Shepherd Express - August 2021

Page 50

CULTURE | SPONSORED BY THE MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM

Sculpture Milwaukee’s

S

Best Summer BY JOHN SCHNEIDER

culpture Milwaukee’s fifth annual public exhibition in Downtown Milwaukee has doubled in size this summer. Since pandemic-related challenges delayed last summer’s installation, and drastically curtailed most Downtown activity, the board and participating artists chose to leave the 2020 show in place through the winter. Fifteen of those works will remain until autumn, joined by this year’s new arrivals, most of which are now installed. It’s a total, by my count, of 31 timely, thought-provoking, entertaining artworks. The new works will be here until autumn of 2022. Most of the pieces are placed along Wisconsin Avenue from the Milwaukee Art Museum to the Central Library. A few speak their minds in the Third Ward. The site and positioning of each piece is determined in collaboration with its artist-maker and for maximum impact. The works change the environment. The settings add meaning. Sometimes the works seem to play off each other. They draw you on. You look for the next one. Sometimes you want to go back. You can, of course. There’s no hours or charge. This year’s works were chosen by guest curators Michelle Grabner and Theaster Gates. Both are artists with remarkable resumes. Oshkosh born and Milwaukee based, Grabner is a well-known nationally. Her work was part of the inaugural Sculpture Milwaukee exhibition in 2017.That piece now lives on the Riverwalk south of Wisconsin Avenue. She’s served on the board of the organization and in various committees. Although she’s curated major national exhibitions, this is her first for Sculpture Milwaukee. She brought in Gates as her creative partner. Chicago born and based, and a member of the University of Chicago’s visual arts faculty, he’s won international renown as a social practice installation artist. That means his assemblages are meant to foster understanding and inspire needed change.

50 | SHEPHERD EXPRESS

MOMENTS OF CONNECTION For the first time, the exhibition has a title: “there is this We.” The words are taken from a poem by Gwendolyn Brooks (2017-2000), who in 1950 became the first Black poet to win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. The poem, “An Aspect of Love, Alive in the Ice and Fire,” describes our too-brief moments of complete connection with another human being. It can perhaps apply as well to the connection of an artwork and its viewer; and more idealistically, to a city and its art. In Grabner’s words, the title “honors a belief in social change through the provocations of the artistic imagination.” Current board chair Wayne Morgan offers this: “Theaster and Michelle are inviting us to consider some incredibly challenging questions and give thought to how we intend to move forward as a community and as a country.” A plaque near each work gives viewers helpful information and good thoughts about that piece. Guided walking tours and open-air bus tours are available with a Sculpture Milwaukee membership, as are audio tours in which you’ll hear directly from the artist on your cell phone. Visit sculpturemilwaukee.com for information.

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE Or just enjoy your own thoughts, as Meg Strobel, the organization’s new marketing and community engagement director, emphasizes: “I think what’s great about our exhibition is we offer something for everyone, whether you’re an art aficionado or just want to get out and explore the city in a new way. Art always reflects the moment in which it was created, and we’ve just come through a pretty serious moment. And artists are able to get to the crux of some of these issues and explore them in really unique ways.” In a digital tour of the exhibition (I’ve since visited in person), Strobel points as an example to Alison Janae Hamilton’s 16’ tall

Photos courtesy of Sculpture Milwaukee.


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Articles inside

From the City that Always Sweeps

4min
pages 66-68

Dairyland Classic Returns to Milwaukee

4min
pages 64-65

When You Wish Upon a Star... — Domicile

4min
pages 60-61

The Tax and Budget Benefits of Legal Marijuana Sales — Cannabis

5min
pages 58-59

When Does Positivity Become Toxic?

4min
pages 56-57

Sculpture Milwaukee's Best Summer

5min
pages 50-53

“Americans in Spain: Painting and Travel 1820–1920.” At the Milwaukee Art Museum through October 3, 2021

10min
pages 44-49

This Month in Milwaukee

5min
pages 54-55

You Can Achieve your Financial Goals

3min
pages 42-43

What’s on the Wisconsin State Fair’s Main Stage?

14min
pages 28-41

Classic Styles of Sour Beer — Beverages

3min
pages 26-27

Ma's Chicken Congee — Flash in the Pan

4min
pages 24-25

La Merenda, A Walker's Point Gem That Still Shines Bright

3min
pages 22-23

Jim Godsil, Integral to Our City

3min
pages 18-19

What's Next for Wisconsin After State Budget is Enacted? — Issue of the Month

4min
pages 16-17

Republicans Keep Reliving Their Party's Worst Demagoguery — Taking Liberties

4min
pages 14-15

"Moving Toward a Shared Vision"

6min
pages 8-11

Making Milwaukee Music History

5min
pages 20-21

This Modern World

1min
pages 12-13
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