This fall, the Jewish Museum is upending museum conventions with Take Me (I'm Yours), an exhibition featuring artworks that visitors are asked to touch, participate in, and even take home.
On view from September 16, 2016 through February 5, 2017, Take Me (I'm Yours) will feature a group of 42 international and intergenerational artists working in a variety of media including sculpture, works on paper, installation, performance, and digital media.
Many of the artists are creating new and site-specific works for the exhibition. On average, 10,000 of each work will be produced for visitors to take away. Over the course of four months, artworks will be replenished so what awaits visitors will constantly evolve.
Selected artists include Uri Aran, Christian Boltanski, Andrea Bowers, Andrea Fraser, General Sisters, Gilbert & George, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Jonathan Horowitz, Alison Knowles, Daniel Joseph Martinez, Jonas Mekas, Yoko Ono, Rachel Rose, Martha Rosler, Tino Sehgal, Haim Steinbach, Amalia Ulman, and Lawrence Weiner, among others (see below for complete list).
The Take Me (I'm Yours) installations are primarily on view in the second floor galleries, but can be found throughout the Jewish Museum, inviting visitors to explore and engage with art in several different locations.The exhibition creates a democratic space for all visitors to participate in the creation anownership of an artwork, questioning the politics of value, consumerism, and the hierarchical structures of the art market. Take Me (I'm Yours) encourages shared experiences and direct engagement with works of art, suggesting alternative ways that artists can live in, contribute to, and gain from society at large.
First mounted by curator Hans Ulrich Obrist and artist Christian Boltanski in 1995 at the Serpentine Gallery, London, Take Me (I'm Yours) featured works by 12 artists that explored concepts of value and participation in the arts. Over twenty years later, Take Me (I'm Yours) at the Jewish Museum features an expanded roster of artists and projects specific to both New York City and an institution of art and Jewish culture, including several from the original exhibition. In addition, the Jewish Museum's presentation marks the first time that Take Me (I'm Yours) will be on view in a collecting institution, examining the role of museum collections by giving works away rather than holding them.German artist Yngve Holen, who lives and works in Berlin, offers a thoroughly modern slant on the evil eye in the form of a contact lens. These contact lenses are printed with a
Nazar (from the Arabic word for sight), a talisman resembling an eye that protects against the Evil Eye. Holen's project is offered together with the free audio tour of the Museum's Permanent Collection, drawing a direct link to the centuries-old objects on display, many which have supernatural uses and meanings.
Yoko Ono, the multimedia artist, singer, songwriter, and peace activist, packages units of air in a 25-cent machine her piece, Air Dispensers. Air is a recurring theme in Ono's work. Here, she commodifies it as a consumable product to make us hyperaware of the immaterial, intensely vital oxygen that sustains life on earth and that we all depend on together. Ono, affiliated with the Fluxus movement, pioneered conceptually driven, performance-based, participatory art in the early 1960s. This piece was first exhibited in a retrospective of the artist in 1971 at the Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, New York. It recalls 50 cc of Paris Air, a 1919 piece by the Dadaist Marcel Duchamp: a glass container full of the inimitable air of that city. A central figure in early conceptual art of the 1960s, Lawrence Weiner uses language as the primary vehicle to present his work, which can be realized in a variety of forms. Presented in Take Me (I'm Yours) are a temporary tattoo, a do-it-yourself stencil, and a formal installation on the wall. The language used is pidgin, a form of speech that incorporates elements from existing languages and develops when speakers do not share a common tongue. Art, like pidgin, offers a universal means to communicate and to evolve. Seen in this light, Weiner's work is both an aphorism and a truism: NAU EM I ART BILONG YUMI (The art of today belongs to us).Participating Artists:
aaajiao (b. 1984, Xi'an, China)
Kelly Akashi (b. 1983, Los Angeles)
Uri Aran (b. 1977, Jerusalem)
Dana Awartani (b. 1987, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia)
Cara Benedetto (b. 1979, New York)
Christian Boltanski (b. 1944, Paris)
Andrea Bowers (b. 1965, Wilmington, Ohio)
James Lee Byars (b. 1932, Detroit, d. 1997)
Luis Camnitzer (b. 1937, Lübeck, Germany)
Ian Cheng (b. 1984, Los Angeles)
Heman Chong (b. 1977, Muar, Malaysia)
Maria Eichhorn (b. 1962, Bamberg, Germany)
Hans-Peter Feldmann (b. 1941, Düsseldorf, Germany)
Claire Fontaine (Founded 2004, Paris)
Andrea Fraser (b. 1965, Billings, Montana)
General Sisters (Founded 2009, North Braddock, Pennsylvania)
Gilbert & George
Félix González-Torres (b. 1957, Guáimaro, Cuba; d. 1996)
Matthew Angelo Harrison (b. 1989, Detroit)
Yngve Holen (b. 1982, Braunschweig, Germany)
Carsten Höller (b. 1961, Brussels)
Jonathan Horowitz (b. 1966, New York)
Jibade-Khalil Huffman (b. 1981, Detroit)
Alex Israel (b. 1982, Los Angeles)
Koo Jeong A (b. 1967, Seoul)
Alison Knowles (b. 1933, New York)
Angelika Markul (b. 1977, Szczecin, Poland)
AdriAna Martinez (b. 1988, Bogotá, Colombia)
Daniel Joseph Martinez (b. 1957, Los Angeles)
Jonas Mekas (b. 1922, Semeniskiai, Lithuania)
Rivane Neuenschwander (b. 1967, Belo Horizonte, Brazil)
Yoko Ono (b. 1933, Tokyo)
Sondra Perry (b. 1986, Perth Amboy, New Jersey)
Rachel Rose (b. 1986, New York)
Martha Rosler (b. Brooklyn)
Allan Ruppersberg (b. 1944, Cleveland)
Tino Sehgal (b. 1976, London)
Daniel Spoerri (b. 1930, Galati, Romania)
Haim Steinbach (b. 1944, Rehovot, Israel)
Rirkrit Tiravanija (b. 1961, Buenos Aires)
Amalia Ulman (b. 1989, Buenos Aires)
Lawrence Weiner (b. 1942, New York)
Take Me (I'm Yours) at the Jewish Museum, New York is curated by Jens Hoffmann, Director of Special Exhibitions and Public Programs, the Jewish Museum; Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, the Serpentine Galleries, London; and Kelly Taxter, Associate Curator, the Jewish Museum.
PublicationPictured: Felix Gonzalez-Torres, "Untitled" (USA Today), 1990. Installation view of Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Specific Objects without Specific Form, MMK Museum Für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, 2011. © The Felix Gonzalez-Torres Foundation, courtesy of Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York
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