Until 29 August, American Art 1961- 2001 at contemporary arts space Palazzo Strozzi is a journey through a multitude of artistic expressions— painting, photography, video, sculpture and installations—that reveal 40 years of American art, featuring Rothko, Warhol, Oldenburg, Lichtenstein, Levine, Opie, Kara Walker, and many more. Many of these works by famous artists are exhibited for the first time in Italy thanks to the collaboration with the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis.
The exhibition presents an extraordinary journey through 53 iconic pieces by noted figures and from movements that have marked American art between two decisive historical moments, the beginning of the Vietnam War and the September 11, 2001 attacks. From Pop Art and Minimalism to Conceptual Art and the Pictures Generation, up to the most recent research of the 1990s and 2000s, central themes include the struggle for civil rights, discrimination, homophobia and feminism. Admiring the works at Palazzo Strozzi, we find ourselves reflecting on issues that are still current and of fundamental importance today.
The itinerary is divided into nine thematic sections, with particular attention given to key figures. In the first section, where Mark Rothko’s work titled No.2 invites observers to participate in visual and emotional contemplation, we immediately find one of the works featured on the exhibition posters: Andy Warhol’s renowned Sixteen Jackies dedicated to First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy after JFK’s assassination.
The era of the Sixties is witnessed through works by masters such as Donald Judd, Bruce Nauman and John Baldessari, who became reference points for subsequent generations of artists to redefine the possibilities of art. Later artists continued to address topics such as the reframing of the male gaze in the work of Cindy Sherman; the appropriation of mass-media images by artists Richard Prince and Barbara Kruger, the denunciation of the stigma of AIDS in the work of Félix González- Torres; or the disquieting narratives of Matthew Barney, whose 1999 video installation Cremaster 2 is shown in an original setting for the first time in Italy.
A special focus in the exhibition is dedicated to artistic developments of the 1990s and 2000s interrogating American identity and featuring the work of such artists as Kerry James Marshall and Kara Walker. The exhibition is curated by Vincenzo Bellis (Curator and Associate Director of Programs, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center) and Arturo Galansino (General Director of the Palazzo Strozzi Foundation).