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X-WR-CALNAME:The Drawing Foundation
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://thedrawingfoundation.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Drawing Foundation
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260131
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260602
DTSTAMP:20260711T094421
CREATED:20260113T230009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260212T162424Z
UID:10000158-1769817600-1780358399@thedrawingfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Carroll Dunham: Drawings\, 1974–2024
DESCRIPTION:Over the course of five decades\, Dunham has engaged in wide-ranging formal and thematic experimentation across various media\, yet his drawings represent a distinct\, interconnected body of work. \nDunham’s mature artistic career began in 1970s New York amid a scene dominated by Minimalist aesthetics. Using simple elements such as line\, shape\, and color\, he made a tremendous impact with work that nevertheless signaled a return to subject matter. In the intervening decades\, Dunham has continued to produce drawings that test\, and ultimately collapse\, the porous boundaries between abstraction and figuration: bodies shapeshift into buildings\, trees pose like models\, the cellular resembles the cosmic\, and internal organs or private parts are made very public. \nWorking in series\, Dunham methodically tests out every possible outcome of a drawing’s composition or content. This approach seems to spontaneously yield new imagery and ideas that link one body of work to the next. His influences are likewise wide-ranging—art history\, philosophy\, psychoanalysis\, and evolutionary science as well as science fiction and comic books—all of which inform his explorations of the tension between male and female\, nature and culture\, self and other. \nDunham foregrounds the development of his work by precisely dating each drawing. This practice is evidenced in the thousands of drawings he has organized into an archive\, from which this show is derived. \nDeveloped in conversation with the artist\, this comprehensive survey is the first museum presentation focused exclusively on Dunham’s drawings. Encompassing a 50-year period and featuring many drawings making their public debut\, it celebrates the medium central to Dunham’s expansive practice. \nCarroll Dunham: Drawings\, 1974–2024 is curated by Thea Liberty Nichols\, associate research curator\, Modern and Contemporary Art. \nSupport for Carroll Dunham: Drawings\, 1974–2024 is provided by an anonymous donor\, Joel Wachs\, and the Allan McNab Endowed Fund. \n \nImage credit: Untitled (4/22/93)\, 1993\, Carroll Dunham. Courtesy of the artist.
URL:https://thedrawingfoundation.org/event/carroll-dunham-drawings-1974-2024/
LOCATION:Art Institute of Chicago\, 159 East Monroe Street\, Chicago\, IL\, IL 60603
CATEGORIES:Current,Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://thedrawingfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Screenshot-2026-01-13-at-17-58-19-Carroll-Dunham-Drawings-1974–2024-The-Art-Institute-of-Chicago.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251030T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251030T190000
DTSTAMP:20260711T094421
CREATED:20250929T161402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251208T031952Z
UID:10000126-1761847200-1761850800@thedrawingfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Lecture: Dreams and Nightmares at the Fin de Siècle
DESCRIPTION:The last decade of the 19th century in Europe saw an explosion of evocative and disturbing works of art\, reflecting a cultural cynicism felt around rapid industrialization\, a perceived moral decline\, and the rural flight to urban centers. \nThese anxieties inspired Symbolist artists to draw on a dark and mysterious vocabulary of demons\, skeletons\, femmes fatales\, and the visual manifestation of inner dreams and nightmares. Strange Realities: The Symbolist Imagination explores this cultural landscape from many perspectives and geographies\, including France\, Belgium\, Norway\, and Germany. On the eve of Halloween\, join curator Jay A. Clarke to take a closer look at these psychologically intense and relevant works.  \nSupport for this program is provided by the Allan McNab Endowed Fund. \n \nImage: Jean Delville\, Medusa\, 1893. Regenstein Endowment Fund.
URL:https://thedrawingfoundation.org/event/lecture-dreams-and-nightmares-at-the-fin-de-siecle/
LOCATION:Art Institute of Chicago\, 159 East Monroe Street\, Chicago\, IL\, IL 60603
CATEGORIES:Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://thedrawingfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Screenshot-2025-09-29-at-12-03-36-Strange-Realities-The-Symbolist-Imagination-The-Art-Institute-of-Chicago-scaled.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251004
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DTSTAMP:20260711T094421
CREATED:20250929T160656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251208T032130Z
UID:10000125-1759536000-1767657599@thedrawingfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Strange Realities: The Symbolist Imagination
DESCRIPTION:Symbolism is among the most complex art movements to define. Although it followed on the heels of Impressionism\, whose imagery was accessible and bright\, Symbolism’s dark and mysterious vocabulary is far less known. \n\n\n\nWhile Symbolist artists were aligned in their embrace of the creative imagination\, they used diverse styles and drew inspiration from the past\, the future\, and the interior self. Complicating the movement further was its lack of a single central hub; instead Symbolism was a loosely connected trend across Europe. \nSymbolism\, in fact\, began as a literary movement in France in the 1880s and later expanded to visual art in Belgium\, Germany\, Norway\, and elsewhere. Reacting against rationalism\, materialism\, and Impressionism’s focus on the external world\, Symbolist artists sought instead to represent the unseeable—ideas and emotions. These artists shared a general cynicism about the late 19th century’s moral decline\, technological advancements brought about by rapid industrialization\, and the rural flight to urban centers. \n\nIn response they made art that invented alternate realities. Some artists turned to the past\, transposing mythological and religious subjects onto the present moment; others turned to the future\, imagining anarchist or idyllic worlds; while still others sought meaning by examining and excavating the self. \nThis exhibition features works on paper by iconic Symbolist artists such as Norwegian Edvard Munch\, as well as lesser-known figures like the Austrian Emilie Mediz-Pelikan\, the Belgian Léon Spilliaert\, and the French Gustav Adolf Mossa. Drawn from the Art Institute of Chicago’s rich and historic collection of drawings and prints\, including the largest collection in America of the French Odilon Redon and Paul Gauguin\, this display features over 85 works that capture the beauty and strangeness of a mysterious generation of artists. \nStrange Realities: The Symbolist Imagination is curated by Jay A. Clarke\, Rothman Family Curator\, Prints and Drawings\, and Jamie Vaught-Karasek\, collection manager\, Photography and Media. \nSupport for Strange Realities: The Symbolist Imagination is provided by an anonymous donor and the Allan McNab Endowed Fund. \n \nImage: Jean Delville\, Medusa\, 1893. Regenstein Endowment Fund.
URL:https://thedrawingfoundation.org/event/strange-realities-the-symbolist-imagination/
LOCATION:Art Institute of Chicago\, 159 East Monroe Street\, Chicago\, IL\, IL 60603
CATEGORIES:Current,Exhibitions
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