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A Feast of Astonishments: Charlotte Moorman and the Avant-Garde, 1960s–1980s (January 16 – July 17, 2016)
Charlotte Moorman was a musician and performance artist and a champion of experimental art, whose avant-garde festivals in New York City brought new art forms to a broad public. Recognition of Moorman in art history has been limited mostly to her collaborations with other artists, including composer John Cage and pioneering multimedia artist
Nam June Paik, and to her 1967 performance of Paik's "Opera Sextronique," for which she became known as the "topless cellist" after being arrested on indecency charges.
A Feast of Astonishments used the artists archive to looks deeper to portray Moorman as a leading international figure in her own right. The exhibition traveled to New York University's
Grey Art Gallery in Manhattan and to the
Museum der Moderne Salzburg. •
If You Remember, I’ll Remember (February 4 – June 18, 2017) This group exhibition of contemporary work included works by artists
Kristine Aono (b. 1960),
Shan Goshorn (b. 1957), Samantha Hill (b. 1974),
McCallum & Tarry (active 1998–2013),
Dario Robleto (b. 1972), and
Marie Watt (b. 1967). The exhibition contemplated the present through works of art exploring themes of love, mourning, war, relocation, internment, resistance, and civil rights in 19th and 20th century North America. •
William Blake and the Age of Aquarius (September 23, 2017 – March 11, 2018) This exhibition explored the impact of British visionary poet and artist
William Blake on a broad range of American artists in the post-World War II period. This exhibition was the first to consider how Blake's art and ideas were absorbed and filtered through American visual artists from the end of World War II through the 1960s.Blake's radical vision influenced artists of the Beat generation and 1960s counterculture. Among the artists, musicians, and writers who looked to Blake were such diverse figures as
Diane Arbus, Jay DeFeo, the Doors, Sam Francis, Allen Ginsberg, Jess, Agnes Martin, Ad Reinhardt, Charles Seliger, Maurice Sendak, Robert Smithson, Clyfford Still, and many others. This exhibition also explored visual cultures around such galvanizing moments of the 1960s as Woodstock and the Summer of Love. •
Paint the Eyes Softer: Mummy Portraits from Roman Egypt (January 13 – April 22, 2018) •
Up is Down: Mid-Century Experiments in Advertising and Film at the Goldsholl Studio (September 18 – December 9, 2019) In the 1950s, Chicago-based design firm
Goldsholl Design Associates made a name for itself with innovative "designs-in-film." Headed by Morton and Millie Goldsholl, the studio produced television spots, films, trademarks, corporate identities, and print advertisements for international corporations like Kimberly-Clark, Motorola, and 7-Up. Although they were compared to some of the most celebrated design firms of the day, the Goldsholls and their designers are relatively unknown today. The Block Museum's exhibition
Up is Down reexamined the innovative work of Goldsholl Design Associates and its national impact. •
Caravans of Gold, Fragments in Time: Art, Culture, and Exchange across Medieval Saharan Africa (January 26 – July 21, 2019) Presenting more than 250 artworks spanning five centuries and a vast geographic expanse, the exhibition features loans from partner institutions in Mali, Morocco, and Nigeria, many of which will be seen in North America for the first time. The Block Museum exhibition was curated by Kathleen Bickford Berzock and traveled to The
Aga Khan Museum in Toronto (Sept. 21, 2019 – Feb. 23, 2020) and then to the
National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution (April 8 – Nov. 29, 2020) ==Museum building and sculpture garden==