Influx Insights Tag Feed: newmuseum http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/ 2008-08-29T07:57:28Z always read instructions- a trip to the new museum http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/article/1728/always-read-instructions--a-trip-to-the-new-museum.html A couple of weeks back, I took a trip to the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.newmuseum.org/">New Museum</a> in New York. <br><br>It&#8217;s the latest and greatest designer museum complete with <a target="_blank" href="http://nousera.blog68.fc2.com/blog-entry-459.html">amazingly radical architecture </a>and a gift shop. <br><br>The museum was full of hip &#8220;global&#8221; twentysomethings looking to grab their latest art fix. <br><br>I began to feel like the whole museum thing was turning into a giant clich&#65533; of itself. A cultural formula that we feel obliged to consume like any other brand, but hopefully one that comes with some rich, intellectual stimulation. <br><br>My problem with the main exhibition, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/4">Unmonumental</a>, was that I didn&#8217;t get it or understand any of the meaning of the works, to me it just looked like a random collection of art from the fringes of the scene. <br><br>I became somewhat cynical about the idea of how quickly art gets discovered and placed in museums. To me, the works seemed embryonic and not fully realized, but clearly I am no expert and I was missing the point. <br><br>A few days ago, I was looking at a pile of old papers and found a leaflet describing the exhibit. One of its paragraphs immediately stuck a chord, seemed massively insightful, made perfect sense and, of course, helped me see the work in a completely new light. <br><br><i><b>&#8220;The opening of the new century seems defined by the disappearance of monuments and erasure of symbols, marked by the indelible images of destruction and ruin, from the fall of the Twin Towers to the obliteration of the Bamayan Budddhas, and the toppling of the statute of Saddam Hussein. It comes as no surprise that this first decade of the 21st century has produced an artistic language of fragments and of debased, precarious trembling forms, sounds and pictures. This millennium appears more concerned with iconoclasm than with creating new, empty and shiny icons. Like the time we live in &#8220;Unmonumental&#8221; marks the passage from clarity to complexity. It presents artworks that are violent and delinquent, but also expresses the urgent need to start picking up the pieces and rebuilding this world from scratch.&#8221;</b></i><br><br>What I am taking out of this experience is two-fold; it&#8217;s always good to read the instructions and there&#8217;s always time to take a second look and to revise your first impressions. <br><br>Here are some shots of the exhibits and museum. <br><br><iframe src="http://www.flickr.com/slideShow/index.gne?group_id=&amp;user_id=48600074737@N01&amp;set_id=72157603582622564&amp;tags=Cars,Lotus,Exige" align="middle" frameborder="0" height="500" scrolling="no" width="500"></iframe><br><small>Created with <a target="_blank" href="http://www.admarket.se/" title="Admarket.se">Admarket's</a> <a target="_blank" href="http://flickrslidr.com/" title="flickrSLiDR">flickrSLiDR</a>.</small><br><br>Posted by Ed Cotton Influx Insights 2008-01-10T20:12:55Z