MILLS COLLEGE ART MUSEUM OPENS “PARTICULATE MATTER” EXHIBIT SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2006
Oakland, CA - The Mills College Art Museum is preparing for a major expansion with high profile exhibits of international contemporary and emerging artists, and a series of lectures beginning Saturday, September 9, 2006. The Museum plans to add a new wing featuring contemporary art and new media.
“Particulate Matter,” the debut exhibit, brings together the work of six contemporary American and European artists who address conditions of overload in modern life: Andrea Bowers, Chris Finley, Karl Haendel, Florian Maier-Aichen, Danica Phelps, and Pamela Wilson-Ryckman. The show runs September 9–December 10.
“Particulate Matter” will also include a series of rotating solo exhibits by emerging artists whose work relates to the larger themes of the exhibition. The first one features Daniel Tierney, September 9–October 8.
On opening day, September 9, a curator’s walk-through will be offered at 4 pm; Tierney will give an artist’s talk at 4:30 pm, followed by the opening reception 5–7 pm.
Organized by ArtForum critic and Mills art faculty member Glen Helfand, the show refers to a term often used in discussions of environmental issues - tiny particles that are expelled into the air to form smog. In relation to the exhibition, it offers a rich metaphor for objects that are created with a mass of parts, informed by political consciousness and attempts to break down issues and phenomenon—think global warming—that are too massive to be addressed as a single gesture or discussion.
This exhibition marks the Bay Area debut of Los Angeles artist Karl Haendel who creates large, dramatic installations of oversized drawings of newspaper and magazine images. Florian Maier-Aichen, a photographer currently living in Cologne, Germany, is exhibiting a group of digitally enhanced landscape photographs that eerily amplify the tensions between nature and culture. This is his first Bay Area show.
New York artist Danica Phelps addresses the compounding nature of commonplace experience with a series of drawings charting her expenses during an emotionally dramatic month. Los Angeles artist Andrea Bowers explores the fate and promise of political activism in a series of sculptures incorporating vintage protest buttons.
Chris Finley, who lives and works in the Bay Area, creates paintings of images filtered through a computer program and painted by hand. San Francisco’s Pamela Wilson-Ryckman depicts scenes of disaster and war in haunting, poetic watercolors.
Two participating artists will give lectures about their work to accompany “Particulate Matter,” Karl Haendel September 27, and, Pamela Wilson-Ryckman November 13. The lectures take place at 7 pm in Danforth Hall, Art Building, on the Mills campus.
"Particulate Matter” is rounded out by a small gallery containing a selection of modern and contemporary photographs from the collection of the Mills College Art Museum. The exhibit will include important works by: Tina Modotti, Man Ray, Joel Sternfeld, Olafur Eliasson, Catherine Yass, among others.
All events are free and open to the public at the Mills College Art Museum, 5000 MacArthur Blvd, Oakland, CA 94613.
MUSEUM HOURS: Tuesdays, and Thursday through Saturday 11–4 pm; Wednesday 11–7:30 pm, Sunday 12–4 pm.
Note to the media: Glen Helfand is available for press walk-throughs and interviews by appointment. For more information about any aspect of the exhibits please call: 510.430.2164 or email museum@mills.edu.
Mills College is a nationally renowned, independent liberal arts college offering innovative degree programs for undergraduate women, and graduate degree and certificate programs for women and men. Consistently recognized as one of the top 100 liberal arts colleges in the nation by U.S. News & World Report, Mills currently ranks 16th for diversity among the country’s liberal arts colleges.
This year, the Washington Monthly College Rankings (September 2006) named Mills a leading liberal arts college based on community service, research spending, quality of preparation for graduate education, and social mobility. In addition, The Princeton Review’s annual guide, The Best 361 Colleges (2007) included Mills for the second year in a row among top U.S. institutions offering students an outstanding undergraduate education.
Nestled in the foothills of Oakland, California on 135 lush acres, Mills provides a dynamic liberal arts education fostering women’s leadership, social responsibility, and creativity.
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