Worcester Art Museum Explores The Cat as Artist’s Muse and Cultural Icon
- WORCESTER, Massachusetts
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- March 20, 2016
On May 21, the Worcester Art Museum (WAM) in Massachusetts will open Meow: a cat-inspired exhibition, a multi-program initiative that explores the cat as both an iconic figure throughout art history and a pop culture, Internet-age phenomenon. The project, which runs through September 4, will feature exhibitions, special installations, interactive public programs, and community engagement—all of which highlight the prolific role of the cat in creative endeavors from ancient sculpture to 19th -century painting to contemporary fashion. Guest curated by scholars and artists, the dynamic mix of programs in Meow examines the relationship between the experience of art and our daily lives through active audience participation.
“Cats have given rise to a plethora of creative online projects, videos, and memes that mix humor and artistry. While the Internet has allowed for viral consumption of the content, this phenomenon isn’t new,” said Adam Rozan, Director of Audience Engagement. “The playful and mischievous natures of cats have inspired artists for ages. Meow is an opportunity to take this subject, which completely is of the moment, and explore how it relates to the experience of art, from ancient times to today. It’s an exciting, one-of-a-kind project connecting art, people, cats, and popular culture in a way that makes learning about art fun for all ages.”
Among the major elements of Meow is the exhibition The Captivating Cat: Felines and the Artist’s Gaze, which will be open throughout the duration of the initiative. Featuring more than 70 works from the Museum’s permanent collection, the exhibition looks at depictions of cats from ancient Egypt and China to the modern day through prints, drawings, photographs, paintings, sculpture, fashion, and armor. Guest curated by Ruth Dibble, Ph.D. candidate in the history of art at Yale University, The Captivating Cat is organized around several major themes, including the cat as metaphor for the modern artist and connections in representations of big and house cats. It features works by Will Barnet, Albrecht Dürer, Takebe Ryotai, Toshi Yoshida, and Harry Gordon, among many others.
Visitors will also be able to discover cats throughout other WAM galleries in a self-guided “Cat Walk” tour, which will shed new light on major works in the Museum’s encyclopedic collections, including Woman with a Cat by Gustave Courbet, the 6 th -century Roman Worcester Hunt Mosaic, and 17th -century Tiger Screen by Kano Naonobu.
“This exhibition breaks from traditional feline-centric scholarship by looking at cats not simply as subjects that artists depicted in diverse media across time and place, but rather as iconic muses with their own, distinctly animalistic, agency,” said Dibble. “A key work in the exhibition is Asakusa Ricefields and Torinomachi Festivals by Ando Hiroshige. In it, there is a sense that being a cat is a lot like being an artist. Both are at once at a remove from the world, yet also consuming it through watchful eyes. It raises the possibility that cats influence, rather than only reflect, artistic intention.”
In addition, artist and critic Rhonda Lieberman will present a special contemporary art installation in partnership with the Worcester Animal Rescue League. Part ‘purr-formance piece,’ part social sculpture, The Cats-in-Residence Program integrates art and rescue to address animal overpopulation in urban areas. Our local ‘purr-formers’ (adoptable rescue cats from WARL) will interact in an inter-species lounge filled with art for humans and cats to enjoy together.
Volunteers will be on site to facilitate adoptions when a cat and human visitor bond. The installation will be open during regular Museum hours between July 11 and September 4. Merging art and life, the Cats-in-Residence Program invites playful fun while drawing attention to an important cause. WAM will be the fourth location for Lieberman’s installation, which was previously shown in New York City, Los Angeles, and Hartford, Connecticut, and the first in a museum.