Urgent Museum Notice

Now Open: Women Shape Design in "Pathmakers"

Blog Category:  NMWA Exhibitions
View of a gallery space. On a black wall, it says

NMWA’s latest exhibition, Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today, is now open! Museum staff have been busy transforming the 2nd-floor galleries to display more than 80 objects including furniture, ceramics, textiles, and jewelry. The exhibition explores the lasting impact of women artists and designers on midcentury Modernism through making groundbreaking commercial and industrial designs, maintaining craft traditions, and incorporating new aesthetics into fine art.

Three people with a light skin tone are standing before a large piece of art and a podium. One of the women is giving a speech. She has gray hair and is wearing a white blouse and glasses.
Opening Reception for Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today exhibition; Photo by Jack Hartzman

In the 1950s and ’60s, an era when painting, sculpture, and architecture were dominated by men, women had a considerable impact in alternative materials such as textiles, ceramics, and metals. Pioneers in these fields, including Ruth Asawa, Edith Heath, Sheila Hicks, Karen Karnes, Dorothy Liebes, Alice Kagawa Parrott, Lenore Tawney, and Eva Zeisel, had tremendous influence as designers, artists, and teachers.

View of a gallery space. Several people are standing in a circle, discussing the artworks on the wall. The artworks are colorful textile art pieces.
Installation view of Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today exhibition; Photo by Jack Hartzman

Their artistic practices varied widely, some exhibited in New York City galleries, others took part in the regional handicraft scene in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and still others collaborated with corporations such as General Motors. Pathmakers also illustrates parallels between women creating work in the United States and Scandinavia, where craft often served as a pathway to Modernist innovation.

Guest curators Jennifer Scanlan and Ezra Shales also consider contemporary female artists and designers whose work builds upon that of their mid-century counterparts. Polly Apfelbaum and Michelle Grabner are represented by installations centered on woven and knitted patterns, while Anne Wilson’s work focuses on the processes of textile manufacture. Magdalene Odundo and Christine Nofchissey McHorse adapt traditional techniques and absorb influences from global sources. Furniture and fixture designers Vivian Beer, Front Design, and Hella Jongerius have also expanded the repertoire of making, while Gabriel A. Maher looks at the ways gender is constructed by the clothes we wear.

Pathmakers stresses the connections between midcentury and contemporary design and aesthetics,” said NMWA Associate Curator Virginia Treanor. “The installation will encourage the comparison of the modern and contemporary periods in a way that enables close inspection.”

Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today is on view through February 28, 2016. Visit this Sunday for a Free Community Day with a pop-up makerspace and enjoy noon gallery talks every Wednesday!

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