Regional Report
Greetings from
Ohio. . .Wish You Were Here!
By AMBER
FOGEL

Lois & Richard
Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art, Cincinnati, designed by Zaha
Hadid
When I decided to
leave New York City for the flatlands of central Ohio, my friends and
acquaintances wondered if I had lost my head. "Why," they
asked, "would you leave New York City if you want to write about
art?" As if no good art worth writing about existed outside Manhattan.
Why Ohio? Other than the draw of cheaper rent, I already knew that great
art could be found here. The state's three major cities-Cleveland, Columbus,
and Cincinnati-may not be widely acknowledged as cultural and artistic
trend setters like New York and Chicago (at least, not yet anyway),
each in its own way has built unique and expanding arts communities
that continue to bring in (and produce) the best and the brightest artists
and exhibitions.
Cleveland
Possibly the most liberal location of the three C's, Cleveland once
was referred to as the "mistake on the lake" -a name borne
from not only its proximity to Lake Erie, but also due to its roughshod
economic history and an infamous chemical fire on the Cuyahoga River.
This "mistake" reversed its reputation by creating a downtown
scene that turned Cleveland into a model of urban rebirth.
Three art venues top the list in Cleveland. The first is the Museum
of Contemporary Art or MOCA (formerly the Cleveland Center for Contemporary
Art). Founded in 1968 by gallerist Marjorie Talalay and Nina Sundell,
daughter of Leo Castelli and Ileana Sonnabend, the venue had access
to cutting edge art from the start. It remains committed to presenting
major shows of current art by the artists who frequent the pages of
Art Forum and Art in America.
The oldest art venue in the city is The Cleveland Museum of Art, established
in 1913. In the throes of its own major expansion designed by architect
Rafael Vinoly, the museum is focusing on smaller, more frequent exhibitions.
"The History of Japanese Photography" and the "Charles
Isaacs and Carol Nigro Collection of American Photography" are
the most recent, with latter highlighting the recent acquisition of
22 images that range in date from 1850 to 1911. The collection includes
an 1850 montage of daguerreotypes from Southworth and Hawes titled Medallion
Portrait of a Woman. This is a unique piece indeed, with an oval-shaped
central image of a woman surrounded by various profile views. Given
the rarity of the daguerreotype, finding multiple images in one piece
is a unique example of the technical excellence and unique approach
honed by Southworth and Hawes during photography's infancy.
In an effort to put more focus on contemporary art, The Cleveland Museum
of Art has instituted its first contemporary art curator. More significantly,
the museum created a small gallery space for rotating exhibitions of
current art. Titled "Project 2.4.4" the space's exhibition
schedule is kept flexible so that it can respond more immediately to
current art. The most recent show was titled "Metascape" wherein
contemporary artists dealt with the traditional theme of landscape in
completely untraditional ways. Works included pieces from artists such
as Benjamin Edwards who also participated in "Painting as Paradox"
at Artists Space last fall and Julie Mehretu, whose work was also included
in "Drawing Now: Eight Propositions" at MoMA QNS last winter.
Where to find the most contemporary of the contemporary in Cleveland?
Why, at SPACES of course. SPACES was founded in 1978 by artists who,
like many artists at that time, either lacked the credentials to show
at major venues or the commercial draw that warranted gallery exhibitions-or
both. Designed to help artists who are new in their careers, are experimenting
with new ideas or are under-recognized, SPACES is often the first place
to show an artist's body of work. With a miniscule budget of around
$400,000 per year, SPACES originates six shows per year-three of them
curated and three non-curated group shows.
"Elements: Matter, Body, Mind and Spirit," the venue's current
show, features new work by four artists who "attempt to visualize
the metaphysical" through works of sound, video projection, sculptural
installation, weaving, and translucent works on paper. One artist who
approaches this theme in the most literal manner is Deborah Carlson.
With ideas rooted in Hindu spirituality, Carlson weaves, binds and hangs
richly textured and colored works of wax, wood and fiber such as Wonder
Drop (2002). These works evoke the sacredness of scrolls, tapestries
and other handmade or primitive religious symbols. The physicality of
their materials reminds us of the role symbols play in our attempt to
connect with the supernatural. These are spectacularly crafted. Which
is not to say that the works of Jee Sun Park (her sculpted, repetitive
and phallic wood forms resemble the work of Eva Hesse) and Peggy Kwong-Gordon
(delicately powerful paintings on translucent paper) are not crafted
just as marvelously, only that they require a different interpretation
of "metaphysical" -a definition that is more about the abstract
nature of time versus the supernatural.
Columbus
On June 2 The Columbus Dispatch reported that AmericanStyle Magazine
ranked Columbus as one of the top 25 arts destinations in the United
States. Finishing at No. 12, Columbus placed ahead of Pittsburgh (No.
