Affinity Atlas charts an exploratory path across disciplines built on idiosyncratic treasures from the Tang Teaching Museum collection and punctuated with recent works by a roster of contemporary artists. Artworks, images, and objects spanning centuries and continents collide and coalesce, forging fresh connections between seemingly disparate works. The exhibition seeks to find affinities in unexpected juxtapositions.
Affinity Atlas draws inspiration from the last work of the pioneering art historian Aby Warburg, who from 1925 to 1929 (the year of his death) undertook an ambitious cataloguing project — nothing less than a visual compendium of his life’s research. Forgoing the customary art historical narrative, Warburg instead chose to illuminate his scholarly research through a constellation of some 2,000 images, which he pinned onto a series of room-filling black panels.
Reaching across vastly different periods and cultures, the panels allowed Warburg to find relationships among images that were worlds apart and to theorize on a collective psychology that connects humans across time and space. He named this “picture atlas” after Mnemosyne, who in Greek mythology is the mother of nine Muses and the goddess of the art of remembrance. At the heart of the Mnemosyne Atlas lay a highly inquisitive approach to the world and an imaginative view of scholarly research that opened a new era in the study of images and offered an innovative approach to visual knowledge whose legacy continues today.
In keeping with Warburg’s expansive approach to images, Affinity Atlas presents a series of montages and shifting perspectives for visitors to explore. In so doing, it underscores the museum’s laboratory-like mission of experimentation. The exhibition includes works from African pottery and Southwest textiles to contemporary ceramics, painting, sculpture, photography and video.
The show will also include a shelf curated by a rotating roster of Skidmore faculty. Former participants in the Mellon Faculty Seminar, they were invited to propose a selection of things that represent their discipline or personal interest and to write a label explaining their choices. They were asked to consider the following questions: What story would you like to tell? How do your chosen objects allow you to tell it? And, what does it mean to tell a story with only the space of a single shelf? Under these parameters, personal examples of cabinets of curiosity or wunderkammer will be displayed and described over the course of the exhibition.
Anchor name: Faculty Shelf
About the Faculty Shelf
Skidmore faculty members who participated in the Mellon Faculty Seminar were invited to propose a selection of objects that represent their discipline or personal interest. These cabinets of curiosity will be displayed over the course of the exhibition, changing every few weeks.
Installation view, Faculty Shelf by Jennifer T. Cholnoky, Visiting Instructor, Geosciences Department, on view from September 8-20 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail), Faculty Shelf by Jennifer T. Cholnoky, Visiting Instructor, Geosciences Department, on view from September 8-20 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view, Faculty Shelf by Heather Hurst, Associate Professor, Anthropology Department, on view from September 22-October 4 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail), Faculty Shelf by Heather Hurst, Associate Professor, Anthropology Department, on view from September 22-October 4 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view, Faculty Shelf by Mary Crone Odekon, Professor, Physics Department, on view from October 6-18 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail), Faculty Shelf by Mary Crone Odekon, Professor, Physics Department, on view from October 6-18 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view, Faculty Shelf by Abby Grace Drake, Teaching Professor, Biology Department, on view from October 20-November 1 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail), Faculty Shelf by Abby Grace Drake, Teaching Professor, Biology Department, on view from October 20-November 1 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view, Faculty Shelf Project Extinction by Erica Bastress-Dukehart, Associate Professor, History, on view from November 3-16 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail), Faculty Shelf Project Extinction by Erica Bastress-Dukehart, Associate Professor, History, on view from November 3-16 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view of the Faculty Shelf Odyssey by Michael Arnush, Associate Professor of Classics, Dan Curley, Associate Professor of Classics, Leslie Mechem, Lecturer in Classics, and Kelly Platt ‘18, Classics major, on view from November 24-December 4 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail) of the Faculty Shelf Odyssey by Michael Arnush, Associate Professor of Classics, Dan Curley, Associate Professor of Classics, Leslie Mechem, Lecturer in Classics, and Kelly Platt ‘18, Classics major, on view from November 24-December 4 in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view of the Faculty Shelf by Catherine Hill, Professor of Management and Business, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail) of the Faculty Shelf by Catherine Hill, Professor of Management and Business, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view of the Faculty Shelf by Barbara Garbin, Visiting Assistant Professor of Italian Language and Literature, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail) of the Faculty Shelf by Barbara Garbin, Visiting Assistant Professor of Italian Language and Literature, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view of the Faculty Shelf by Sarah Goodwin, Professor of English, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Installation view (detail) of the Faculty Shelf by Sarah Goodwin, Professor of English, on view in the exhibition Affinity Atlas, Tang Teaching Museum, 2015
Anni Albers, Bale Creek Allen, Ilit Azoulay, Sebastiaan Bremer, Brian Bress, Nick Cave, Nicole Cherubini, Willie Cole, Russell Crotty, Dorothy Dehner, David Diao, Efiaimbelo, A.W. Elson & Co., Phil Frost, Phyllis Galembo, Jeffrey Gibson, Michelle Grabner, Nancy Grossman, Tim Hawkinson, Camille Henrot, Roni Horn, Brad Killam, Wolfgang Laib, Hew Locke, Charles Long, Joanna Malinowska, John McQueen, Vik Muniz, Michael Oatman, Marion Pease, Richard Pettibone, Dario Robleto, Allison Schulnik, Raja Babu Sharma, Myron Stout, Toshiko Takaezu, Lenore Tawney, Paul Thek, Ken Tisa, Johannes VanDerBeek, Sara VanDerBeek, William Villalongo, Fred Wilson