| Red
Grooms: Ruckus in Roslyn
November 20, 2005 through February 6, 2006
Major Sponsorship by Pall Corporation
with Support from Marlborough Galleries
Red Grooms is a singular artist, one who is widely treasured
for colorful large-scale three-dimensional assemblages and
painted installations that reveal boundless good-natured
satire and a wryly whimsical pop style that always brings
smiles to the faces of viewers. In Red Grooms: Ruckus in
Roslyn, curators Constance Schwartz and Franklin Hill Perrell
have worked closely with the artist, his gallery, Marlborough,
and private collectors to gather examples of Grooms' best-known
themes, especially that of the gritty reality of New York
City. Never before seen together, these large- and small-scale
works in painting and sculpture exemplify a rich range of
the artist's interests including entertainment, sports,
the work of other artists and, most of all, the enduring
scenes and people of the streets of New York.
A highlight of Red Grooms: Ruckus in Roslyn will be Hot
Dog Vendor, a 10-foot-high multi-figured “sculpto-pictorama”
scenario depicting an enormous umbrella shading a vendor
who is serving up street treats to eager customers. Exhibition
visitors will also revel in The Bus, a life-size New York
City bus filled with passengers inviting the viewer to hop
aboard for the ride, and in Grooms’ reinterpretations
of famous paintings by Pollock and Picasso.
Born in Tennessee and nicknamed Red for his carrot-colored
hair and preference for red clothing, Red Grooms studied
at the Chicago Art Institute but, finding it a bit too academic,
traveled to Europe to study briefly with Hans Hoffman. Upon
his return to New York he met artists such as Jim Dine,
Claes Oldenburg, George Segal and Allan Kaprow who were
creating “happenings” that explored the intersections
of art and theater. Soon Grooms too was performing these
unstructured live performance/art events as well as creating
films and experimenting in printmaking. By 1960 he had embarked
on the lively, mixed-media three-dimensional works that
would capture the public’s imagination and bring him
fame. Grooms’ work has been the subject of numerous
solo exhibitions at major museums and is included in many
private and public collections, including Metropolitan Museum
of Art, The Whitney Museum of American Arts, Museum of Modern
Art, National Academy of Design among many other important
art institutions in this country and abroad.
NCMA’S CONTEMPORARY GALLERY
William Wegman Fashion Photos
November 20th through February 6th
William Wegman is internationally renowned for his elaborately
staged photographs of his weimariner, Fay Ray, and her numerous,
and now illustrious descendents. In Wegman’s photographs,
which have been shown at MOMA, the Whitney and many other
museums, these dogs, garbed in costumes, enact a variety
of narrational dramas. Accompanying the exhibition, which
is organized by Contemporary Curators Elaine Berger and
Kathleen Cullen, will be a special lecture, book signing,
holiday festivities and an opportunity to meet Wegman’s
famous models.
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images for larger view

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