Tampa Museum Exhibits Art From Hadley Martin Fisher Collection, Begins 7/9
Beginning July 9, 2011 and on view through September 25, 2011, the Tampa Museum of Art will present Syntax: Text and Symbols for a New Generation, Selections from the Hadley Martin Fisher Collection. This exhibition examines the engagement that a current generation of artists has with the written word, symbolism, modes of communication and is drawn from one of the most exciting private collections in the nation.
The 20th century began with the inclusion of written text within the collages of Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque. As the century progressed, text remained an important presence within the art world. With the appearance of Pop Art, textual references reappeared in staggering fashion. Conceptual art, with all of its challenges to the nature of the art object, relied heavily on text as a vehicle to express its desire to rupture and overturn accepted forms of expression. By the 1990s and early 2000s, artists began to reposition text and symbolic matter into new formats and to increasingly expanding ends. In addition to the experiments within the art world, reassessments continued in the philosophical and linguistic discourse about what constitutes meaning within textual references.In Syntax: Text and Symbols for a New Generation, the Tampa Museum of Art has chosen an important theme that is central to the Hadley Martin Fisher (HMF) Collection: text-based work created by a new generation of conceptual artists. This exhibition highlights several key early works in the text-based genre within the HMF Collection (by artists such as John Baldessari, Mel Bochner and Joseph Kosuth) against a wide array of younger artists who revisit the importance of word, symbolism, communication and information transference. Together, these artists show that text-based art is a vital and vibrant presence. More than 30 artists are featured in this exhibition, including Fiona Banner, Natalie Djurberg, Tracey Emin, Olafur Eliasson, Robert Gober, Sean Landers, Christian Marclay, Seth Price and Jason Rhoades.About the Tampa Museum of Art
The new Tampa Museum of Art is located in downtown Tampa's Curtis Hixon Park. Its spectacular 66,000-square-foot Cornelia Corbett Center building opened on February 6, 2010. The museum provides the region with a variety of world-class traveling exhibitions, a growing collection of contemporary and classical art, expanded educational programs and access to scenic outdoor events along Tampa's Riverwalk.
The museum opens daily at 11 a.m. Hours of operation are: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.; Friday from 11 a.m. - 8 p.m.; and Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. General admission prices are: adults $10; seniors, groups, military plus one guest $7.50; students $5; and children ages 6 and under free-of-charge. Please note that during Syntax, all current college students will be admitted free of charge. The museum's address is 120 W. Gasparilla Plaza, Tampa, FL 33602. For more information, please visit www.tampamuseum.org.

Videos