Swept Away: Dust, Ashes, and Dirt in Contemporary Art and Design / MAD Museum, New York

Swept Away exhibition: Dust, Ashes, and Dirt in Contemporary Art and Design at MAD Museum, New York

Swept Away: Dust, Ashes, and Dirt in Contemporary Art and Design / MAD Museum, New York
February 7 - August 12, 2012

MAD (The Museum of Arts and Design) has explored the intersection of traditional or unusual materials and techniques as viewed through the lens of contemporary art and design in a series of exhibitions that include Radical Lace and Subversive Knitting; Second Lives: Remixing the Ordinary; Slash: Paper Under the Knife; Dead or Alive: Nature Becomes Art; and Otherworldly: Optical Delusions and Small Realities.

The next investigation into unusual mediums features an international group of artists whose major materials are dust, ashes, dirt, and sand. Swept Away: Dust, Ashes, and Dirt in Contemporary Art and Design will highlight works that deal with issues such as the ephemeral nature of art and life, the quality and content of memory, issues of loss and disintegration, and the detritus of human existence. Sculptures made from ash by Chinese artist Zhang Huan, life-size sculptures of unfired dirt by American artist James Croak, and works created from city smog by American artist Kim Abeles, among others, illustrate the transformative potential of humble, overlooked, and discarded materials.

Swept Away Projects
February 28, 2012 - May 14, 2012

An extension of the Swept Away exhibition, Swept Away Projects will include a series of “live” installations occurring during the run of the exhibition that will allow audiences to experience and interact with artists and their site-specific installations made of ash, dust, sand, and dirt. The series includes a dust installation by Croatian Igor Eskinja, a sand installation by German artist Elvira Wersche, and a chalk installation by British artist Linda Florence. In some instances, visitor will actually get to sweep away the installations by walking through and touching them, participating in the ephemeral nature of these artists’ output.

Join us for the following

live installations

:



Elvira Wersche:


Live Installation Dates: February 28th through March 6th


Work on View: February 28th through May 5th



Igor Eskinja:


Live Installation Dates: February 28 through March 2nd


Work on View: February 28th through April 5th



Linda Florence:


Live Installation Dates: April 9th through April 12


Work on View: April 12 - May 14th



A full range of programs will accompany the exhibition. The exhibition will be amplified in a series of video interviews with participating artists and exhibition catalogue.

Participating artists

include:



Phoebe Cummings (UK) - Dirt, Paul Hazelton (UK) - Dust, Kim Abeles (US) - Smog, Igor Eskinja (Slovenia/UK) - Dust, Lee Stoetzel (US) - Sand, Alexandre Orion (Brazil) - Automobile soot graffiti (video), James Croak (US) - Dirt, Elvira Wersche (NL/DE) - Sand, Catherine Bertola (UK) - Dust, Jim Dingilian (US) - Smoke, Studio Glithero (UK) - Fire and Smoke, Su Zhiguang (China) - Urban Soot, Andy Goldsworthy (UK) - Sand photographs, Stephen Livingstone (UK) - Smoke and Ashes, Cai Guo-Qiang (China/US) - Gunpowder ash, Julie Parker (UK) - Lint, Antonio Riello (IT) - Burned books.

Swept Away: Dust, Ashes, and Dirt in Contemporary Art and Design is made possible by the Inner Circle, a leadership Museum support group, and with public funds from the Netherlands Cultural Services.

The Museum of Arts and Design (“MAD”) explores the blur zone between art, design, and craft today. Accredited by the American Association of Museums since 1991, MAD focuses on contemporary creativity and the ways in which artists and designers from around the world transform materials through processes ranging from the artisanal to the digital.

CONTACT
Marisa Bartolucci, Public Relations
marisa.bartolucci@madmuseum.org
Tel. 212-299-7777

Museum of Arts and Design / MAD Museum
2 Columbus Circle
New York, NY 10019
United States
www.madmuseum.org

Above: Phoebe Cummings, On Fallen Ground, 2010, Unfired clay, Courtesy of the artist.