Bunny Rogers
Brig und Ladder
07 Jul - 09 Oct 2017
Bunny Rogers (b. 1990)
still from A Very Special Holiday Performance in Columbine Auditorium, 2017
Video, color, sound. Collection of the artist; courtesy Société, Berlin
still from A Very Special Holiday Performance in Columbine Auditorium, 2017
Video, color, sound. Collection of the artist; courtesy Société, Berlin
BUNNY ROGERS
Brig und Ladder
7 July – 9 October 2017
In her work, Bunny Rogers draws from a personal cosmology to explore universal experiences of loss, alienation, and a search for belonging. Her layered installations, videos, and sculptures begin with wide-ranging yet highly specific references, from young-adult fiction and early 2000s cartoons, like Clone High, to autobiographical events and violent media spectacles, such as the 1999 Columbine High School shooting. Rogers’s techniques are equally idiosyncratic. She borrows from theater costuming, design, and industrial furniture manufacturing, and often crafts her work by hand. This hybrid approach gives Rogers’s objects and spaces a distinct texture; they read simultaneously as slick and intimate, highly constructed but also sincere.
For her first museum solo show in the United States, Rogers creates a new body of work. The exhibition is on view in the John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Gallery on the Museum's first floor, which is free and open to the public.
This exhibition is organized by assistant curator Elisabeth Sherman and curatorial assistant Margaret Kross.
Major support for Bunny Rogers: Brig Und Ladder is provided by John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation.
Generous support is provided by Jackson Tang.
Brig und Ladder
7 July – 9 October 2017
In her work, Bunny Rogers draws from a personal cosmology to explore universal experiences of loss, alienation, and a search for belonging. Her layered installations, videos, and sculptures begin with wide-ranging yet highly specific references, from young-adult fiction and early 2000s cartoons, like Clone High, to autobiographical events and violent media spectacles, such as the 1999 Columbine High School shooting. Rogers’s techniques are equally idiosyncratic. She borrows from theater costuming, design, and industrial furniture manufacturing, and often crafts her work by hand. This hybrid approach gives Rogers’s objects and spaces a distinct texture; they read simultaneously as slick and intimate, highly constructed but also sincere.
For her first museum solo show in the United States, Rogers creates a new body of work. The exhibition is on view in the John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Gallery on the Museum's first floor, which is free and open to the public.
This exhibition is organized by assistant curator Elisabeth Sherman and curatorial assistant Margaret Kross.
Major support for Bunny Rogers: Brig Und Ladder is provided by John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation.
Generous support is provided by Jackson Tang.