The Hechinger Collection: Select Works

The Hechinger Collection: Select Works

The Hechinger Collection
Select Works

December 4 – February 27, 2022

The complete Hechinger Collection, featuring nearly 400 works of art, was donated to IA&A in 2003 by hardware-industry pioneer John Hechinger, Sr. The collection’s contemporary prints, drawings, paintings, and sculptures represent a wealth of 20th-century art that incorporates tools and hardware by artists Berenice Abbott, Arman, Jim Dine, Walker Evans, Jacob Lawrence, Fernand Léger, and Claes Oldenburg, among others.

The collection celebrates the ubiquity of tools in our lives with art that magically transforms utilitarian objects into fanciful works of beauty, surprise, and wit. This exhibition represents a selection of works from IA&A’s Hechinger Collection, which tours nationally with our exhibitions Tools as Art, Tools in Motion, ReTooled, Making Your Mark, and Tools 5, which will debut in 2024.

Featured Artists:

Chester Arnold, Debra Chase, Henryk Fantazos, Jacob Lawrence, Ed McGowin, Hans Namuth, Christopher Pelley, and F.L. Wall.

See John Hechinger and Charlie Rose discuss the making of the collection here.

View the rest of the Hechinger Collection here.

She Says, Her Story

She Says, Her Story
Contemporary Women Artists from Taiwan

November 5 – December 19, 2021

She Says, Her Story: Contemporary Women Artists from Taiwan, curated by Yu-Chuan Tseng, is an exhibition about “her stories,” multidimensional narratives that lie between past and present, myth and reality. Wen-Jen Deng weaves together migratory maps that explore the intersection of history, myth, and legend. Ping-Yu Pan creates an installation of “family recipes” that embody culture and mythical archetypes. Ya-Lan Yu employs woodcuts to create indelible impressions of her fleeting memories of Madame Chung. I-Chun Chen uses video animations to investigate the real and imagined life of Wang Shih. Jui-Hung NI creates colorful light boxes to explore the intersection between mythical Chinese fairies and women of the internet. Yi-Hsin Tzeng adopts the classical technique of cun (wrinkles) to show how landscapes emerge from the crevices of our memories and imagination. Collectively, six women artists from Taiwan explore the intervals between myth, reality, and imagination.

Contributors:

Artists: Ping-Yu Pan, I-Chun Chen, Wen-Jen DENG, Jui-Hung NI, Yu-Hsin Tzeng, and Ya-Lan Yu

Curator: Yu-Chuan Tseng

Organizer: Ministry of Culture: Republic of China (Taiwan) Exhibition

Coordinators: International Arts & Artists , Taiwan Academy, INFODATE Association (Taiwan Information, Design, Technology, and Education Association)

To watch video statements from the artists and curator, click here.