Posts Tagged ‘Noguchi Museum’

Noguchi Museum Launches Digital Catalogue Raisonné of Artist’s Work in all Mediums and Genres.

Isamu Noguchi with Tsuneko-san, mid 1960’s. Photograph by Jun Miki. Courtesy The Noguchi Museum, New York.

LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum (The Noguchi Museum) today—the 107th anniversary of the artist’s birth—launched The Isamu Noguchi Catalogue Raisonné, posting the first installment on the museum’s website: http://catalogue.noguchi.org.

An ongoing digital publication, the catalogue raisonné presents comprehensive information on all categories of Noguchi’s practice, encompassing sculptures, drawings, models, architectural spaces, stage sets, and manufactured designs, as well as a chronology, bibliography, and list of exhibitions. Access to the publication—one of the first catalogues raisonnés to be published digitally—is free of charge.

Noguchi Museum Director Jenny Dixon states, “The Isamu Noguchi Catalogue Raisonné, a longtime project, is an enormous achievement, bringing together traditional scholarship with contemporary technology to create a rich, flexible publication that will serve scholars, curators, collectors, and the interested public for years to come.”

Digital publication of the catalogue will not only make it more accessible to the public than a traditional book would be, but will also enable the museum to post partial entries on artworks, exhibitions, and literature, identifying them as “research pending,” thereby providing scholars and the public with available information while research continues. In addition to the many other benefits of digital technology, such as searching, linking, zooming in on images, and so on, users of the catalogue raisonné will be able to make use of such personalized tools as bookmarking and, ultimately, creating slide shows and saving searches.

The first installment of The Isamu Noguchi Catalogue Raisonné includes complete entries for more than 300 artworks and partial entries on more than 1,000 others for which research is in progress. In addition to making ongoing structural improvements to the site and enhancing content over the next several months, the museum will post new “chapters” on November 17 of every year through 2018.

Upon its completion, the publication will comprise complete entries on over 4,000 artworks, in addition to exhibitions and publications, and will be the first comprehensive record of the life and work of Noguchi, updating and considerably expanding upon the 1980 catalogue of sculpture by Nancy Grove and Diane Botnick (Garland). It will be an indispensable resource for scholars, arts professionals, and collectors of Noguchi’s work.

Shaina D. Larrivee is the project manager for The Isamu Noguchi Catalogue Raisonné.

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    20

    11 2011

    Long Island City Night Tonight!

    Ever since Deitch Projects touched down in Queens two years ago, Long Island City has been one of the hottest art annexes in New York, evident by the abundance of programming today. Ride the train to Queens Plaza station where MTA Arts for Transit staff will be on hand to discuss Ellen Harvey’s sky-filled 2005 mural, Look Up, Not Down from 5 to 7pm. LIC Artists, who have been holding Open Studios exhibitions for more than 20 years, will launch their Armory Fest with a three-venue exhibition at the Clocktower Building, the Holiday Inn Manhattan View and the Space Realty Group. Other openings will take place at AES Gallery, Dean Project, climate/gallery and Dutch Kills Gallery. Elsewhere, P.S.1 hosts three ongoing exhibtions—Between Spaces, 1969 and 100 Years—and the Noguchi Museum will have its long-running Noguchi ReINstalled on display. Be sure to save room for the third annual showing of MoFA (aka the Museum of Fake Art), sponsored by LIC arts nonprofit The Space. The Chelsea satirists are offering “a unique opportunity to dress up and fake interest vis-à-vis the complex issues facing international Contemporary Art and simulate a direct involvement in the Curatorial and Exhibition process.” Only a square realist would miss it.

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      05

      03 2010