Off Center

Outside Ideas from Inside the Walker Art Center

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by Matt Peiken at 11:44 pm 2007-10-29
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Kathy Halbreich (in white) has the McGuire Theater all to herself. Photo by Cameron Wittig.

 

Kathy Halbreich limped into the final hours of her final day — her 6,115th — as the Walker’s director.

“I fell into a drain. I think it’s appropriate,” she told a Walker staffer, referring to the giant plastic boot encasing her right foot and ankle, as she hobbled into the museum’s Skyline Room. “I thought, you know, ‘Take the next step — break a leg.’”

That next step — a new associate director position created for her at New York’s Museum of Modern Art — was barely alluded to during Monday’s triple-layered farewell tribute. The evening started with a champagne-toasted goodbye from Walker staff, merged into a formal tribute to Halbreich in front of nearly 400 staff, donors, board members and assorted dignitaries and closed with a Walker-wide “block party” — all of it hailing Halbreich’s 16-plus years leading the Walker and the deep impact she made on museum programming, funding, recruiting and its thinking.

Long, thin tables at the staff toast were topped only with boxes of tissue, and many staffers reached for them during speeches as touching as they were brief.

“I will miss your shuffle to my the office with one more idea you need to share immediately,” said Philippe Vergne, the Walker’s associate director and chief curator.

Howard Oransky, the director of planning and a longtime Walker staffer, praised Halbreich for “having changed the curatorial landscape of contemporary art.” He recalled that after seeing evidence that the Walker exhibited art primarily from American and Western European artists, Halbreich immediately conceived and launched the museum’s global initiative. This broadened programming across disciplines, heightening artistic discoveries in Africa, China, South Korea, the Middle East and elsewhere and stamping the museum with perhaps Halbreich’s most profound legacy in terms of programming.

“You are not only the finest example of what a museum director can be, but you have given us a home, a home built with ideas,” Oransky said.

Philip Bither, chief performing arts curator, thanked Halbreich for her “constant, tireless, exhausting support and trust and faith” and the “grace and humanity in how you ran the place.”

Sarah Schultz, director of education and community programming, put it plainly: “Good girls don’t make a difference. So on behalf of all the remaining bad girls, we salute you.”

Jazz pianist Jason Moran proved a fitting feature of the tribute inside the Walker’s McGuire Theater. He first performed at the museum in 2001 and then held residencies in 2004 and 2005, when he turned to the Walker’s visual arts collection for direct inspiration for new work. On Monday, he tweaked one of his own tunes into the retitled “She Puts on Her Coat and Leaves,” sampling and layering sound clips from an early Halbreich interview — Her pasted words: “My Husband. My Son. My Friendship. My Obsession” — atop a gorgeous, airy ballad.

Board members rattled off Halbreich’s accomplishments: Among them, starting Free First Saturday and the Walker’s teen arts council, a $100 million capital campaign leading to the museum’s new building and balanced budgets during every year of her leadership.

Halbreich said she leaves the museum with a succinct mission: Keeping the Walker “a safe place for unsafe ideas.”

“These were, for me, the happiest years of my life,” she said from the theater’s podium. “It has been my obsession, and I thank you all for supporting it. This is a very special place, and what we have isn’t reproducible.”


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 7:22 pm 2007-10-29
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Tyler Green’s Modern Art Notes, dubbed “the most influential of all the visual-arts blogs” by the Wall Street Journal, is building its Minneapolis blogroll. Off-Center makes the list (thanks!), but are there other local art blogs you think the world should know about? Here’s your time for civic pride: Leave a list in comments or at MAN.


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 10:25 pm 2007-10-28
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Why don’t they just leave the poor terracotta warriors alone already? Last year in Xi’an, China, a German art student donned a gown and hat, identical to those once worn by Emperor Qinshihuang’s warriors and posed as one of the city’s famed 2200-year-old terracotta statues. (Authorities caught him, confiscated his costume, and sent him back to Guangzhou, where he was studying.)

Now a climate activist has altered some of the warriors that are on view at London’s British Museum. Martin Wyness, 49, jumped the barricades and slipped facemasks bearing the words “CO2 emission polluter” on two of the figures to highlight China’s poor pollution record. He’s been banned from the museum for life.


