Mint Museum of Craft + Design
Mint Museum of Art
Mint Museum of Craft + Design
Charlotte, NC
704-337-2000
California Dreamin': Contemporary Art from the Bank of America Collection
August 3 - October 24, 1999
The visual diversity of the Golden State is the focus of California Dreamin': Contemporary Art from the Bank of America Collection featured at the Bank of America Gallery, located within Charlotte's Mint Museum of Craft + Design, at 220 North Tryon Street. The exhibition of 14 works by 13 prominent artists opens August 3rd and runs through October 24th at the free center city gallery. California Dreamin' is the first in an on-going series of exhibitions at the Bank of America Gallery.
While many think of the Statue of Liberty as symbolizing
the American melting pot, it is in fact the state of California which truly
showcases the diversity in American culture. And in no arena is this more
emphatically
stated
than in the visual arts. The artists working in the state over the last
thirty years represent the range of aesthetic styles, ethnic backgrounds
and approaches to subject matter found throughout the country (right:
Peter Alexander, Punta Topo, 1986, Bank of America Collection)
California Dreamin': Contemporary California Art from the Bank of America Collection brings together some of the most important names in the area of contemporary art from the Golden State. Regarded as "the quintessential LA artist," Edward Ruscha has long been a recorder of the images and icons of Southern California's popular culture. Ruscha's drawing, I Forgot to Remember to Forget, represents the importance of the written word to conceptual art.
While
LA-based art of the recent past often takes its inspiration from popular
culture, the art of the Bay area is less easily defined and highly individualistic.
For Joan Brown, a longtime Bay Area resident, her art is personal. The
Swimmers #I (Diving) reflects the artist's interest in swimming. Brown
often swam the bracing waters of the San Francisco Bay. (left: Joan
Brown, The Swimmers #I (Diving), 1973, Bank of America Collection)
For Santa Barbara artist Rick Stich, the beauty of his
surroundings provided the basis for his art.
Alice Keck Park Leaning Figure
is one of a series of works the artist created based on plein-air sketches
from the Alice Keck Park in Santa Barbara. Stich's use of tempera as his
medium is notable for the unforgiving nature of the medium but also for
the historical associations the medium has. (right: Rick Stich, Alice
Keck Park Leaning Figure, Bank of America Collection)
Artists in the exhibition include Peter Alexander, Billy Al Bengston, Joan Brown, Laddie John Dill, Roberto Gil de Montes, Wade Hoefer, Deborah Oropallo, Eric Orr, Edward Ruscha, Raymond Saunders, Rick Stich, Paul Wonner and Takako Yamaguchi.
The Bank of America art collection is comprised of works
representing many media and regional, national and international artists.
It reflects the diversity and creativity found within the Bank of America
franchise.
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