Date: Fri 05-Mar-1999
Date: Fri 05-Mar-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Aldrich-Klein-Reader's-Digest
Full Text:
"Future-Present" Brings Reader's Digest Selections Into Ridgefield
(with cuts)
BY SHANNON HICKS
RIDGEFIELD -- In the early 1940s, Reader's Digest co-founder Lila Acheson
Wallace began the Reader's Digest Collection, a selection of artwork
originally recognized for its holdings of Impressionist and early modernist
art. In 1988 the corporate art department launched an aggressive art
acquisition program that doubled the collection's size to 8,000 pieces and
expanded the holdings to include photography, painting, prints, drawings and
other works on paper.
The program was always meant to enhance the working environment at Reader's
Digest, and also to continue Reader's Digest's support emerging artists around
the world.
Through the middle of this month, the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art will
continue to present "Future-Present: Photographs of Children from the Reader's
Digest Collection." On view until March 14, "Future-Present" represents the
first time any of the pieces from the Reader's Digest collection have been
assembled for public viewing.
"The Reader's Digest collection has material that dates back to the 19th
Century," Richard Klein, the Aldrich's assistant director and the organizer of
the exhibition, pointed out recently. "But when the museum entered discussions
[with Reader's Digest], it was with the understanding that we would show only
contemporary prints, from 1980 or newer."
The photography segment of the Reader's Digest Collection was started in 1989;
the focus on images of children came about in 1996. While the complete
photography collection numbers over 2,000 pieces of work by emerging and known
artists (including pieces that date to 1922, the year Reader's Digest was
founded), the children's portion of the collection now contains over 275
vintage, modern and contemporary works by 150 photographers. The Aldrich is
presenting 73 works, representing 49 contemporary artists.
The museum chose to work with the Reader's Digest corporation in presenting a
show because the institutions share a similar mission: to present important
contemporary visual art. Included in "Future-Present" (the exhibition's name
is derived from the sense of hope children bring to each current and future
generation) are photos by Tina Barney, Ellen Brooks, Robert Mapplethorpe,
Sebastio Salgado and Carrie Mae Weems, among others.
"It is interesting to note how many well-known photographers, especially those
not recognized for their work with children, are represented in this
exhibition," Mr Klein wrote in his introduction to the exhibition's
accompanying catalogue. "Young people have consistently been important subject
matter for photographers since the medium's inception in the 19th Century,"
his essay continued.
In fact, of the 17 billion photographs that were taken last year, on the
amateur and professional level, more than 50 percent of that number is
represented by images of children. "There has been a lot of interest within
the last decade of the depiction of children," Mr Klein said recently.
While children have always represented a large segment of the photographs that
have been taken, art history professor and author Anne Higonnet pointed out in
a recent program at the Aldrich that "there is an increasing number of
photographers who are devoting at least part of their career to the children."
Aside from the point the Aldrich is a museum that focuses on modern visual
art, Ms Higonnet said, "One of the reasons this show is here -- the newer
photographs -- is because these are the stronger of the works [in the
collection.]"
"It is the newer ones which are more powerful, more culturally motivating,"
said Ms Higonnet, who teaches at Wellesley College.
Many contemporary photos certainly do more to capture children in dramatic
settings, or even more natural settings and reactions, than their historic
counterparts. Mark Steinmetz's "Chicago 1989," a 14 by 20-inch gelatin silver
print included in the show, captures the moment five boys in a pickup baseball
game nearly collide in the outfield as all five move in to catch a flyball.
The ball has just touched the glove of one of the boys, and each facial
expression tells a different story -- "Am I going to collide with a
teammate?," "Did I catch it?," "Where's the ball?," and so on.
Conversely, Len Jenshel's "Alice in Wonderland Statue, Central Park, New York"
captures five little girls clamoring on the statue of the image's title. While
the setting is more natural and less tense than the purposely posed canvas
counterparts of early 18th Century painters like Mary Cassatt, the girls are
still obviously aware of the camera and photographer's presence. Each girl is
wearing a light blue pinafore, just like her fairy tale namesake. The
contemporary photo may be more light-hearted and less posed than the earliest
images of children, but it is still a picture that was in some part created,
rather than simply captured spur of the moment.
In her lecture on February 26 at the museum, Ms Higonnet used examples of work
by the popular photographer Anne Geddes to back up her point that commercial
photographers will use children just as easily as immaterial props in their
work, yet still create images that are pleasing to the eye and enjoyable to
look at.
"Future-Present: Contemporary Photographs of Children From The Reader's Digest
Collection" presents works that run the gamut from pieces that are simply
enjoyable to look at, such as the aforementioned "Chicago 1989," to images
that can have so much read into them their images nearly lose all hint of
innocence the idea of childhood carries with it.
In the exhibition catalogue, Janet Rutledge makes the argument that in
"Boston," a 1986 Ektacolor print by Paul D'Amato, a young black girl in a
purple dress and white tights is not just reaching from the railing of her
home's porch to grasp a red rose, but that the child represents everything
from the contrast of youth in an old neighborhood to an example of leaving the
dark (the porch and its railing are painted a dark green) and reaching into
the light (the background is of a white house that abuts her parents' home).
Whatever viewers choose to read into the works on view in the current Aldrich
exhibition, children are generally pictures of innocence. In deciding to share
part of its collection with the public, the Reader's Digest Corporation has
allowed museum visitors to not only see works of art that have been
unattainable for decades, but also to see children in a different light.
The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, 258 Main Street in Ridgefield, is open
Tuesday through Sunday, noon to 5 pm (Friday until 8 pm). For details, call
438-4519.