Mirror Image
to
Madison Museum of Contemporary Art 227 State St., Madison, Wisconsin 53703
2/23-5/19.
press release: Drawn entirely from MMoCA’s permanent collection, Mirror Image presents the evolution of the portrait from the early twentieth century to the present. A mirrored reflection of the presence of both artist and sitter, portraiture has long been a part of the history of art. While often depicting physical likeness, portraiture also addresses issues of identity and the personality of an individual. The introduction of the photograph, alongside the movement to abstraction, shifted the portrait from an elite mode of documentation to a more conceptual approach of representing self and other.
Today the contemporary practice of portraiture is even more accessible through the ubiquitous social media phenomenon of the selfie. Throughout history, the portrait remains a means for engagement with others and for the memorialization of self. Mirror Image contains over 100 portraits—over half haven’t been on view in over two decades, including 30 works that have never been on view. The exhibition features work by artists Gertrude Abercrombie, Ivan Albright, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Warrington Colescott, Jim Dine, David Hockney, Alex Katz, Käthe Kollwitz, Henri Matisse, Jim Nutt, Diego Rivera, and Karl Wirsum.
GALLERY TALKS
March 29, 6:30-7 PM • Solid State and Liquid Intelligence
Faisal Abdu’Allah will discuss the impact of digital photographic processes on contemporary photography using Mirror Image as a context for exploration.
Abdu'Allah is a multidisciplinary artist and associate professor in the UW-Madison art department whose work explores identity in relation to cultural diversity and multiculturalism.
April 4, 1-1:45 PM • Telling Stories: Narrative In Contemporary Portraiture
Contemporary portraits probe below the surface to suggest narratives that go beyond superficial likenesses. Fred Stonehouse will discuss a selection of portraits in Mirror Image that express potential storylines, including two of his works from the late 1980s.
Fred Stonehouse is an artist and professor in the UW-Madison Art Department where he teaches advanced drawing and painting.