Exhibitions: BAM! BAM! BAM! Catching the Next Wave for 20 Years

  • 1st Floor
    Arts of Africa, Steinberg Family Sculpture Garden
  • 2nd Floor
    Arts of Asia and the Islamic World
  • 3rd Floor
    Egyptian Art, European Paintings
  • 4th Floor
    Contemporary Art, Decorative Arts, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art
  • 5th Floor
    Luce Center for American Art

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Hiroshige's One Hundred Famous Views of Edo

Hiroshige's 118 woodblock landscape and genre scenes of mid-nineteenth-century Tokyo, is one of the greatest achievements of Japanese art.

    On View: Brush Jar with an Imperial Inscription

    This elaborately carved jade brush jar represents not the restraint usually associated with scholarly taste but the contrasting sumptuous de...

     

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    BAM! BAM! BAM! Catching the Next Wave for 20 Years

    Press Releases ?
    • August 2002: The Brooklyn Museum of Art will present a large-scale, multi-channel video and sound installation celebrating the twentieth anniversary of the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave Festival, which has established the benchmark for avant-garde performances of theater, dance, and opera. BAM! BAM! BAM! Next Wave, designed and curated by Matthew Yokobosky, will be on view at the Museum from October 4, 2002 through January 12, 2003.

      BAM! BAM! BAM! Catching the Next Wave for 20 Years is sponsored by Philip Morris Companies Inc., which has supported a wide range of exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum of Art over the course of more than two decades and has been the leading corporate sponsor of BAM’s Next Wave Festival since its inception in 1983.

      The exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum of Art will be presented in the Museum’s twenty-five-foot-high Hall of the Americas. Visitors will enter a floating tent, recline on an oversized viewing platform, and see and hear video selections from the festival’s performances projected overhead. Dynamically edited, rarely seen archival footage from some of the Next Wave Festival’s most memorable performances will comprise a twenty-minute video montage. Included will be clips from Secret Pastures (Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane/Keith Haring), Forward and Reverse (Merce Cunningham/Rei Kawakuba), Songs and Stories from Moby Dick (Laurie Anderson), and Nixon in China (John Adams/Mark Morris/Peter Sellars). The Next Wave Festival is internationally recognized for its commitment to presenting avant-garde dance, theater, and opera. Among the many landmark productions presented over the course of two decades are The Gospel at Colonus (Lee Breuer); The Mahabharata (Peter Brook, Chloe Obolensky, 1987); numerous works by Robert Wilson including his collaborations with Philip Glass (Einstein on the Beach, 1984, 1993), David Byrne (The Forest, 1988), Tom Waits (The Black Rider, 1993), and Lou Reed (Time Rocker, 1997 and POEtry, 2001).

      Collaboration is key to both the content of the video projection and the installation as a whole. The partnership created between the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Brooklyn Museum of Art in developing this presentation represents a collaboration of visual arts and performance. In creating the installation, exhibition designer and curator, Matthew Yokobosky brings performance elements in to a museum setting[.] BAM! BAM! BAM! Catching the Next Wave for 20 Years is intended to be experienced collectively by an audience in the same manner as a theatrical production and to provide a celebratory intersection of the arts.

      Philip Morris Companies has been a pioneering supporter of the arts for more than four decades-investing in the cultural vitality of communities in the United States and around the globe. For more information about Philip Morris’ programs and philanthropy, visit the company’s website at www.philipmorris.com/media.

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      "Hi Aimee, I think you mean Oreet Ashery? More information can be found in her profile on the Feminist Art Base: http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/oreet_ashery.php?i=266"
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      The Brooklyn Museum Archives maintains a collection of historical press releases. Many of these have been scanned and made available on our Web site. The releases range from brief announcements to extensive articles; images of the original releases have been included for your reference. Please note that all the original typographical elements, including occasional errors, have been retained. Releases may also contain errors as a result of the scanning process. We welcome your feedback about corrections.
      For select exhibitions, we have made available some or all of the informative text panels written by the curator or organizer. Called "didactics," these panels are presented to the public during the exhibition's run, and we reproduce them here for your reference and archival interest. Please note that any illustrations on the original didactics have not been retained, and that the text may contain errors as a result of the scanning process. We welcome your feedback about corrections.
      For select exhibitions, we have made available some or all of the objects from the Brooklyn Museum collection that were in the installation. These objects are listed here for your reference and archival interest, but the list may be incomplete and does not contain objects owned by other institutions or lenders.
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