An Introduction to Jere Abbott's Russian Diary, 1927–1928

October ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 145 ◽  
pp. 115-124
Author(s):  
Leah Dickerman

In 1978, in its seventh issue, October published the travel diaries written by Alfred H. Barr, Jr., who would go on to become the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art, during his two-month sojourn in Russia in 1927–28. They were accompanied by a note from Barr's wife, Margaret Scolari Barr, who had made the documents available, and an introduction written by Jere Abbott, an art historian and former director of the Smith College Museum of Art who had returned to his family's textile business in Maine. Abbott and Barr had made the journey together, traveling from London in October 1927 to Holland and Germany (including a four-day visit to the Bauhaus) and then, on Christmas Day 1927, over the border into Soviet Russia. Abbott, as Margaret Barr had noted, kept his own journal on the trip. Abbott's, if anything, was more detailed and expansive in documenting its author's observations and perceptions of Soviet cultural life at this pivotal moment; and his perspective offers both a complement and counterpoint to Barr's. Russia after the revolution was largely uncharted territory for Anglophone cultural commentary: This, in combination with the two men's deep interest in and knowledge of contemporary art, makes their journals rare documents of the Soviet cultural terrain in the late 1920s. We present Abbott's diaries here, thirty-five years after the publication of Barr's, with thanks to the generous cooperation of the Smith College Museum of Art, where they are now held.

2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 10-17
Author(s):  
David Senior

In the past few years, several new publications and exhibitions have presented surveys of the genre of artists’ magazines. This recent research has explored the publication histories of individual titles and articulated the significance of this genre within contemporary art history. Millennium magazines was a 2012 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art that traced the artists’ magazine into the 21st century. The organizers, Rachael Morrison and David Senior of MoMA Library, assembled a selection of 115 international tides published since 2000 for visitors to browse during the run of the exhibition and created a website as a continuing resource for information about the selected tides. The exhibition served as an introduction to the medium for new audiences and a summary of the active community of international artists, designers and publishers that still utilize the format in innovative ways. As these projects experiment with both print and digital media in their production and distribution of content, art libraries are faced with new challenges in digital preservation in order to continue to document experimental publishing practices in contemporary art and design.


Author(s):  
Мария Владиславовна Федорова

Статья представляет обзор зарубежных выставокЗураба Константиновича Церетели. Зураб Церетели народный художник СССР и Российской Федерации, посол доброй воли ЮНЕСКО, президент Российской академии художеств отметил свой 85-летие в 2019 году. В течение года он представил свои скульптуры, живописные и графические работы на выставках Больше, чем жизнь (галерея Саатчи , Лондон, Великобритания), Возможные миры (Центр Гейдара Алиева, Баку, Азербайджан), Чарли Чаплин в Тифлисе (филиал Московского музея современного искусства, Тбилиси, Грузия), Персоналии Зураб Церетели (Государственный музей Лихтенштейна, Вадуц, Лихтенштейн), Монументальность (галерея D10 Art Space, Женева, Швейцария), экспозиции намеждународной выставке современного искусства АртПариж (Гран Пале, Париж), международной художественной ярмарке Art Bahrain Across Borders 2019 (Бахрейн). The article provides an overview of foreign exhibitions of Zurab Konstantinovich Tsereteli. Zurab Tsereteli, Peoples Artist of the USSR and the Russian Federation, UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, President of the Russian Academy of Arts, celebrated his 85th birthday in 2019. During the year, he presented his sculptures, paintings and graphic works at the exhibitions More than Life (Saatchi Gallery, London, Great Britain), Possible Worlds (Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku, Azerbaijan), Charlie Chaplin in Tiflis (Branch of the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Tbilisi, Georgia), Personalities Zurab Tsereteli (State Museum of Liechtenstein, Vaduz, Liechtenstein), Monumental (D10 Art Space Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland),expositions at the international exhibition of contemporary art ArtParis (Grand Palais, Paris), the international art fair Art Bahrain Across Borders 2019 (Bahrain).


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caterina Albano

The analogy of the exhibition as an experiment suggests innovative curatorial approaches that challenge institutional practices. This analogy has however a historical precedence in modernism when it became paradigmatic of the exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in the 1940s, defining the curatorial approach of its founding director Alfred J Barr. This article considers this early use of the analogy of the exhibition as an experiment and further reflects on its redefinition at the turn of the 20th century by examining how both the notions of the exhibition and of the experiment have changed over time. In particular, the article examines the different meanings and practices inferred by the concepts of the exhibition and the experiment in the first decades of the 20th century and in the present. It outlines how correspondences between cultural and scientific paradigms can be deployed to tease unacknowledged synergies between two modes of knowledge production (i.e. the art exhibition and the experiment) and address questions of presentness, authority and legitimacy that they imply.


2007 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 22-28
Author(s):  
Milan R. Hughston

The Museum of Modern Art’s ten-year building project provided new, purpose-built spaces for the library and museum archives, one of the world’s premier research resources documenting modern and contemporary art. This article summarizes the planning and implementation of the new space and reflects on its successes after six months of operations.


Muzealnictwo ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 62 ◽  
pp. 227-235
Author(s):  
Wojciech Szafrański

The ‘National Collections of Contemporary Art’ Programme run by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage (MKiDN) in 2011–2019 constituted the most important since 1989 financing scheme for purchasing works of contemporary art to create and develop museum collections. Almost PLN 57 million from the MKiDN budget were allocated by means of a competition to purchasing works for such institutions as the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw (MSN), Museum of Art in Lodz (MSŁ), Wroclaw Contemporary Museum (MNW), Museum of Contemporary Art in Cracow (MOCAK), or the Centre of Polish Sculpture in Orońsko (CRP). The programme in question and the one called ‘Signs of the Times’ that had preceded it were to fulfil the following overall goal: to create and develop contemporary art collections meant for the already existing museums in Poland, but particularly for newly-established autonomous museums of the 20th and 21st century. The analysis of respective editions of the programmes and financing of museums as part of their implementation confirms that the genuine purpose of the Ministry’s ‘National Contemporary Art Collections’ Programme has been fulfilled.


Author(s):  
Antoniette M. Guglielmo

Alfred H. Barr, Jr. was an art historian and the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in Manhattan, New York, from 1929 to 1943. Upon assuming his post at the museum in August 1929, Barr proceeded to establish the institution as America’s first and premiere museum devoted exclusively to modern art. His vision involved developing an intellectual foundation for the development of modern art and popularizing it for the public. As part of this work, Barr created new collection areas not previously conceptualized as part of an art museum, such as film and video, photography, architecture and design, and industrial art. Barr conceptualized a canon for the development of modern art and the origins of abstraction, diagramming it in the exhibition catalog Cubism and Abstract Art (1936). During his tenure, he organized more than 100 exhibitions largely focused on European modernism. Barr was dismissed as Director in 1943 by the chairperson of MoMA’s board of trustees, but stayed involved with MoMA in various capacities until 1968.


1962 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 35-37
Author(s):  
Eileen Bowser

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