Showing posts with label New England Quilt Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New England Quilt Museum. Show all posts

Thursday, January 23, 2014

HUB ORIGINALS: New England Quilt Museum/Quilts Japan


Mikiko Misawa, Grassland, Thai silk, Contemporary Category
Link to Exhibition Website: http://www.nequiltmuseum.org/2014-exhibitions.html

Curator: Pam Weeks

From the Press Release: "the only Northeast venue to showcase these award winning quilts from the 2011 international competition of the Japanese Handicraft Instructors' Association"

Recommended For: A decidedly Asian twist on a familiar American art form with interesting contemporary art harmonies. Not just for quilters!

The Experience:
See It All will kick off 2014 with an new series I'm calling HUB ORIGINALS. This series will look at some of the more unique and focused museums in the greater-Boston area. I'm starting the series with the New England Quilt Museum in Lowell.

A very easy drive up Route 3 on a frigid January morning took me into downtown Lowell before I knew it. The New England Quilt Museum was easy to find and nearby parking was readily available. I had come to see Quilts Japan, the NEQM's new show that opened on January 16.  Quilts Japan is a selection of 32 quilts that received awards at the 2011 Quilt Nihon competition.  This competition is held biannually in Tokyo and is sponsored by the Japan Handicraft Instructors' Association.  The 2011 competition brought in a staggering 377 entries in both the Traditional and Contemporary categories.  It attracts primarily Japanese, but some international submissions.  Pam Weeks, NEQM's curator, told me that Japanese quilters first started gaining prominence in the 1980's and 1990's.  The emergence of Japanese artists into a traditionally western textile art gives Quilts Japan an interesting connection to PEM's Future Beauty, as this was exactly the same time that Japanese designers first started making inroads into the world of couture fashion. Food for thought.

I went to Quilts Japan expecting to see sumptuous fabrics and exquisite craftsmanship and I was not disappointed. The examples shown span a range of very traditional designs to progressive forms that push at the boundaries of what makes a quilt a quilt, but all shared an absolutely superb level of skill and technique in their construction. I was also struck by how many of the quilts were created to evoke a moment of essentialized natural beauty, from starry skies, to carefully tended gardens, to breeze-blown fields of grass. This is an impulse I see carrying over into many other Japanese art forms.

The method of display at NEQM allows the visitor to get extremely close to the quilts, unimpeded by plexiglas or barriers and this makes the viewing of these works a very rich experience. I do wish that there had been more contextual information about the rise and popularity of quilting in Japan, but this did not really detract from appreciating the stunning craftsmanship on display.  If the presentation of the show seems a little bare-bones, I think they can be excused as Weeks confided in me that the show arrived from Wisconsin 1 DAY before it opened in Lowell!

Note that this show overlaps the MFA's Quilts and Color show by only 1 week, but they would make for very complimentary experiences.

Here are some of the standout examples for me (photos posted with the permission of NEQM):


Yoko Komatsuno, Streamline, cotton, Traditional Category


Chiaki Desho, The Crossing Time IV, kimono fabric, Contemporary Category


Yoko Kageyama, Feel Something from the Kimonos, kimono silk, Traditional Category
Soohee Lee, In the Blue, recycled bluejeans, Contemporary Category
In the Blue, detail

Harue Konishi, SYO #53, Contemporary Category



Sunday, December 15, 2013

See It All's Spring 2014 Preview


Well, it has been a great pleasure and privilege to see such a wonderful group of exhibitions this fall. My personal favorites would have to be the ICA Boston's Amy Sillman: one lump or two and MIT Museum's 5000 Moving Parts, with WAM's [remastered] close behind. The spring of 2014 has some exciting and varied offerings for See It All. Exhibitions featuring painting, installation, textiles, drawings and rare books and manuscripts will all be opening in and around the Hub.

The Shows

Fans of quilts and textiles can continue their exposure to amazing work started at New England Quilt Museum's The Roots of Modern Quilting by attending their follow-up show Quilting Japan, opening in mid-January.  Then, in April, the MFA mounts Quilts and Color: The Pilgrim/Roy Collection which should present a diverse and masterful array of examples of the quilting art.



Two very interesting examinations of the act and meaning of collecting can be seen by visiting the Currier Museum's collaboration with Andrew Witkin, Exploring the Currier Inside and Out: Andrew Witkin, Among Others. This meditation on collecting and collections can be followed up in April with the Boston Athenaeum's second installment of their Collecting for a New Century, featuring rare books and manuscripts (a personal favorite of VO.)


Another favorite medium of VO is drawing, which will be the subject of a show opening at the Portland Museum of Art in late January. Fine Lines: American Drawings from the Brooklyn Museum, will give New England audiences a rare chance to view these delicate works.








The ICA Boston will provide a dramatic shift from their Amy Sillman show by turning their West Galleries over to unique installation and sound artist Nick Cave, an exhibition that's bound to dazzle.






A deep and stimulating glimpse into a painter's love of place will be featured in the Addison Gallery of American Art's An American in London: Whistler and the Thames. The examination of an artist's treatment of a paricular subject is also the theme of VO's most anticipated show of the spring, PEM's Turner and the Sea opening in May. This show features representations of the sea in the work of England's renowned 19th century painter J.M.W. Turner.



See It All's Most Anticipated Show of Early-2014
PEM/Turner and the Sea opening in May


Enthusiasts for all things nautical can sate their appetite further at the MIT Museum's The Herreshoff Legacy about America's most famous yacht designer (and MIT's own,) Nathaniel G. Herreshoff.

Another show that I am anticipating eagerly is Knights! at the Worcester Art Museum, opening in March. This will be the lead-off public event in the integration of the beloved Higgins Armory Collection into WAM's galleries, collections and programs.  I am fascinated to see how the absorption of the Higgins collection by WAM will play out.  The loss of the Higgins Museum from the Boston-area community of museums is a sad event and I applaud WAM's dedication to making the processing of this collection fairly transparent.  More information on this can be found here.



See It Before It Closes
Closing Dec. 31, Higgins Armory Museum
Closing Jan. 5, ICA Boston/Amy Sillman


Spring Preview Links:
Most looking forward to: