Exhibition

Material Friction: Americana and American Art Highlights from the Collection of Jonathan and Karin Fielding

Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, MA, United States
12 Jun 2014 - 02 Nov 2014

Material Friction: Americana and American Art Highlights from the Collection of Jonathan and Karin Fielding

Photo of the WCMA-taught seminar meeting in Material Friction. Photo courtesy of the Williams College Museum of Art.

The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) presents Material Friction: Americana and American Art, on view through January 25, 2015. The exhibition provokes questions about the role of “folk” art within museums and art history.

It features 80 paintings, decorative arts and utilitarian objects created predominantly in the rural northeastern United States between 1690 and 1840 from the collection of Jonathan and Karin Fielding, most of which have never been on public view. Objects lent by the Fieldings are installed with 45 works from WCMA’s renowned collection of American art.

Should museums display materials made by rural artisans or amateurs in isolation, or view them alongside similar forms created by academically trained artists working in urban centers? These questions are central to a new WCMA-taught seminar in the fall semester where undergraduate and graduate students will re-curate the current installation.

Jonathan (Williams ’64) and Karin Fielding have been collecting folk art for the past 30 years. Material Friction reflects the breadth of the Fielding’s collection, including such diverse materials as an iron fireback, small baskets made by Native Americans, mirrors, stoneware, samplers, a tavern sign, and examples of lighting technology.

The current installation of Material Friction, organized by Kevin M. Murphy, WCMA’s Eugénie Prendergast Curator of American Art, takes three approaches to the display of folk art. In one gallery, objects from the Fielding’s Collection are segregated from WCMA’s collection. They have been placed in rough chronological groupings that reflect their original domestic function. This gallery installation is typical of major museums across the country where vernacular works are contained in period rooms or otherwise set apart from the “American art.” In contrast the two largest galleries juxtapose the Fielding’s Collection with works of art from WCMA. “The incredible range and quality of the Fielding’s collection make possible multiple curatorial strategies,” Murphy said. “We wanted to explore the sympathies and antiphonies that occur if we displayed works across time and media that place, for example, allegorical figures or reference nature and the landscape in close proximity.” A small gallery displays Amish and Shaker textiles with works by Ellsworth Kelly, Frank Stella, and Ad Reinhardt, referencing superficial aesthetic connections between modernism and vernacular objects.

The current iteration of Material Friction will be on view until the beginning of November, after which it will be reinstalled according to the students’ research into vernacular art and museum practice. The seminar will be led by Murphy and staff from across WCMA, and will work mainly in the museum rather than in a classroom. The Material Friction galleries will be open during the student reinstallation, extending the Williams academic experience and process of exhibition making to the public.

 

Williams College Museum of Art
15 Lawrence Hall Dr.
Williamstown, MA 01267

 

wcma.williams.edu

 

 


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