Robert Mallary

Excerpt from Curator’s Statement:

Robert Mallary’s artwork spans the pivotal decades of the American hegemony in visual arts in the twentieth century. His work reflected and presaged many of the artistic practices of our time and augured a future of art that as yet is unrealized.

Robert Mallary was a prominent and respected artist. Early in his career he shared both a friendship and a studio with Willem DeKooning. He had close friendship with many of the pivotal artists of his day, including Elaine DeKooning, Richard Diebenkorn, Chuck Close, and Wayne Thibaud. He was in the vanguard of the ascendancy of the American visual arts on the world scene.

Mallary’s early critical success came from his exploratory use of polymers and other resins in sculpture. For Mallary as well as for other artists (most especially Eva Hesse), prolonged use of these new media led to health complications. Because of his own adverse health conditions, Mallary became concerned for other artists. His are the earliest writings warning others artists of the health hazards of the new arts materials. Abandoning use of these toxic materials, Mallary began exploring another new medium of art making, computers. In the nineteen sixties Robert Mallary had the prescience to see that a future would exist in which computers would be able to create holographic worlds, cogent and visually credible virtual worlds where for all intents and purposes reality as we know it could not be distinguished from the simulation created by the artist. This vision of the future, combined with Mallary’s commitment and intelligence, helped make Mallary one of the pioneers of computer graphics and computer art.

Robert Mallary was a keen and trenchant social observer. Much of Mallary’s early sculptural and later collage work commented on and came out of the undercurrent of our society’s conspicuous consumption of natural resources and the waste that it creates. Mallary found in this flotsam and jetsam of our consumer culture a ready source of materials that he used in his assemblage and collage. He was one of the earliest artists to use litter as an art material. The use of which today is so ubiquitous in current art practice it is difficult to imagine that it had a beginning. Among Robert Mallary’s many artistic accolades are representing the United States in the Venice Biennial, representing New York State in the New York Worlds Fair.He also received Rockefeller, Fulbright and Guggenheim grants

Regardless of the artistic merit of an artist’s oeuvre, a place in the art canon is not by any means a fixed or steadfast certainty. Many artists get their due only after their deaths, if at all. Robert Mallary was not intent on pursuing his artistic legacy; he was dedicated to creating his work and teaching. While his influence on his colleagues and students was profound, his later work did not always receive the critical attention it deserved. It is theintention of this show to begin to return Robert Mallary to his place in the arts canon.

Robert Mallary, in addition to being a renowned artist early in his career and a computer arts pioneer, was a professor in the art department here at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Robert Mallary’s influence still reverberates both in the world of art and in the commercial world of computer graphics. The artists Paul McCarthy, Mike Kelly, and Chuck Close all cite him as an early influence. He is remembered by his students for his intelligence, his artistic acumen and his technological skill and understanding.

The scope and breadth of Robert Mallary’s artistic achievements are too large for an exhibition of this size to encompass. This exhibition will therefore perforce limit itself to the exploration and presentation of Mallary’s sculptural oeuvre.

When:
Monday, March 2 – Saturday, March 28

William Parker and Hamid Drake With Special Guest Konrad “Conny” Bauer

Parker and Drake invite the reknown German trombonist Konrad “Conny” Bauer to perform in Amherst.

Thursday, February 25
Bezanson Recital Hall 8:00 pm
$12 General Public; $7 Students

Parker and Drake invite the reknown German trombonist Konrad “Conny” Bauer to perform in Amherst. Born in 1943, “Bauer has mastered the wide range of techniques available to the contemporary trombonist,” writes John Corbett, “as well as the web of genres in which the instrument is imbricated, including march, parade, circus, early jazz, bop, free improvisation, new music, even other related traditions like alphorn and bugle call.”

“Not since Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell joined forces have two musicians so organically wedded world-music influences with free jazz,” writes Jazziz. Since the late1970’s, Hamid Drake has moved easily between work with top jazz improvisers like David Murray, Don Cherry and Pharaoh Sanders, and international artists like Foday Muso Suso, Mahmoud Gania and Gigi. In 1972 Parker began playing with musicians such as Bill Dixon, Milford Graves, Billy Higgins and Sunny Murray, before becoming a member of the Cecil Taylor Unit, where he played a prominent role for over a decade. Time Out New York proclaimed William Parker one of “the 50 greatest New York musicians of all time.”

