Exhibition

Delirious: Art at the Limits of Reason 1950-1980

13 Sep 2017 – 14 Jan 2018

Regular hours

Wednesday
10:00 – 17:30
Thursday
10:00 – 17:30
Friday
10:00 – 21:00
Saturday
10:00 – 21:00
Sunday
10:00 – 17:30
Tuesday
10:00 – 17:30

Cost of entry

$25.00 Adults
$12.00 Students

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Delirious times demand delirious art, or so this exhibition will propose. The years between 1950 and 1980 were beset by upheaval.

About

Around the globe, military conflict proliferated and social and political unrest flared. Disenchantment with an oppressive rationalism mounted, as did a corollary interest in fantastic, hallucinatory experiences. Artists responded to these developments by incorporating absurdity, disorder, nonsense, disorientation, and repetition into their work. In the process, they destabilize space and perception, give form to extreme mental, emotional, and physical states, and derange otherwise logical structures and techniques. Delirious will explore the embrace of irrationality among American, Latin American, and European artists.

Divided into four sections—Vertigo, Excess, Nonsense, and Twisted—this exhibition will showcase roughly 100 works of art by 62 artists, including Antonio Berni, Dara Birnbaum, Tony Conrad, Hanne Darboven, Nancy Grossman, Philip Guston, Dean Fleming, Eva Hesse, Alfred Jensen, Yayoi Kusama, Sol LeWitt, Lee Lozano, Anna Maria Maiolino, Ana Mendieta, Bruce Nauman, Jim Nutt, Hélio Oiticica, Claes Oldenburg, Abraham Palatnik, Howardena Pindell, Mira Schendel, Peter Saul, Carolee Schneeman, Paul Sharits, Robert Smithson, Nancy Spero, Paul Thek, and Stan VanDerBeek. About a third of the exhibition will be drawn from The Met collection. Linked by a common distrust of reason, the featured works will alternately simulate and stimulate delirium, straining the limits of both legibility and intelligibility. Ultimately, the exhibition will ask if it is possible to understand a good deal of postwar art, even seemingly rational art, as an exercise in calculated lunacy.

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