Now that spring has actually arrived, I ventured forth to the Hudson Valley to make some visits that had been long-postponed by our recent terrible winter weather.
First I spent a whole day with artists Ken Landauer and Julianne Swartz, a married couple who share a custom -built home and studio in Kingston , NY . In addition to visiting their studios to see works-in-progress by both artists (and enjoying a delicious home-cooked lunch!), I also discussed the possible loan of Ken’s outdoor sculpture King, originally created in 2007 for the Socrates Sculpture Park in New York . This beautiful and poignant work involves a king-sized bed, fitted with extremely expensive and elegant Pratesi linens, set within a Plexiglas and steel architectural reliquary box. Later that day, we visited the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at SUNY New Paltz to see the exhibition Thick and Thin: Ken Landauer and Julianne Swartz, a sharp and beautiful juxtaposition of their work by curator Brian Wallace. Back in 1994, I had co-organized the group exhibition The Computer in the Studio with Brian, which was installed both at deCordova and at the now-defunct Boston Computer Museum . Julianne Swartz will soon install a major public art piece for the High Line in New York, and in the fall of 2012 deCordova will present her first large-scale museum solo exhibition, Julianne Swartz: How Deep is Your.
Jon Isherwood in his studio |
On Day 2 I visited sculptor Jon Isherwood at his studio in
DeWitt Godfrey, Picker Sculpture, at The Fields |
Philip Grausman, Leucantha, at The Fields |
Mary Ann Unger, Misericordia, at The Fields |
Bernar Venet, installation of Arcs, at the Fields |
Deputy Director for Curatorial Affairs