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10 years, 10 months ago
CITY AS CANVAS, AN EXHIBITION AT THE MUSEUM OF NYC
Filled under: Front Page, Street Art
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Martin Wong, an East Village artist and collector of graffiti art, amassed a treasure trove of hundreds of works on paper and canvas—in aerosol, ink, and other mediums. The artists, including Keith Haring, Lee Quiñones, LADY PINK, and FUTURA 2000, were seminal figures in an artistic movement that spawned a worldwide phenomenon, altering music, fashion, and popular visual culture. The exhibition City as Canvas: Graffiti Art from the Martin Wong Collection begins with photographs of graffiti writing long erased from subways and buildings.

Wong, who died of AIDS in 1999, donated his collection to the City Museum in 1994.

Wong, who integrated the graffiti subculture while working at Pearl Paint on Canal Street after arriving in New York from San Francisco in 1978, amassed an unparalleled collection of sketchbooks, drawings, and paintings either through trades or acquisitions. He donated all of them to MCNY before his death from AIDS in 1999. The exhibition draws from the 55 “black books” and more than 300 paintings on all types of materials, from canvases and boards to paper and plywood that Wong donated to the museum. The exhibition will also feature a selection of Wong’s own paintings — which are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum, among others, and were the subject of a 1998 retrospective at the New Museum — including realist street scenes and portraits.

“Graffiti art is now widely admired, but many questioned its merits during the movement’s development in the 1970s. Martin Wong had the foresight to collect graffiti art and advocate for young ‘writers,’ just as New York City’s street art scene was on the cusp of gaining international prominence,” MCNY director Susan Henshaw Jones said in a statement. “Understanding the importance of graffiti as an urban statement, the City Museum embraced the opportunity to acquire Martin Wong’s collection, which included many works by artists living just blocks away. We’re thrilled to show this rare collection for the first time since Wong donated it 20 years ago.”

The exhibition, curated by MCNY’s curator of prints and photographs Sean Corcoran, will also be accompanied by a catalogue edited by Corcoran and critic Carlo McCormick.

The show, titled “City as Canvas: Graffiti Art from the Martin Wong Collection” and slated to run February 4-August 24.

city_as_canvas1 city_as_canvas2 city_as_canvas3 city_as_canvas4 city_as_canvas5 city_as_canvas7 city-as-canvas-haring city-as-canvas-lee-big

 
via mcny.org

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