Touring show seeks to ‘de-exoticise’ the predominant narrative

Southern/Modern: Frist Art Museum “rediscovers” Art from the first half of the 20th century
From January 26 to April 21, 2024, the Frist Art Museum hosts the exhibition “Southern/Modern: Rediscovering Art from the First Half of the Twentieth Century”
Source: Frist Art Museum · Image: Carroll Cloar. A Story Told by My Mother, 1955. Casein tempera on Masonite; 28 3/8 x 40 1/4 in. Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, TN. Bequest of Mrs. C.M. Gooch, 80.3.16. © Estate of Carroll Cloar
The first comprehensive survey of paintings and works on paper created in the American South from 1913 to 1955, “Southern/Modern” features more than one hundred works drawn from public and private collections across the country. The exhibition focuses on artists such as Carroll Cloar, Aaron Douglas, Caroline Durieux, Will Henry Stevens, Alma Thomas, and others who worked in states below the Mason-Dixon line and as far west as those bordering the Mississippi River. It also includes artists from outside the South, such as Josef Albers and Elaine de Kooning, who were instructors at North Carolina’s experimental Black Mountain College, as well as Thomas Hart Benton, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, and others whose works reflect on Southern experiences from a distance.
Throughout the exhibition, thematic groupings weave together the region’s rich cultures, telling stories of agriculture and industry, class division and racial injustice, natural beauty, and stylistic innovation. Full of vibrant, emotionally charged works, Southern/Modern treats a subject long neglected by art historians and museums outside the region. It shows how in the South as elsewhere, modern artists linked social and aesthetic progress, hoping to change the way people saw their world.
Southern/Modern is organized by the Mint Museum in collaboration with the Georgia Museum of Art.
Wanda Nanibush left the institution after a letter accusing her of “hate speech” was circulated by the group Israel Museums and Arts, Canada
Wanda Nanibush left the institution after the group Israel Museums and Arts, Canada circulated a letter accusing her of “hate speech”
The disaster represents a tragic loss to cultural heritage in the region, which broke away from Georgia three decades ago
Canvas that “self destructed” at Sotheby’s in 2018 was renamed Love is in the Bin by the artist’s studio—but last year it went on show in Korea with a new title and date
Polarising steel sculpture stands in grounds of King’s College
From gold coins to ivory carvings, many pieces were found by amateur metal detectorists, according to latest report by British Museum’s Portable Antiquities Scheme
Marie-Anne McQuay previously worked at the city’s Bluecoat art centre, and currently holds positions including member of Arts Council England’s collection acquisitions committee
Whitman was a pioneer of the early performance art events known as Happenings and collaborated with Robert Rauschenberg and others on technologically ambitious projects

