"Lascaux Dreams" by Teresa Getty |
|||||||
This exhibition will be on display in the Memorial Union Porter Butts Gallery until September 17th, from 10AM until 8PM every day.
| |||||||
Artist's statement: |
"I want my process-driven paintings and drawings to be documents of some thing. This drive is rooted in contemplating the commensal relationship of man and machine; one lived first hand with my machine-dependent daughter. I am compelled to document her life while struggling to redefine my mistrust of mechanical progress, but the result is not a representational visual record. Process generates content, weaving time and memory into mark." | ||||||
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Exploring "Dimensions of Material Culture"
Written by
Ellery Foutch - November 2012
What is
“material culture”? For students in Art History / Design Studies/ History 464,
the answer is unfolding over the course of a semester by exploring University
of Wisconsin collections, learning from local experts, and contemplating a
variety of “things”—the material world to which people give meaning and which,
in turn, influences their lives. The class takes the perspective that what we
make, see, inhabit, eat, acquire, cherish, and discard—all are important agents
of communication and part of broad social and cultural contexts. We are all
part of a complex system of makers and consumers, interacting with the world of
made objects and constructed spaces.
To this end,
co-instructors Lauren Kroiz and Ellery Foutch have planned a variety of guest
lectures and site visits, in which students learn different ways of
interpreting and interacting with material culture. This year, the Dimensions
course, a requirement for the Certificate in Material Culture, is organized
around three themes: land and landscapes, the body, and technology. The course
is a capstone in the Material Culture Program, traditionally offered every fall
and co-taught by faculty in Art History and Design Studies; it was originally
developed by Professor Jean Lee and Virginia Boyd, with support from a
UW-Madison Chancellor’s Collaborative Teaching Award for Senior
Faculty.
In the first
unit of the semester, students contemplated human interactions in the environment
and the constructed concept of the “natural,” from painted landscapes in the
Chazen Museum of Art to sessions devoted to urban planning, landscape garden
design, and interventions in the Wisconsin landscape due to agriculture and
foodways. Allen Centennial Gardens provided an exemplary site to explore and
juxtapose conventions of formal garden design and the human desire to
demonstrate control over the natural world, while the intrusion of the active
sprinkler system gave a visceral indication of the technology and effort
required to maintain these constructions! In presentations and discussions with
former Madison mayor Dave Cieslewicz and Art History professor and member of
Madison planning commission Anna Andrzejewski, students thought critically about
urban planning and the built environment of suburbs—how the layout of streets,
sidewalks, shopping centers, and family homes affects social interactions. With
facilities cultural resource manager Daniel Einstein and amongst the dusty
rafters of the UW Dairy Barn, where the single-grain experiments took place,
and the gleaming machinery of Babcock Dairy, students learned of the
University’s role in nutrition science as well as the architectural and
landscape modifications constructed for the care of livestock and the
cultivation of a milk-consuming society on a grand scale. Guest speaker and
Folklore faculty Janet Gilmore further discussed Wisconsin’s population of
Hmong immigrants and their relationship to the state’s foodways and landscape.
Allen Centennial Gardens |
To investigate
the concept of Bodies and Material Culture, the students learned about
Associate Professor of Marketing Joann Peck’s quantitative research on
consumption and touch, or what motivates shoppers to touch and buy
products. The class then visited the
collections of the Wisconsin Historical Society, where curator Leslie Bellais
discussed Victorian-era undergarments, showing the students examples of 19th-century
body-shaping garments, corsets, bustles, hoops, and more. The shaping of bodies
was also explored through discussions of turn-of-the-century bodybuilders and
popular exercise programs, which the students attempted by following the
instructions for bodybuilder Eugen Sandow’s popular dumbbell exercises and
calisthenics. Bodily modifications of skin, rather than muscle, were the focus
of visiting speaker and Milwaukee-based author Amelia Klem Osterud’s discussion
of turn-of-the-century “Tattooed Ladies,” sideshow performers who bared their
elaborately-decorated skin to paying customers. A visit to the
recently-reopened Helen Louise Allen Textile Collection gave students an
opportunity to study curious artifacts of Victorian hairwork firsthand, objects
that were both made from bodily material—human hair—with the intention of
adorning the body. Yoruba practices of bodily adornment and beadwork were the
focus of another visit to the Chazen Museum of Art, led by art historian Henry
Drewal.
TECHNOLOGY will
be the third and final theme of the semester. Given the historic election year,
two classes will be devoted to the material culture of campaigns and elections,
visiting the Wisconsin Historical Society and curator Paul Bourcier to see
examples of historic campaign material (from buttons to powder compacts), and
reading about the history of ballot design, voting machines, and the infamous
effects of “hanging chads,” “pregnant chads,” and material implications of
ballots and ballot designs in the 2004 Presidential election. The course will
conclude with a discussion of material cultures of teaching and learning, from
the materiality of books (seen firsthand in Special Collections and Rare Books
with librarian Robin Rider), to the traditional tools of art history classrooms:
slide projectors and the recent transition to powerpoint and digital
technologies. Faculty Associate in Astronomy and Director of Space Place James
Lattis will guide students in a very different kind of “looking,” demonstrating
the technologies in use at the historic Washburn Observatory.
Campaign materials, Wisconsin Historical Society |
Students are
working in groups to produce final projects that apply methods of material
culture study and analysis learned in class, with projects that range from
researching the material culture of yoga practice in the United States to
potential landscape plans for the Class of 1920 Memorial Plaza. The combination
of assignments and topics examines the way that things help us to connect to
the world, see the world in a new way, and give meaning to our lives.
________________________________________________________________________
Ellery Foutch is a
Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for the Humanities and the Department
of Art History, University of Wisconsin-Madison. She received her PhD in Art
History from the University of Pennsylvania in 2011 with a dissertation
entitled “Arresting Beauty: The Perfectionist Impulse of Peale’s Butterflies,
Heade’s Hummingbirds, Blaschka’s Flowers, and Sandow’s Body.” She earned her MA
from the Williams College Graduate Program in the History of Art and a BA from
Wellesley College. Her work has been supported by fellowships from the American
Council of Learned Societies, the Terra Foundation for American Art, the
Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Philadelphia Area Center for the
History of Science.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)