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EIU Tarble Arts Center

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS

 


Force Majeure

Hannah Black, micha cárdenas, Shirin Neshat, Pipilotti Rist, Janaina Tschäpe, and Carrie Mae Weems

September 24–December 4, 2021

Still of "I Look at Women" by Carrie Mae Weems

Carrie Mae Weems, I Look at Women (still), 2017, video | © Carrie Mae Weems. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.

 

This exhibition traces the history of video and technology as media for the voices of feminist discourse from second- to third- and fourth-wave aesthetics and strategies. The title Force Majeure recognizes the power of historical and contemporary demands for voice and visibility; suggests the ways that nature and the landscape appear within the works in the exhibition; and acknowledges contingency, as in the common contractual force majeure clause. The exhibition presents a focused selection of influential contemporary video and media works installed throughout the Tarble's gallery and outdoor spaces.

 


Yoko Ono: Mend Piece

September 24–December 4, 2021

"Mend Piece" by Yoko Ono

Yoko Ono, Mend Piece (Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York City version), 1966/2015, Ceramic, nontoxic glue, cello tape, scissors, and twine, Dimensions variable, Rennie Collection, Vancouver. Installation view, rennie museum, Vancouver, 2018, photographed by Blaine Campbell; courtesy Rennie Collection, Vancouver | © 2015 Yoko Ono 

 

In this iteration of the iconic installation Mend Piece (Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York City version) (1966/2015), Ono proposes communal mending as an act of healing. In a seemingly simple white room, shattered cups and saucers are placed on a table. Participants are asked to bind the fragments together using common household items: twine, glue, scissors, and tape. The resulting creations are displayed on nearby shelves, evidence of the power of collective action. Secluded from the bustling world, Ono’s meditative environment inspires reflections on the tumultuous concerns of society, as well as personal struggles. 

Conceived in the 1960s at a moment of rapid cultural transformation, this early example of participatory artwork still resonates strongly today. Mend Piece calls to mind the Japanese philosophy of Wabi-sabi, an embracing of the flawed or imperfect. For Ono, a visitors’ small act of mending holds the potential to resonate at a universal scale. With straightforward directions, the artist asks participants to let go of pretension and consider larger ideas: “Mend with wisdom/mend with love./It will mend the earth/at the same time.”  

Yoko Ono’s work radically questions the division between art and the everyday, the artist and the viewer. Participating in Mend Piece (Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York City version), one experiences Ono’s unique practice both intellectually and physically.

 

This exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts (AFA). The presentation of Yoko Ono’s Mend Piece (Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York City version) is part of ArtRoom, an ongoing series of contemporary art installations organised by the AFA.
AFA logo

 


Re:hab / Re:sound

Brad Decker and Will Porter

September 24–December 4, 2021

"Re:hab / Re:sound" by Brad Decker and Will Porter

 

In a collaborative gesture that responds to the exhibitions on view and explores cycles of destruction and creation, Brad Decker and Will Porter will perform live during the Fall Exhibition Grand Opening reception using electronic music, trombone, movement, and a graphic score. The recorded music will continue to play throughout the exhibition cycle, and residue from the performance will remain on view as a visual representation of the happening.

 

Related Pages

Contact Information

Tarble Arts Center

2010 9th St.
Charleston, IL 61920
217-581-2787
tarble@eiu.edu


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