Presented in collaboration with WMUA-91.1FM

RFK: The Journey to Justice

Wednesday, February 24
Concert Hall
$8 students, $8 adults

Reserve Tickets Online

The 60’s in America was a decade of heroes, violence, love, death, progress, and disappointment. The “RFK Project” chronicles Robert Kennedy’s dramatic transformation from discomfort with and indifference towards the Civil Rights movement to a champion and crusader. This docu-drama brings to life this compelling and dramatic illumination of this crucial decade, enabling a new generation to hear the words, feel the tension and explore the issues that still resonate today. L.A. Theatre Works has been the foremost radio theater company in the United States for more than two decades. An L.A. Theatre Works performance is immediate, spontaneous, and features a first-rate cast, live sound effects, and a connection to the audience rarely felt in a traditional theater setting. This production is a perfect experience for history, social sciences, government, media and theater students. Recommended for grades 9-12.
This is a 2 hour production.

ASL Interpreted event

Curriculum Connections: Civil Rights movement, Martin Luther King, Personal and Political Convictions, Theatre, Radio Theatre

Maggie Nowinski: Swallowed

Hello Everyone!

I just wanted to remind everyone that Maggie Nowinski’s exhibit ‘Swallowed’ is still going on in Hampden ’til February 23. We invite you to come and visit if you haven’t yet!

Maggie Nowinski: Artist Statement

Plastic water bottles exist in the daily periphery of our environments, like the tap, tap, tapping of a leaking faucet, the ticking of a clock counting down to a dangerous event. As they assimilate into the corners of our environments, we swallow the methods of the bottled water industry that manufacture and advertise their contents using notions of purity and health.

Obsessed by an awareness of plastic water bottles I started collecting and working with them. Since late 2007 I have been developing a project that explores my relationship with the plastic water phenomenon. Looking at my own discomfort about participating in the world I live in, physically and psychologically, as I continually adjust to the sensation of impending doom that comes from living in today’s world, I explore the internalization of anxiety, the absorption of customary practices as normal and the impact of social and commercial processes on the individual. When I drink bottled water, the process is paradoxical – rejuvenating yet emotionally numbing. Swallowed will culminate in an installation including hundreds of photographs, thousands of plastic water bottles, video projects, audio recordings and drawings.

When we drink water we experience a somatic moment at the site where the external and internal meet – a primitive experience of a basic need being met. Plastic bottling has invaded this moment. We drink plastic water, part of a system that extends beyond the simple and immediate practice of drinking water. The residue of this process leaves internal traces in the body as it passes through our bodies – evidenced in the quenching of thirst, urinating and sweating.

When:
Wednesday, January 21 – Monday, February 23

Our Moment: RFK and Our Shared Civil Rights Legacy

Tuesday, February 16
First Churches, Northampton 7:00 pm
Free and Open to the Public.

In anticipation of the L.A. Theatre Works’ Tuesday, February 23 presentation of RFK: The Journey to Justice, the Fine Arts Center is hosting a public forum during which panelists will reflect on the role that RFK played in the Civil Rights movement, and on the continuting legacy of his involvement. Please join us for this community event featuring a non-traditional panel of speakers and performers who will touch on Robert F. Kennedy’s political legacy.

To date, panelists include Shahid Buttar, executive director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee and the People’s Campaign for the Constitution, Adrienne Williams, Director of RFK’s Child Welfare Services, Dr. Arlene Rodriguez, Dean of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences at Springfield Technical Community College, and Phil Johnston, founder of the Robert F. Kennedy Action Corps. Moderator will be local attorney Bill Newman, who practices Civil Litigation; Civil Rights; Labor and Employment, and Criminal Law, and is also director of the Western Regional Office of American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts. The panelists will speak to the historical role of the arts in social change and the civil rights issues that we face today—another pivotal moment of American history.

Presented by the UMass Fine Arts Center in collaboration with The RFK Children’s Action Corps.

American Experience: RFK – A Film Documentary Directed by David Grubin

Thursday, February 18

Augusta Savage Gallery from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Free and open to the public.

In conjunction with the L.A. Theatre Works’ Tuesday, February 23 presentation of RFK: The Journey to Justice, the Fine Arts Center will be screening a documentary film on Thursday, February 18 at the Augusta Savage Gallery in New Africa House.

Utilizing interviews and archival footage, this film offers an inspiring portrait of the influential leader—from his visionary politics to his interpersonal relationships and the tragic 1968 assassination that cut short a brilliant life and promising career. Featuring extensive interviews with family members, friends, journalists, Washington insiders, and civil rights activists, American Experience: RFK chronicles the pivotal role Robert Kennedy played in many of the major events of the 1960s—the Cuban Missile Crisis, the civil rights movement, and the war in Vietnam.

