Not exact matches
Through its focus on pathways linking memory, movement, the loss of home, and the
invention of a new one, the
exhibition opens an inclusive critique of stereotypes
about migrants and migration.
The
exhibition explores six subjects that helped shape America during the period — the buffalo, giant sequoia and Niagara Falls represent American beliefs
about abundant natural resources for fueling the nation's progress, while
inventions such as the clock, the gun and the railroad linked improvements in technology with the purposeful use of time.
On the occasion of Matisse: Radical
Invention, 1913 — 1917 at the MoMA (July 18 — October 11, 2010), John Elderfield, who co-organized the
exhibition, stopped by Art International Radio to talk with Rail publisher, Phong Bui,
about the exhibit.
On the occasion of Matisse: Radical
Invention, 1913 — 1917 at the MoMA (July 18 — October 11, 2010), John Elderfield, Chief Curator Emeritus of Painting and Sculpture, the Museum of Modern Art, who co-organized the
exhibition with Stephanie D'Alessandro, Gary C. and Frances Comer, Curator of Modern Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, stopped by Art International Radio to talk with Rail publisher, Phong Bui,
about the exhibit.