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 12:00 pm 2007-10-28
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Johnson, Gehry, Pelli, Herzog & de Meuron: Architecturally, Minneapolis has got it all, a fact Coolhunting acknowledges with a new video, led by tourguide and University of Minnesota architecture professor John Comazzi.[via]


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 9:35 am 2007-10-28
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PBS’ amazing Art:21 launches its fourth season tonight (Sunday) with the first episode in a series of profiles of 17 contemporary artists working on themes of romance, protest, ecology and paradox. Artists include names familiar to Walker regulars, including onetime artists-in-residence Allora & Calzadilla, current Brave New Worlds artist Mark Bradford, Catherin Sullivan (whose installation Triangle of Need closes at the Walker Nov. 18), and Laurie Simmons, who film The Music of Regret was a highlight of Women With Vision 2007. The full list of artists:

Laurie Simmons

Lari Pitman

Judy Pfaff

Pierre Huyghe

Nancy Spero

An-My Le

Alfredo Jaar

Jenny Holzer

Ursula von Rydingsvard

Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle

Robert Adams

Mark Dion

Mark Bradford

Catherine Sullivan

Robert Ryman

Jennifer Allora & Guillermo Calzadilla

Find local listings here. (Here in the Twin Cities, it airs tonight at 10 pm on TPT 2.)

[via]


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 12:43 pm 2007-10-23
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• Futurist Revival? A man described by Italian media as a “rightwing extremistdumped paint into Rome’s famed Trevi Fountain, turning its waters blood red on Friday. He dropped leaflets attributed to a group called “FTM Futurist Action 2007″ and declared, “Today we give birth to a new violent conception of life and history, which exalts the battle against … the toadies of false power, slaves to the global market. You wanted just a red carpet; we want a city entirely in vermilion.” The red carpet refers to the expense of hosting the just-concluded Rome Film Fest.

• Dylan, Shillin’:
The “climes they are a changin’,” but that didn’t stop Bob Dylan for cutting a commercial for the 14 mpg (city) Cadillac Escalade. While Todd Haynes’ new movie on Dylan has film buffs buzzing, some in the art world aren’t wowed by the Cadillac ads. Guardian blogger Kelly Nestruck writes, “Enjoy Dylan’s music. Enjoy his radio show. But don’t look to the man for any sort of spiritual or moral guidance.”

• Ephemeral Buddha: Like fellow Chinese-born artist Huang Yong Ping’s castle of sand (on view in the Walker’s 2005 show House of Oracles, which opens at the Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art in Beijing in March 2008), Zhang Huan’s new work Berlin Buddha is meant to deteriorate throughout the course of its showing. On view now at Haunch of Venison in Berlin, the piece features a 4-meter-tall Buddha made of compacted ash from ceremonial joss sticks, presented with the aluminum mold used to make it.

• RIP: Civil rights photographer Ernest C. Withers, including an iconic image of striking sanitation workers in a sea of “I Am a Man” signs, passed away last week in Memphis. He was 85.

• “Portrait of a Ladies’ Man”: Malkovich plays Klimt in a new film that opened last week.


 
by Matt Peiken at 3:10 pm 2007-10-22
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A day after the Walker’s opening of Frida Kahlo, Twin Cities community radio station KFAI is airing a soundtrack to the exhibition on its new program, “Encuentro.” Host Gilberto Vázquez Valle is dedicating the Oct. 28 show to songs from Kahlo's life — “songs that she loved, songs that were popular in Mexico during her lifetime and songs that were part of the musical backdrop for her artistic work,” he says.

KFAI (90.3 FM in Minneapolis / 106.7-FM in St. Paul) broadcasts "Encuentro" 1 to 2:30 pm each Sunday.


 
by Kate Strathmann at 2:24 pm 2007-10-22
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The Washington Post’s Robin Givhan comments on the Walker’s Kara Walker exhibition My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love, currently at the Whitney museum in New York. Givhan does an excellent job putting Kara Walker in the context of recent events.


 
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