Transforming Chronologies: An Atlas of Drawings, Part One
26 Jan - 24 Apr 2006
Installation view of the exhibition, "Transforming Chronologies: An Atlas of Drawings, Part 1"
January 26, 2006–April 24, 2006. IN1961.5. Photograph by Thomas Griesel.
January 26, 2006–April 24, 2006. IN1961.5. Photograph by Thomas Griesel.
Transforming Chronologies is a two-part exhibition that approaches the drawings collection from a new direction, presenting works not by date but by specific sequences of forms. Just as anthropologists see a myth as the summation of all of its many versions, we may say that in art history a form, motif, or theme is the sum of its variations and differences. Transforming Chronologies is a curatorial application of this concept, suggesting that the meaning of a work of art depends not only on its own internal structures but also on its relationships to other works. The exhibition explores the possibilities of these interactions by presenting drawings in groupings intended to provoke transformations of meaning, both among themselves and in the way viewers perceive them.
Organized by Luis Peréz-Oramas, Adjunct Curator, Department of Drawings.
Organized by Luis Peréz-Oramas, Adjunct Curator, Department of Drawings.