Madison Museum of Contemporary Art

Making Visible the Invisible:
Abstract Art from MMoCA’s Permanent Collection


Mary Heilmann, 21st Century Fox, color spitbite aquatint with soft-ground etching, 29 1/2 x 21 1/2 inches. Collection of the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art. Gift of the Estate of ellsworth snyder

Sam Francis, Untitled Mandala, 1975, acrylic, 36 1/2 x 37 inches. Collection of Madison Museum of Contemporary Art. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic F. Renfert. © 2005 Samuel L. Francis Foundation, California/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

   Click on images to enlarge.

The paintings, sculpture, and works on paper in the Henry Street Gallery explore the tradition of abstraction in the visual arts. Abstract art is an expression of pure form and color, analogous to music. It has carried a rich variety of meanings since its inception in the second decade of the twentieth century, and its history continues to the present. The exhibition will be on view through July 13, 2008.

Abstract art was a radical departure in Western art. For nearly five centuries, art had been based upon faithful recreations of the visible world as seen by the human eye. This core idea, initiated by the Italian Renaissance, was challenged in the later nineteenth century by the Post-Impressionists. They argued in through their paintings that non-naturalistic color and exaggerated shape could portray the feelings of the artist toward his subject. It was only a short time before artists of a new generation allowed expressive color and form to stand on their own, pried free from describing the perceived world.

Making Visible the Invisible reveals abstract art to have a language of great stylistic breadth that yields ambitious meaning in a series of dialects: geometric, biomorphic, and gestural. As a challenge to the senses and the mind, abstract art has received interpretations from both artists and critics that range from the perceptual to the metaphysical. These selected works from MMoCA’s permanent collection demonstrate the array of poetic meanings that have been ascribed to abstract forms, including a concern for the effect of abstract shape on our perceptions; a wish to map conceptual structures; and attempts to make visible the invisible world of nature’s underlying patterns and forces.

Exhibitions in the Henry Street Gallery are generously funded through an endowment established by the Pleasant T. Rowland Foundation.

What People Are Saying

"Art Talk: Do you prefer abstract or realistic art?" by Jacob Stockinger,
November 9, 2007 The Capital Times >>

© Madison Museum of Contemporary Art. All rights reserved.
227 State Street, Madison, WI 53703 - 608.257.0158

regular text size | large text size

Web Site by Ajenda Interactive Media