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Cleve Carney Museum of Art celebrates summer exhibition 'Hooking Up'

The Cleve Carney Museum of Art in Glen Ellyn is celebrating its summer 2022 exhibition "Hooking Up: Meet the Collection," with a reception Friday, July 15.

The exhibition showcases treasures from the COD Permanent Art collection and explores the historical precedents and issues contemporary artists address today, while bringing members of the community together to engage in thoughtful discussion about works on display.

The reception starts at 6:30 p.m. at the museum located on the College of DuPage campus at 425 Fawell Blvd. It will include an artist talk by contemporary artist Britni Mara who will discuss her artistic practice and work on display in the current exhibition.

Assistant curator Julia Walker, curator of "Hooking Up," will moderate and lead a brief Q&A.

Visitors are welcome to tour the exhibition before or after the discussion.

The July 15 event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, visit TheCCMA.org.

Visitors are also welcome to stay for the 7:30 p.m. opening concert of the MAC's free Lakeside Pavilion Summer Series. For more, go to AtTheMAC.org.

The "Hooking Up" exhibit at Cleve Carney Museum of Art showcases works such as Cindy Sherman's chromogenic print, "For Chicago" and Nicholas Africano's oil manga and fabric on canvas "Protégé." Courtesy of Clare Britt

In the exhibit, masters such as Toulouse-Lautrec and Rembrandt Van Rijn to 21st-century artists Maya Lin and Kehinde Wiley from the College of DuPage Permanent Art collection will be in conversation with works by notable contemporary Chicago artists including Theaster Gates, Sam Jaffe, Christopher James, Troy Lehman, Riva Lehrer, José Lerma, Britni Mara, Audrey Niffenegger, Julia Phillips, Jeffrey Swider-Peltz, Taylor Smith, and Amanda Williams.

"The College of DuPage has an amazing permanent collection featuring pieces by some of the most recognizable names from art history, and this exhibition highlights that," said Art Assistant Curator Julia Walker. "It's rare to find artists like Rembrandt and Warhol in a suburban museum; that's why it was important for us to also bring in contemporary works that are capable of playing off these masters."

"Hooking Up: Meet the Collection" offers a rare opportunity for visitors to draw links between disparate works of art while connecting with others within the museum and beyond. A locally commissioned mural, activities for visitors of all ages, collaboration with Glen Ellyn's Common Good Cocktail House and other programs foster a community of conviviality against an inviting backdrop of compelling artworks, both familiar and new.

For this exhibition, the museum's gallery space is transformed into a creative gathering space where visitors are encouraged to sketch, write and converse while taking inspiration from a wide range of artworks.

Visitors are encouraged to participate by hanging their own work on a dedicated wall next to those of famous artists like Joan Miró, entering a piece of writing or visual art for publication in the Prairie Light Review and writing letters that will be delivered to artists featured in the exhibition.

"Museums should be lively, welcoming and enriching spaces where the community can come together," said Walker, who hopes visitors to the CCMA this summer will make themselves at home in the museum.

"We are very excited to be able to share our world class collection with the community while introducing many important artists working in the country today," said Chief Curator Justin Witte. "The Cleve Carney Museum of Art is committed to creating a welcoming and engaging environment that aids in the enrichment of DuPage County and this exhibition is a wonderful example of doing just that."

Highlights from the College of DuPage Permanent Art collection to go on view include a sculptural bust by prominent artist Kehinde Wiley, who is perhaps best-known for his presidential Barack Obama portrait and often explores themes related to race and representation in classical art history.

Also on display from the Permanent Art collection will be screen prints by legendary Pop artist Andy Warhol depicting 19th-century Danish author Hans Christian Anderson, a bronze sculpture by famed architect Maya Lin, as well as a suite of woodblock prints by the late minimalist artist and printmaker Zarina.

