Whitney Museum

Nick Mauss

Transmissions

16 Mar - 14 May 2018

Installation view of Nick Mauss: Transmissions (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 16-May 14, 2018). Clockwise, from bottom left: Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; John Storrs, Forms in Space, c. 1924; Man Ray, New York, 1917/1966; Gaston Lachaise, Man Walking, 1933; Dorthea Tanning, Aux environs de Paris (Paris and Vicinity), 1962; Nick Mauss, Images in Mind, 2018; Pavel Tchelitchew, Interior Landscape Skull, 1949; John Storrs, Forms in Space #1, c. 1924; Elie Nadelman, Two Circus Women, c. 1928-29; Gustav Natorp figure (formerly owned by Lincoln Kirstein), 1898; Sturtevant, Relâche, 1967; Ilse Bing, Untitled (Skyscrapers, night, NY), 1936; Isle Bing, Dead End II, 1936.; Ilse Bing, Three Birds in the Sky, Paris, 1936; Ilse Bing, Between France and U.S.A. (Seascapes), 1936; Elie Nadleman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Elie Nadelman, Untitled, c. 1938-46; Carl Van Vechten, Al Bledger of the Von Grona (American) Negro Ballet, 1938; Carl Van Vechten, Al Bledger of the Von Grona (American) Negro Ballet, 1938; Carl Van Vechten, Carl Van Vechten slideshow, 1940-64. Photograph by Ron Amstutz. Digital image © Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
For his first solo museum exhibition in the United States, artist Nick Mauss (b. 1980) presents Transmissions, a multidisciplinary work exploring the relationship between modernist ballet and the avant-garde visual arts in New York from the 1930s through ’50s. Over the past decade, Mauss has pursued a hybrid mode of working that merges the roles of curator, artist, and scholar. At the Whitney he brings together his own works, alongside historical photographs, sculptures, paintings, drawings, film and video from the Whitney’s holdings and those of other public and private collections—all presented within a layered exhibition design by Mauss that allows for the works to be seen in a new light.

Central to the exhibition is a daily performance by four dancers made in collaboration with Mauss as an interpretative reaction to the artworks and archival materials on display. For Transmissions, Mauss cast dancers whose training includes ballet, though most have continued to practice in more contemporary forms. Their movements incorporate quotidian gestures and procedures from a dancer’s daily practice as well as a choreographed sequence that invokes ballet as it comes into tension with modern and contemporary techniques.

In the current vogue for contemporary dance in museums, the legacy of ballet remains relatively unexamined. This exhibition will consider the intersections of ballet not only with the visual arts but also with theater, fashion, and new representations of the body. The development of modernist ballet in New York in the decades bookending World War II served as an artistic catalyst, filter, and vibrant, shared vocabulary. European surrealist aesthetics and interdisciplinary experimentation bridged artistic and social worlds. Mauss also explores the overt and coded imaging of desire in art and dance of this time, emphasizing pre-queer histories within an exhibition that itself forges new modes of attention and engagement with history in the present.

This exhibition is organized by Scott Rothkopf, Deputy Director for Programs and Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator, and Elisabeth Sussman, Curator and Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography, with Greta Hartenstein, senior curatorial assistant, and Allie Tepper, curatorial project assistant.

Generous support for Nick Mauss: Transmissions is provided by Deutsche Bank and the Performance Committee of the Whitney Museum of American Art.

In-kind support is provided by The Center for Ballet and the Arts at New York University.
 

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