MoMA to Present THE FOREVER NOW, Begin. 12/14

By: Nov. 24, 2014
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Paintings by 17 artists working today are the focus of The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemporal World at The Museum of Modern Art from December 14, 2014, through April 5, 2015. These works are united by a singular approach that characterizes a cultural moment in the early years of this millennium: they paradoxically do not represent-either through style, content, or medium-the time in which they are made. This "atemporality," or timelessness-also present in contemporary literature, fashion, and popular music-is manifested in painting through the reanimating of historical styles or by recreating a contemporary version of them, sampling motifs from across the timeline of 20th-century art in a single painting or across an oeuvre, or by radically paring down an artistic language to its most basic, archetypal form. The Forever Now is organized by Laura Hoptman, Curator, with Margaret Ewing, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA.

The Forever Now includes nearly 90 stylistically disparate, and often visually dazzling, paintings made within the last several years by Richard Aldrich, Joe Bradley, Kerstin Brätsch, Matt Connors, Michaela Eichwald, Nicole Eisenman, Mark Grotjahn, Charline von Heyl, Rashid Johnson, Julie Mehretu, Dianna Molzan, Oscar Murillo, Laura Owens, Amy Sillman, Josh Smith, Mary Weatherford, and Michael Williams. Several artists-including Connors, Eisenman, and Owens-are producing new work for the exhibition.

The featured artists utilize a wide variety of styles and impulses, but all use the painted surface as a platform, map, or screen on which genres intermingle, morph, and collide. Their work represents an engagement with traditional painting, yet each artist tests those traditions in such a way that they reshape the various languages of abstraction, redefine strategies like appropriation and bricolage, and reframe more metaphysical, high-stakes questions that surround notions of originality, subjectivity, and spiritual transcendence.


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