MoAFL “Tom Wesselmann Draws” press preview & exhibition opening

Tom Wesselmann Draws, a major exhibition of the Pop artist’s most intimate works, is coming to the Museum of Art I Fort Lauderdale October 2, 2010-February 27, 2011

WHO/WHAT:

The Museum of Art | Fort Lauderdale will host an exhibition of drawings by Pop Art star Tom Wesselmann, which was originally conceived by Wesselmann and his wife, Claire, before the artist’s untimely death in December, 2004.  Last year, Claire Wesselmann revisited the project with Emilio Steinberger, Senior Director of Haunch of Venison gallery, to bring it to fruition.  The exhibition, which spans more than four and a half decades – from 1959 to 2004 – includes more than one hundred works, many of them large in scale and created from materials not usually associated with drawing, including steel, aluminum, fabric and molded plastic.

A Cincinnati native who came to New York in 1956 to attend art classes at Cooper Union, Tom Wesselmann was one of the originators of Pop Art.  Along with Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist and Jim Dine, Wesselmann created a body of works that helped define the visual identity of America in the 1960s.  In time, Pop Art became one of the best known movements in the history of art.  Wesselmann’s earliest works were small Cubist-inspired still lifes, several of which are in the exhibition, that combine drawing with printed color advertisements which the artist cut from magazines and newspapers.  Known chiefly as a figurative painter with a special affinity for the nude female form, Wesselmann became famous for a series of paintings begun in 1961 that he called the Great American Nude.  Several large-scale finished drawings and preparatory works for the Great American Nude as well as for a second series, Bedroom Paintings, are featured in the exhibition.  Most of the drawings in the show have never been seen outside the artist’s studio before now.

“We are immensely grateful to Claire Wesselmann not just for curating the exhibition and facilitating the loans of works from the artist’s estate, but also for including one of Tom Wesselmann’s giant (104.5 x 391 x 79 inches) cutout still lifes  (Still Life #61) from 1976.  Wesselmann goes beyond taking everyday objects –toothbrush, ruby ring, and a set of keys– and has memorialized them to an impossible level of reality,” said Irvin Lippman, Executive Director, Museum of Art | Fort Lauderdale.

Tom Wesselmann Draws is the most comprehensive exhibition of drawings by the artist that has ever been assembled.  It will be on view at the Museum of Art I Fort Lauderdale from October 2, 2010 through February 27, 2011.  Following its presentation in Fort Lauderdale, the exhibition travels to the Kreeger Museum in Washington, D.C. in 2011.

The Museum of Art I Fort Lauderdale was founded in 1958 and is located at One East Las Olas Boulevard in downtown Fort Lauderdale.  In July 2008, the Museum became part of Nova Southeastern University.  The Museum’s permanent collection includes a large selection of paintings and works on paper by American artist William Glackens and a significant number of paintings, sculptures and works on paper by contemporary Latin American artists, including a strong selection of works by artists from Cuba.  The Museum is especially rich in paintings, drawings and prints by the CoBrA artists.

WHEN:

October 2, 2010 – February 27, 2011

WHERE:

Museum of Art | Fort Lauderdale

One East Las Olas Boulevard at Andrews Avenue

(954) 525-5500 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (954) 525-5500      end_of_the_skype_highlighting

ABOUT THE MUSEUM OF ART I FORT LAUDERDALE

The Museum of Art | Fort Lauderdale is open Tuesday – Saturday 11 am – 5 pm, with extended hours on Thursday until 8 pm, Sundays 12 pm – 5 pm, and closed on Mondays.   The Museum of Art is located at One East Las Olas Boulevard at Andrews Avenue in Downtown Fort Lauderdale. Individual ticket prices are $10 for adults, $7 for seniors 65+, and $5 for students 6-17 (excluding special ticketed exhibitions and events).

Since its founding in 1958, the Museum of Art I Fort Lauderdale has served our growing community as a gathering place for friends and neighbors, a lifelong learning center for children and adults, and as a dynamic hub for the cultural life of Broward County.  Housed since 1986 in a distinguished modernist building designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes, the Museum is South Florida’s premiere destination for quality exhibitions and programs that encompass every facet of civilization’s visual history.  During the past five years, more than one and one-half million visitors have enjoyed remarkable exhibitions like Cradle of Christianity, Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs, and American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell.  In 2008, the Museum became part of Nova Southeastern University, the sixth largest private university in the nation, to form an expanded arts campus that joins the school’s Davie location with the Museum’s downtown Fort Lauderdale address.

Funding for the Museum of Art is provided, in part, by the Broward County Board of County Commissioners as recommended by the Broward Cultural Council; the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, the Florida Council on Arts and Culture.

Image cutline:

Tom Wesselmann

Still Life # 61, 1976

Oil on shaped canvases

104 ½ x 391 x 79 inches

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