The film looks closely at Kennedy’s complicated relationships with some of the leading figures of his day, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Lyndon B. Johnson, among them. And it reveals much about his personal world, his role as family mediator, and his overwhelming grief and guilt following the assassination of his older brother. Produced by David Grubin, the award-winning director of FDR and LBJ.

It’s a Flea Market World: New Works by Kelly Moore

Thursday, February 11 – Tuesday, March 9
Augusta Savage Gallery

Fully-engaged and totally original, Kelly Moore lives in Santa Fe, where he can be found painting on canvas and paper, as well as on other more unlikely surfaces such as used tubes of paint, discarded paint brushes, wooden boxes, and electrical wiring. His dolls, hung along the sides of his flea market vendor’s booth, pop up between paintings of faces, crows, hillsides, and a range of references, marks and gestures that emerge from deep places inside him. His works have a poetic quality, giving back to us what we bring to them. About himself, he says: these are my words eye was born a black crow on the 13th day of a scorpio moon in the foothills of the arkansas ozark mountains to my scottish irish parents dismay… they took me in nonetheless, fed me, clothed me, sent me to schools and tried to domesticate me… eye attempted to live a normal life… finding employment, trying to marry and even voting regularly but failed mostly and when eye reached full crow adulthood realized eye could no longer deny my coyote nature and immediately began turning over tables and rattling the cages folks immediately said eye was crazy and lots complained eye should stop what eye was doin (those is the folks that let you know you is doing something rite) eye knew this was an important breakthrough and immediately started looking for matches and kerosine and have been settin fires ever since thank you for reading my words

Stand With Haiti

Thursday, February 11
UMass Fine Arts Center Concert Hall 7:00 pm
General Admission $20; $10 for students and youth 17 and under

Tickets available for purchase online now
The UMass Marching Band (tent.) The Young at Heart Chorus, Tehillah (St. Johns Congregational Gospel Choir, Joe Velez Quintet, UMass Jazz Ensemble I, FlavaEvolution Jazz Quartet
And Special Guests

All proceeds to benefit Partners in Health. PIH has been working on the ground in Haiti for over 20 years. PIH works to bring modern medical care to poor communities in nine countries around the world.

Sponsored by the UMass Fine Arts Center, UMass Office of Student Development, The UMass Amherst Springfield Initiative, the UMass Dept. of Music and Dance, UMass Haitian Student Association. WFCR/WNNZ, WGBY, the Daily Hampshire Gazette, the Valley Advocate, and the Northampton Arts Council.

Sailing the Barbarous Coast

Opening Reception: Sailing the Barbarous Coast
Central Gallery
Thursday, February 11, 4-6pm

Thursday, February 11 – Thursday, March 11

In the two person exhibition, Sailing the Barbarous Coast, Anthony Smith Jr.’s gestural sequential painting is paired with Colin Matthes’ flat, brusque, obsessive drawing- based work to form an exhibition that reflects a sense of uncertainty in the midst of economic calamity, social unrest, and global disruption.
Both artists create work influenced by war and consumption, sex, race, and well as the current global fiscal crisis. This work naturally draws connections between militarism, consumerism and economic hardship. With an eye to humor, irony, and mischief, the artists combine representations of global events with imagery sparked by personal experiences in their own roller-coaster like lives.

About the Artists

Anthony Smith
Anthony Smith’s paintings combine abstract expression with epic narratives that explore human will, slavery, and love.
Anthony’s paintings have recently been exhibited as part of “Icograms” at the Newton Art Center (Newton, Massachusetts) and at the Holland Area Arts Council (Holland, Michigan). He was a contributing artist to the critically noted “Harlem World” exhibit at the Studio Museum of Harlem in 2004. From 2000 to 2003, his work was displayed in studios and galleries in Michigan, New York and Texas.
Anthony moved to New York City where he currently resides in the Inwood section of Manhattan.

Colin Matthes
Colin Matthes, an artist based in Milwaukee, WI, works across a range of media including drawing, sculpture, installation, public art, print, and self-publishes the zine Ideas in Pictures. His artwork has been exhibited in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Denmark, Spain, and Austria. In 2009 Matthes completed a solo-exhibition at the University of Texas-Pan American, created an installation at the Armory Gallery (Milwaukee, WI), and made a wall drawing for a group exhibition at the Haggerty Museum (Milwaukee, WI). 2010 exhibitions include two-person shows with Anthony Smith at The New Art Center, Newton, MA and at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA.

He works on collective art projects including Justseeds, Street Art Workers, and Cut and Paint zine (www.cutandpaint.org). For more information: Ideas in Pictures

Free and open to the public