parent menu item not found: "152"
Sharon Louden Press Release

BIRMINGHAM MUSEUM OF ART INSTALLS EXHIBITION OF NEW WORKS BY AMERICAN ARTIST SHARON LOUDEN

Multifaceted exhibition features illuminated installation, painting, video animation

July 28, 2008, Birmingham, Ala — The Birmingham Museum of Art (BMA) announces an exhibition of newly commissioned work by New York-based artist Sharon Louden from September 28, 2008 to January 4, 2009. The works in Sharon Louden: Taking Turns will visually connect the Museum's galleries and Sculpture Garden through different media: paintings, a projected video animation, and a site-specific installation of illuminated cable in the trees.

Louden’s approach is abstract yet formal, focusing primarily on line, gesture, and materials.

“Sharon’s work is both elegant and playful, and for this project she is exploring the idea of an exhibition moving from space to space,” says Ron Platt, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Birmingham Museum of Art. “Her work in all media comes out of drawing and her drawing is borne of human gesture. She considers the site-specific illuminated cable works as three-dimensional drawings.”

For her gallery installation, Louden is creating twelve 13 x 13-inch paintings with watercolor, acrylic, and transparent gel medium on gessoed wood panels. Her brushstroke-like marks invite viewers to look closely. Benjamin Genocchio of The New York Times described her drawings as having an unusual sculptural quality and as “feeling airborne, as though Louden blew them out of her hand.”

Louden’s projected video installation for the BMA is an animated sequence that gives viewers a window onto a spare digital landscape where the artist’s characteristic marks appear to intermingle with blown sheets of paper and other elements.

“She really got my attention several years ago with her video installations. They were more about line than about the language of film or video, and it is unusual for an artist so focused on formal concerns to work in video,” Platt says. “There is a synergy between all of the work in this exhibition that links the separate spaces, a thread the viewer can follow to make the connections.”

“I wanted to embrace the Birmingham Museum of Art’s architecture,” Louden says. “The spaces enable a visual connection and physical experience between the gestures in the paintings and animation inside the galleries to those in the trees in the outdoor garden, showing that art lives beyond the walls of a museum. The positioning of these different mediums, inside and out, allow and encourage visitors to take the experience with them after leaving the interiors.”

“Glowtown” Artist Workshop, October 4, 2008

Louden will share her approach to transforming the most common materials into surprising, glowing “landscapes” with custom phosphorescent paints in a workshop on Saturday, October 4 at the BMA. Participants will create their own 12-inch three-dimensional cube to be combined in a “Glowtown” installation piece for display through the month. With the assistance of teen and adult volunteers, Louden will teach one session for ages six to nine and the other for older kids and adults. “Glowtown” is revealed at the end of each session when the cubes are assembled and the lights go out.

Taking Turns coincides with an exhibition of rare Leonardo da Vinci drawings on view at the BMA from the Biblioteca Reale in Turin, Italy (September 28-November 9), which also invites the viewer to closely examine line and texture.

About Sharon Louden

Louden graduated with an MFA from Yale University School of Art and a BFA from the School of The Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been exhibited at the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, the Drawing Center in New York, and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, and is in the permanent collections of the Neuberger Museum of Art (Purchase, NY), the National Gallery of Art (Washington, DC), the Arkansas Arts Center (Little Rock, AK), Yale University Art Gallery (New Haven, CT), the Weatherspoon Art Museum (Greensboro, NC), and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (TX).

Sharon Louden: Taking Turns is supported by Mr. and Mrs. Werner H. Kramarsky, the Toby D. Lewis Philanthropic Fund, EBSCO Industries, Inc, and an anonymous donor. The BMA exhibition will travel to the Weatherspoon Art Museum at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Birmingham Museum of Art

Founded in 1951, the Birmingham Museum of Art today has one of the finest collections in the Southeast, with more than 17,000 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, and decorative arts representing a rich panorama of cultures, including Asian, European, American, African, Pre-Columbian, and Native American. Among other highlights, the Museum's collection of Asian art is considered the finest and most comprehensive in the Southeast, and its Vietnamese ceramics one of the finest in the world. The Museum also is home to a remarkable Kress collection of Renaissance and Baroque paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts from the late 13th century to c.1750, and the 18th-century European decorative arts include superior examples of English ceramics and French furniture.

The Birmingham Museum of Art is owned by the City of Birmingham and encompasses 3.9 acres in the heart of the city's cultural district. Erected in 1959, the present building was designed by architects Warren, Knight and Davis, and a major renovation and expansion by Edward Larrabee Barnes of New York was completed in 1993. The facility encompasses 180,000 square feet, including a splendid outdoor sculpture garden.

 

Photo Op: The artist will be lifted by a scissor lift truck high into the Museum Sculpture Garden’s oak trees, where she will twist glowing blue cable into illuminated drawings. Day(s) and time(s) to be announced.

 

ADMISSION to the exhibition Sharon Louden: Taking Turns, to Leonardo da Vinci: Drawings from the Biblioteca Reale in Turin, and to the Museum’s permanent collection is FREE.

MUSEUM HOURS: Tues—Sat, 10 am to 5 pm; Sun, Noon—5 pm; closed major holidays

Go to www.artsbma.org or call 205.254.2565.

 

For images, go to www.artsbma.org

All images provided by Sharon Louden.

 

Birmingham Museum of Art:

Melanie Parker

205.254.2076 / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Julie Mann

205.254.2707 / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Resnicow Schroeder Associates:

Julia Kirchhausen

212.671.5161 / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Geetha Natarajan

212.671.5175 / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 

 

 

 

MUSEUM HOURS:

Tuesday—Saturday
10am—5pm

Sunday
12pm—5pm

CLOSED MONDAYS &
Major Holidays


ADDRESS:

2000 Eighth Avenue North
Birmingham, Alabama 35203

T: 205.254.2565

F: 205.254.2714