The Renwick Gallery, the 156-year-old building part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington D.C., has a new mission in life. It reopened last week in a grand fashion with Wonder, an exhibition of nine contemporary artists who each took over a room in the newly-remodeled space. The exhibition will run for the next six months.
Above image: Chakaia Booker, Anonymous Donor, 2015. Photograph by Ron Blunt.
Two years and $30 million in renovations left the Renwick with an updated design and a new philosophical outlook. Renwick director Elizabeth Broun told the New York Times that the institution will now focus on “craftsmanship in a digital age.” More than that, Broun wants to see art that is not cloistered and instead “looks out.” The new mission can be seen in the computer-aided installations and in the gallery’s encouragement of photography.
“It’s not a precious object in a studio,” she told the New York Times. “It engages the world in a broader way.”
The immersive installations were created by Jennifer Angus, Chakaia Booker, Gabriel Dawe, Dara Donovan, Patrick Dougherty, Janet Echelman, John Grade, Maya Lin and Leo Villareal. Curator Nicholas R. Bell said that the concept of “wonder” was “deeply intertwined with how we experience art.” He said that the nine artists excel in startling their audiences, overwhelming them and inviting them to marvel at their works. The gallery states:
While the nine artists work in strikingly different media, they are connected by a shared interest in materiality and the labor-intensive creation of objects by hand in a digital age. Their works are created by exploring the potential of unlikely materials and utilizing both traditional techniques and cutting-edge technology. The resulting installations are expressions of process, labor and materials that are grounded in our everyday world, but which combine to produce awe-inspiring results.
Below are photographs of the installations, accompanied by brief descriptions.
Love contemporary ceramic art and design? Let us know in the comments.
Nancie Mills Pipgras
Is this the End of the Adoration of the Object at the Renwick? Or simply an open invitation to engage with craft on multiple levels? I do hope the Renwick will strike a balance between the two.
Ron porter
Touché Paul
paul mathieu
If art is only for temporary experiences, is it art anymore or simply entertainment?
thomas stollar
PM I would be interested to know your definition of art. I ask because I wonder how you see this work as different to other ‘art’, and what makes the experience of this work any more or less temporary. I would add that I think art has always been about entertainment for a long time, at least as long as there have been galleries and museums.
thomas stollar
Sorry, I meant that art has been about entertainment at least as long as there have been galleries and museums.
Alexandra Wilde
Wonderful imagery. I so wish I could see it in person!