30 Oct SFMOMA and MoMA Announce Major Ruth Asawa Retrospective
Source Credit: Content and images from Ocula Magazine. Read the original article - https://ocula.com/magazine/art-news/sfmoma-and-moma-announce-major-ruth-asawa-show/
The two museums will present around 300 works by the Japanese American artist, who died in 2013. After showing in San Francisco and New York, the exhibition will travel to Spain and Switzerland.
Ruth Asawa at _Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective View, _San Francisco Museum of Art, 1973. Photograph by Laurence Cuneo. © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) yesterday announced a major exhibition of works by Ruth Asawa (1926–2013).
Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective will debut at SFMOMA from 4 April to 2 September 2025 before travelling to MoMA from 19 October 2025 to 7 February 2026. It will venture on to Guggenheim Museum Bilbao from 20 March–13 September 2026 and conclude its run at Fondation Beyeler from 18 October 2026 to 24 January 2027.
Ruth Asawa. Untitled (BMC.145, BMC Laundry Stamp) (c. 1948–49). Stamped ink on fabric sheeting. 36 3/4 × 45 1/2″ (93.3 × 115.6 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Acquired through the generosity of Joshua and Filipa Fink, 2018. © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.
‘Ruth Asawa: Retrospective is deeply aligned with SFMOMA’s vision to be both local and global—presenting Bay Area artists with profound significance that also have the potential to be highly impactful and relevant on an international scale,’ said Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA.
Spanning six decades of Asawa’s career, the exhibition will include some 300 objects spanning mediums including wire sculptures, bronze casts, paper folds, paintings, and works on paper.
The exhibition is organised by Janet Bishop, Chief Curator and Curator of Painting and Sculpture at SFMOMA, and Cara Manes, Associate Curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, at MoMA.
Ruth Asawa. Untitled (S.390, Hanging Tied-Wire, Double-Sided, Center-Tied, Multi-Branched Form with Curly Ends) (1963). Copper wire. 20 × 20 × 20 in. (50.8 × 50.8 × 50.8 cm). Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, gift of Rita Newman. © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.
‘What’s exceptional about Asawa’s practice is the multiplicity of her artistic pursuits and the marvellous ability to turn the simplest things into subjects of lifelong creative contemplation,’ Manes said.
‘The exhibition aims to offer multiple points of entry into her work, reflecting what Asawa described as the “total act” of artmaking,’ she said.
Ruth Asawa. _Untitled _(PF.293, Bouquet from Anni Albers) (early 1990s). Ink on paper. 40 × 26 in. (101.6 × 66 cm). Private collection. © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.
Asawa was born in Norwalk, California, and raised on a farm. As a teenager during World War II, she and her family were incarcerated in war relocation camps. While interned, she practised drawing with Japanese-American Disney animators.
After the war, she enrolled in Black Mountain College in North Carolina, where she studied under painter Josef Albers and architect Buckminster Fuller, among others. In 1947, she travelled to Mexico, where she took lessons with local weavers that helped inspire the metal sculptures for which she is best known.
Ruth Asawa. Untitled (S.398, Hanging Eight-Lobed, Four-Part, Discontinuous Surface Form within a Form with Spheres in the Seventh and Eighth Lobes) (c. 1955). Brass wire, iron wire, and galvanized iron wire. 8′ 8 1/2″ × 14 1/2 × 14 1/2″ (265.4 × 36.8 × 36.8 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, Promised gift of Alice and Tom Tisch, 2016. © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy David Zwirner.
Largely overlooked during her lifetime, Asawa has received growing attention in recent years. David Zwirner announced representation of her estate in 2017 and the Whitney Museum of American Art held an exhibition of her drawings titled Through Line from 16 September 2023–15 January 2024.
Writing about the exhibition for Ocula, Martin Gelin said, ‘Asawa often spoke of the connection between agriculture and craft and Albers’ lessons about learning to love the process itself. In her meticulous drawings and graphic works, you can see and feel the labour going into each line.’ —[O]
Source Credit: Content and images from Ocula Magazine. Read the original article - https://ocula.com/magazine/art-news/sfmoma-and-moma-announce-major-ruth-asawa-show/