13), Cleveland (15), Baltimore (23) and Atlanta (25). Topping the list
of favorite venues for Columbus was The Ohio State University's Wexner
Center for the Arts, which regularly showcases the work of prominent
contemporary artists and hosts lectures and symposia by influential
critics and artists of recent years. Examples include the recent exhibition
"From Pop To Now: Selections from the Sonnabend Collection"
and lectures by performance pioneer Marina Abramovic and art critic
Carter Ratcliff. Also mentioned were several galleries in the city's
popular Short North Arts District: the Rebecca Ibel Gallery which features
the work of established U. S. artists in all media, the Hawk Galleries
and its amazing, technically resplendent works in glass, and the Riffe
Gallery, which showcases the work of Ohio's artists and curators and
the collections of the state's museums and galleries.
Forced to reduce exhibitions and staff due to budget constraints, the
Columbus Museum of Art is still producing quiet, but stimulating exhibitions
as well. The current exhibition "By George! Columbus Celebrates
American Master George Bellows" is one such exhibition. Born and
raised in Columbus, Bellows (1882-1925) is considered one of the finest
artists of his generation, and the museum is the world's foremost repository
of works by the artist. This tribute exhibition showcases its collection
of the artist's paintings and lithographs. Divided into four themes:
Columbus, New York, New England and sports, 60 works demonstrate the
diversity of Bellows' uvre.
In Polo at Lakewood (1913), the swooping gestures and suspended motion
that identify Bellows are evident-the handling of paint will be familiar
to those who already know of the diagonal energy in his more widely-known
image Stag at Sharkey's (1909, Cleveland Museum of Art). Also present
in Polo at Lakewood is Bellows' use of blue and white for intense, almost
gleaming light. White horses bounce off undulating green pastures, bright
white spectator's dresses flip-flap in the wind. This image demonstrates
Bellows' move from a Social Realist approach to a modern approach given
his exposure the European trends displayed in the Armory Show of 1913.
Through this and other glowing canvases, the exhibition is a sentimental
homage to one of Ohio's favorite sons.
Cincinnati
With a rather tame
exhibition schedule at the Cincinnati Museum of Art, and the Taft Museum's
renovation, the biggest buzz in the Queen City is the grand reopening
of the Contemporary Arts Center (CAC). The building, designed by architect
Zaha Hadid, is the first and only major museum expansion project designed
by an independent female architect. Now a freestanding structure, the
Lois & Richard Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art provides spaces
for temporary exhibitions, site-specific installations, and performances
through its distinct role as a kunsthalle. The new galleries are of
varying sizes and ceiling heights that allow for connections and interlocking
designs that offer numerous spatial configurations meant to accommodate
the sometimes-enormous scale and diverse media of contemporary art.
Recognized contemporary
artists such as Vanessa Beecroft, Janet Cardiff and Yinka Shonibare
are featured alongside established and emerging artists from around
the globe in the CAC's reopening exhibition "Somewhere Better than
This Place: Alternative Social Experience in the Spaces of Contemporary
Art." To better explain the premise of this lengthy title, the
CAC's press release quotes philosopher Michael Foucault: "There
are
in every culture, in every civilization, real places
.in
which all the other real sites that can be found within the culture
are simultaneously represented, contested, and inverted," he wrote
in 1976. Labeling these sites as "heterotopia"-specifically
the territories defined by institutions such as birthing centers, prisons,
fairgrounds, and mental hospitals-these sites are spaces in which people
can analyze and critique troubling aspects of society, and consider
possible alternatives.
Foucault? In
Ohio?
Setting a certain standard for ideas in art in this very conservative
city is noting new for the CAC. The Center established itself as a leader
in 1940 as one of the first American institutions to exhibit Picasso's
Guernica. The Center continued its pioneering tradition by featuring
the work of hundreds of renowned artists early in their careers including
Laurie Anderson, Jasper Johns, Louise Nevelson, Nam June Paik, I.M.
Pei, Robert Rauschenberg, Kara Walker and Andy Warhol. Most notably,
the Center was at the center of an important First Amendment legal case
in 1990 when it successfully defended the right of Cincinnati's citizens
to view an exhibition of the photographs of Robert Mapplethorpe.
The idea behind
this grand reopening exhibition is clear and the building is spectacular,
but the exhibition can be a tad overwhelming. Works inhabit all six
floors, each serving as an exploration of the relationships among society,
place and art and encouraging direct interaction between the Center's
audiences, works of art and the building itself. A sense of order is
conveyed by arranging works according to four key themes: the social
construction of identities; discourses of social order; changing patterns
of social relations; and social encounters organized around shared experiences
of the sublime. The works reflect the role of contemporary art museums
as places distinct from all others, in which "outside" culture
is both represented and critiqued, and unique social activity is created.
With so many works and so many ideas, the exhibition functions as a
contemporary historical survey. Oxymoronic for sure, and with so many
works in so little time with so many ideas and references, one can get
lost in the intellectual soup. But hey, at least we're thinking.
Cheap rents there may be, but cheap experiences these are not. All over
the state, unique art experiences can be found, and you don't have to
fight the subway crowd to get there. Call them "cow towns"
if you will, but Ohio's cultural centers hold their own against larger
metropolitan cities. The art is beautiful. . . wish you were here!