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Monthly Archives:May 2022

What We’re Reading: The Whitney’s Union and Supporters Protested Outside the Museum’s Annual Gala Following a ‘Lowballed’ Wage Offer

“Events at the Whitney Museum of American Art this year have featured a consistent new guest: the museum’s union. Last night, at the museum’s annual gala and Studio Party, about 50 people turned out, standing on the curb with signs bearing such slogans as ‘LIVING ARTISTS LIVING WAGES,’ ‘HONK FOR A FAIR CONTRACT,’ and ‘WHITNEY WORKERS WANT FAIR WAGES’ and banging on drums as guests filed into the museum’s lobby for a luxe dinner,” said artnet news. “Compared to the demonstration that followed the opening of the Whitney Biennial, it was a clear increase in participation, plausibly stemming from a wage offer on April 19 that fell far below the union’s proposal.”

“According to a release that the union sent out, the Whitney’s director, Adam Weinberg, brings in a yearly salary of just above $1.1 million, and ‘the combined compensation for the fourteen highest-paid museum executives for the prior year totaled $4.5 million.’ Signs on the street revealed that many employees, in contrast, earn $17 per hour, and claimed that they are unfairly kept as temporary employees, barring them from certain benefits—including union membership.”

Read the full article here.

ICYMI: The Bridging Fellows Program

Congratulations to GIA’s Support for Individual Artists co-chair Celeste Smith, who was selected for the Bridging Fellows Program. “The Bridging Fellows program provides changemakers in Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Dallas the opportunity to strengthen their individual and collective leadership capacity and grow networks to support building healthy and equitable communities.”

From the Independent Sector: “A Bridging Fellow actively engages individuals, communities, and/or organizations for the purpose of building bridges across varying differences, including ideological, racial, socioeconomic, and geographical. Bridging Fellows-formally and/or informally-build relationships, trust, and opportunities for open and honest communication towards sustainable change and impact – including but not limited to- activists, community residents, organization leaders, community liaisons, youth development coordinators, program officers, case managers, community organizers, educators, human resource professionals, etc.”

“Through participation in the fellowship, Fellows will receive capacity and skill-building activities and instructions around bridging frameworks, share their bridging expertise with the cohort and broader social sector, and commit to deploy these practices in their organizations and communities. As a cohort, they will share their learnings and deepen their connections with each other across sectors, institutions, and geographies.”

Read the full announcement, and meet the 2022 fellows here.

The Lucie Photo Book Prize

International Deadline: September 30, 2022 – The Lucie Photo Book Prize is a juried competition open to a diversity of submissions. The awards will be presented to photographers, editors, curators or publishers…

CERF+’s Craft Emergency Relief Fund

U.S. National Deadline: Ongoing – CERF is a national, nonprofit organization making loans and small grants to professional craftspeople experiencing career-threatening illness or crisis. Grants or loans up to…

General Idea retrospective opening at National Gallery of Canada

One of the most influential groups of Canadian artists, General Idea typified the irreverent wit that swirled within the art and culture of the country throughout the late 20th-century. Decidedly anti-establishment and brimming with both social critique and playfulness, the collective trio were an icon for queer culture that wielded the veneer of consumerist culture. At the start of next month, the National Gallery of Canada will be honouring General Idea with their most extensive retrospective ever.

 

Composed of three Canadian artists Felix Partz, Jorge Zontal, and AA Bronson, General Idea rooted itself firmly geographically and culturally in Toronto and New York from 1969 to 1994. They were pioneers and prominent influencers in the spheres of conceptual and installation art, utilizing iconic images of modern life—such as drugs, advertisements, kink culture, and television—to hold a twisted mirror up to society. From their 1971 Miss General Idea Pageant where people of any gender could be candidates, to their massive display of stark blue and white pills in the installation One Year of AZT, to their strikingly ambivalent and poignant series AIDS, a send-up of Robert Indiana’s iconic LOVE; the works of General Idea lampooned, they challenged, and they inspired.

 

One Year of AZT by General Idea; courtesy of National Gallery of Canada and Sarah E.K. Smith.

 

Tragically, two-thirds of the group passed in 1994—Partz and Zontal died of complications from AIDS. In many ways, the works that General Idea was creating towards this bitter end of the group were injected with the most personal quality of their art. Unabashedly bringing the struggles that their community and they themselves faced with the likes of One Year of AZT and AIDS, the group’s insistence—as well as their playfulness, visible in pieces such as Playing Doctor—did not diminish in the slightest when faced with the terrifying epidemic. Many parallels can be drawn between their work and Andy Warhol’s at the time, but General Idea, as always, was unafraid to wear their identity on their sleeves and embrace the queer community through their work.

 

AIDS by General Idea; courtesy of ACI and Sarah E.K. Smith.

 

The General Idea archive has resided in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada for some time, and the NGC’s retrospective aims to dive deep into the works of this truly iconic trio. Encompassing over 200 works spanning their two and a half decades together, it will combine “major installations as well as publications, videos, drawings, paintings, sculptures and archival material”. In accompaniment, there is a new 756-page book entitled GENERAL IDEA which explores the works of the collection and the collective at large. The gallery is also holding the General Idea Symposium on June 4th to explore with scholars the influence of General Idea.

 

General Idea was the exact sort of force that modern art should be—biting, clever, and emotionally honest. They honed in on aspects of popular culture closer than any of us are meant to, and in doing so they found gold. Self-mythology, celebrity, and wily self-promotion made the trio icons before anyone had even realized it—and now the National Gallery of Canada can help entire new generations of artists realize it too.