a revolutionary who broke through the theoretical boundaries between art and craft. Although her monumental figures attracted national and international acclaim Frey also created a strong body of paintings and drawings and experimented with photography, bronze casting and glass sculpting.
According to Gardiner Museum Executive Director Alexandra Montgomery, “BIGGER, BETTER, MORE: THE ART OF VIOLA FREY offers a rare opportunity to see some of Viola Frey’s most extraordinary work. Frey has a wide appeal as her work provides a provocative commentary on life in 20th century American and engages those with an interest in modern art and/or figurative sculpture as well as ceramics.”
BIGGER, BETTER, MORE: THE ART OF VIOLA FREY is co-organized by the Gardiner Museum and the Racine Art Museum in Racine Wisconsin. It will also travel to the Museum of Art and Design in New York City and the Arkansas Arts Centre in Little Rock. It is accompanied by a 133-page catalogue featuring three essays about the artist and images of all artwork featured in the exhibition.
Exhibition-Related Programming
Viola Frey expert Patterson Sims will give a talk and short tour of BIGGER, BETTER, MORE: THE ART OF VIOLA FREY on Saturday, October 24 at 4:00 p.m. ($10, public; $8.50, members, seniors and students). CLICK HERE TO REGISTER NOW FOR THIS EVENT
Media
Press Release: Gardiner Museum presents exhibition of epic proportions
High-Resolution Images: Gardiner Museum Media Room
Photo Credits
(from top to bottom)
Viola Frey, Man Observing Series II, 1984.
Ceramic, steel, and concrete with glazes.
Collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Partial gift of Dorothy and George Saxe to the Fine Arts Museums Foundation, 2002.148.18.
Photography © M. Lee Fatherree.
Art © Artists’ Legacy Foundation/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
Viola Frey, Weeping Woman, 1990-91.
Ceramic with glazes.
Collection of Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, Florida. Purchase, the Rose L. Kraft Fund, 92.2.
Art © Artists’ Legacy Foundation/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
Viola Frey, Man and Meissen Figurine, 1982.
Oil and acrylic on paper.
ALF-VF-0752WP.
Collection of Artists' Legacy Foundation, Oakland.
Photography by Michael Tropea, Chicago.
Art © Artists’ Legacy Foundation/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
Viola Frey, Mrs. National Geographic (also My Grandmother Figure: Mrs. National Geographic of the 1950's), 1978.
Ceramic with glazes.
Collection of Janet and Roger Robinson, Arizona.
Photography by Michael Tropea, Chicago.
Art © Artists’ Legacy Foundation/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
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