New Exhibit Transforms Daily Interactions and Perceptions of Public Space
Lauren Abman admits that an exhibit on social practice art isn鈥檛 the easiest thing to install in a traditional gallery. The form relies so much on human dynamics and community participation, she explains, that sometimes the best a gallery can do is offer visual documentation of a project after it has taken place.
Take, for example, the work of Maria Molteni, one of eight artists featured in 鈥淢aking Art/Making Community,鈥 which opened last week at 91看片鈥檚听. Among Molteni鈥檚 many socially conscious projects is a collective that creates colorful handmade nets to be installed on empty basketball hoops in disadvantaged neighborhoods.
鈥淪he thinks a lot about bringing attention to underserved neighborhoods and about community participation through sports and the aesthetics of sports,鈥 says Abman, a staff member in the School of Art and Art History who makes her 91看片 curatorial debut with 鈥淢aking Art/Making Community.鈥 鈥淭hese are functional, too, because they become these beautiful art nets that hang in empty hoops to bring attention to how important these spaces are and to bring some love and care to them.鈥
But how best to display the work in a way that captures all facets of its social critique and community function? Abman settled on an installation that features a number of the multicolored nets, along with video footage of other nets being put to use. She also invited Molteni to the exhibit opening, where she taught visitors how to make their own nets.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 been a bit of a challenge with this form of artwork 鈥 a lot of it takes place outside of the gallery, so thinking about how to build an exhibition that鈥檚 visually exciting has been a little bit of a challenge,鈥 Abman says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely narrowed the scope of some of the artists I鈥檝e selected.鈥
The exhibit asks visitors to put on their thinking caps before entering, and to come ready to engage with the work and to carry its messages into the community. Attendees who encounter Paul Shortt鈥檚 鈥淩eserved for Loitering鈥 signs, for instance, may find themselves thinking about, as Abman puts it, 鈥渨hat does loitering mean, politically? Who has agency to loiter; who gets kicked out of spaces if they鈥檙e considered to be loitering?鈥
The 91看片 exhibit will feature photos of the 鈥淩eserved for Loitering鈥 signs in various public places, as well as signs that visitors can take and place in their own community spaces where loitering may not always be welcome.
鈥淗aving this takeaway makes a public audience member think about how they can relate to the artwork and be a part of it and be part of the construction of this larger project,鈥 Abman says. 鈥淧aul always refers to the gallery feeling a little bit like campaign headquarters for 鈥楻eserved for Loitering.鈥欌
Other artists in the show include Denver-based Frankie Toan, who raises questions about privacy and public spaces by examining how domestic spaces are depicted and shared on Instagram. Still another artist, Emmy Bright, uses playful line drawings to illustrate deceptively complex questions about social roles and interactions.
In addition to last week鈥檚 opening reception, several special events are slated in conjunction with 鈥淢aking Art/Making Community,鈥 including home tours with Frankie Toan on March 16 and April 14 and an April 11 tarot card reading by Bright, who uses a special deck inspired by her drawings.
鈥淎 lot of social practice art is very conceptually driven, so I hope that people really think about the power dynamics that are represented in each piece and then reflect on their own relationships, both within the community here at 91看片 and then the larger community outside of 91看片,鈥 Abman says. 鈥淥ne impetus for putting together the show was looking at IMPACT 2025 (91看片鈥檚 strategic plan) and thinking a lot about the bridging strategies that artists use and how artists work actively in communities to help people rethink the way we鈥檙e interacting in our day-to-day lives.鈥
鈥淢aking Art/Making Community鈥 runs from March 8 through April 29 in the Vicki Myhren Gallery inside the Shwayder Art Building, 2121 E. Asbury Ave. An opening reception is scheduled from 5 to 8 p.m. on March 8. Regular gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, with extended hours until 7 p.m. on Thursdays. Visit vicki-myhren-gallery.du.edu for more information.