Among the many notable Chicago-based contemporary artists participating in the exhibition is internationally renowned multidisciplinary artist Theaster Gates, whose work focuses on craft, religious space, social practice and urban planning.

As a philanthropist, Gates works to revitalize underserved neighborhoods and respond to the disinvestment in African American communities by combining urban planning and artistic practices.

Interdisciplinary artist Sam Jaffe uses her work to explore labor, folk and domestic art traditions, ornamentation, collecting behaviors, femininity, and the grotesque fallibility of the human body. Jaffe often uses materials that are recycled, reused, repurposed, dead-stock, vintage or otherwise sustainably sourced.

Artist and architect Amanda Williams' "Auburn Gresham Is Iraq?," part of the "Chicago is Iraq?" series from 2017, raises questions about the state of urban space and ownership in America. Courtesy of Michael Tropea

Artist and architect Amanda Williams's installations, sculptures, paintings and works on paper seek to inspire new ways of looking at the familiar and in the process, raise questions about the state of urban space and ownership in America. She examines the stark inequities and systemic injustices that underlie such shifts, asking us to reflect on control and freedom, isolation and community, prejudice and violence, love and fear.

Sculptor Julia Phillips often uses the human body as a metaphor for social and psychological experiences. Her works focus on power relations between individuals or between an individual and an institution. Phillips's works strive to help viewers "identify with experiences that are not (their) own."

The works of these artists and others from both the College of DuPage Permanent Art collection and beyond will spark a dialogue between historical precedents and issues contemporary artists address today, while bringing members of the community together to engage in thoughtful discussion about works on display.

The museum is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday, and one hour prior to Lakeside Pavilion evening events. Admission is free and open to the public.

The late Cleve Carney provided a significant legacy gift to establish the Cleve Carney Art Gallery at College of DuPage. The gallery opened in February 2014 with its inaugural exhibition, "Selections from Cleve Carney's Art Collection." In fall 2020, the gallery was expanded to a 2,500 square-foot museum.

In June 2021, the art museum opened with the highly anticipated "Frida Kahlo: Timeless" exhibition. The CCMA will cap the 2022-23 season with "Warhol: Featuring the Andy Warhol Portfolios - A Life in Pop / Works from the Bank of America Collection" on loan through Bank of America's Art in our Communities program from June 3 to Sept. 10, 2023.

Funding for CCMA is provided by the Cleve Carney Endowment Fund, which supports vital programming including artist engagement opportunities for community members and students, gallery exhibitions, artist commissions, new acquisitions and other teaching and learning tools that foster cultural enrichment in our community. More information can be found at TheCCMA.org and on social media @CleveCarneyMuseumofArt.

“Hooking Up” events

• “Cocktails and Conversations” at 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 19, at the Common Good Cocktail House, 560 Crescent Blvd. in Glen Ellyn. Mix and mingle with fellow art lovers over whimsical cocktails (and mocktails) at Common Good Cocktail House in Glen Ellyn. Muralist Jeffrey Swider-Peltz will be present to share some thoughts and answer questions about his mural currently on view in the exhibit.

• An artist talk and book reading with Riva Lehrer at 1 p.m. Sunday, July 24, at the museum. Lehrer is an American painter, writer, teacher, and speaker. She was born with spina bifida, and her work focuses on issues of physical identity and the socially challenged body, especially in explorations of cultural depictions of disability. Riva Lehrer comes to the CCMA to discuss her work and read from her memoir, “Golem Girl.”

• “Art as Discourse” discussion with Amanda Williams at 6 p.m. Thursday, July 28, at the museum. Williams grew up in Chicago’s South Side and trained as an architect. Her work investigates color, race, and space while blurring the conventional line between art and architecture. Sit in on a discussion with artist Amanda Williams who will examine important themes such as contested space and the concept of home in relation to Williams’ and printmaker Zarina’s artwork. The discussion will be led by artist, activist, and senior curator of the South Asian Institute of Chicago, Pritika Chowdhry.

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