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Ways of Thinking is designed for anyone interested in exploring contemporary art and its exhibition framework. This section offers succinct and synthesized information on the exhibition’s concept, the artists and the works featured. One finds a general presentation, areas of inquiry and ideas to reflect upon as well as suggested Internet links and bibliographic references that allow one to gain a general understanding of the artist’s approach to artmaking, the works featured and the curatorial framing adopted. Ways of Thinking’s primary objective is to draw the public into the Gallery so that it can experience first hand the work in the exhibition and gain insight into the issues at work in contemporary exhibition making. Once the exhibition is over, Ways of Thinking becomes part of a documentation database of particular interest to students, teachers and researchers interested in the Gallery’s exhibition program.

WAYS OF THINKING
9 EVENINGS RECONSIDERED: ART, THEATRE, AND ENGINEERING, 1966
CURATOR: Catherine Morris

Organized by the MIT List Visual Arts Center with the support of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Robert Rauschenberg, Martin E. Zimmerman, Dedalus Foundation, Massachusetts Cultural Council, Council for the Arts at MIT.

Its presentation in Montreal is made possible by The Daniel Langlois Foundation, the Canada Council for the Arts and the Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science of Concordia University.

Fondation Daniel Langlois

This important historical exhibition explores the unique collaborations that took place between a group of engineers and artists of the avant-garde over nine evenings of performances at the Armory in New York City in October 1966. Billy Klüver, an engineer at Bell Labs and a founder of Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) was the driving force behind this innovative project. This project is particularly relevant today for its interdisciplinary approach and its attempt to bring together art and engineering.

CURATOR’S COMMENTS
9 Evenings Reconsidered “A simple proposition drove 9 Evenings. In 1965, the engineer Billy Klüver, who had been working with artists to solve technical problems for several years, became interested in putting artists and engineers together at the beginning of the creative process in order to see how available technology could play a role in the development of an artist’s ideas from the earliest stages. (…) Forty years later, 9 Evenings is understood as a significant group of performances that encompassed not only a unique set of collaborative experiences between artists and engineers but a critical attempt to integrate into contemporary performative practices the technology of the day beyond simply utilizing gadgetry as a form of theatrical embellishment. 9 Evenings resonates today as a historical model of how technology and art can interact as catalysts for creative intellectual development. In spite of its significance as an art historical touchstone, contemporary understanding or what went on in October 1966 has been hampered by an inadequate understanding of how the performance actually unfolded. The exhibition 9 Evenings Reconsidered: Art, Theater, and Engineering, 1966 is an attempt to present the ten performances that took place at the 69th Regiment Armory through primary source materials, including photographs, film, sound recordings, drawings, notes, and other form of documentation.”

Catherine Morris, “9 Evenings : An Experimental Proposition (Allowing for Discontinuities)”, 9 Evenings Reconsidered : Art, Theatre and Engineering, 1966. Cambridge: MIT List Visual Arts Center, 2006, 9.

 

New scholarship by Clarisse Bardiot and Michelle Kuo
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