This installation from the museum's permanent collection highlights a broad range of artistic styles, mainly from the United States, during the late 1950s through the early 1980s, from Nouveau Réalisme to Pop Art and Minimalism.
Sponsored in part by the Illinois Arts Council, a State Agency
Post-war Abstract Expressionism had established itself as a popular style within the art world by the late 1950s. However, at that time many artists did not share the same interest in exploring the inner creativity of the artist and began to challenge the Abstract Expressionists by turning almost exclusively to culture. Instead of exploring the artist's individuality, these assemblage and Pop artists renewed a relationship between art and everyday life by incorporating popular culture through the use of found objects and images from popular media.
Artists continued to challenge how the meaning of works of art was uncovered during the radical 1960s and into the 1970s. Rather than finding meaning exclusively within the work, artists placed more emphasis on the context in which the work of art existed. The context became increasingly more social and political, which pushed the boundaries of what constituted art. This interrogation, which ushered in the age of Postmodernism, looked back to what the artist Marcel Duchamp confronted in the early twentieth century. As artists began to use a diverse range of media, they continued to blur the lines of art and life.
The selection, including paintings, sculpture, and works on paper by Sam Francis, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, Kenneth Noland, Robert Rauschenberg, Niki de Saint Phalle, and Frank Stella, illustrates the diverse ways that artists attacked notions of modernism.
Curator: Kathryn Koca Polite