On View at the Jones Center, Laguna Gloria, and the Visual Arts Center in the Department of Art and Art History at The University of Texas at Austin
Charles Atlas, Trisha Baga, Millie Chen, Phil Collins, Andy Coolquitt, Ayşe Erkmen, Roger Hiorns, Nancy Holt, Lakes Were Rivers, Angelbert Metoyer, Bruce Nauman, Yoko Ono, Paul Sharits, Sofía Táboas
“True memories seemed like phantoms, while false memories were so convincing that they replaced reality. This meant I could not detect the dividing line between disillusionment and nostalgia. It was the definitive solution. At last, I had found what I needed most to complete the book, what only the passing of the years could give: a perspective in time.”
Gabriel García Márquez, Strange Pilgrims
The exhibition Strange Pilgrims begins with the metaphorical notion of the traveler: an open-ended journey through strange and unfamiliar spaces, embarking on a pilgrimage not only in time and place but also through imagination, the senses, and perception. Strange Pilgrims brings together a collection of experiential-based ideas and projects proposing unconventional gestures and formats, defining “experiential art” as work that is immersive, participatory, performative, or kinetic, and favoring art from the vantage point of the phenomenological experience. Taking its title from a collection of twelve short stories of the same name by the writer Gabriel García Márquez, Strange Pilgrims is The Contemporary Austin’s first large-scale, thematic group exhibition, and represents the museum’s most expansive gesture into the city of Austin, spanning multiple venues: The Contemporary’s two sites, the downtown Jones Center and Laguna Gloria (including the Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park, the historic Driscoll Villa, and the Gatehouse Gallery), and a third venue, the Visual Arts Center in the Department of Art and Art History at The University of Texas at Austin.
Loose threads of continuity and affinity connect the various projects in Strange Pilgrims. There are those that embrace the construction of open-ended formats and processes, or theses without resolution, abandoning certainty for ambiguity, as in the work of Roger Hiorns* or Andy Coolquitt. Other projects share an immersion of the senses, achieved by using nontraditional formats and media in combination with others, as seen in Trisha Baga’s multimedia playgrounds, Millie Chen’s aural-video room, or Bruce Nauman’s light-sculpture corridor. Formal affinities exist, too, such as the hybridization of media, notable in Charles Atlas’s media-dance works, or the transformation of the qualities of abstraction into three-dimensional space, as in the historical filmic “locational” installation by Paul Sharits. Process is integral to others, seen in the collective Lakes Were Rivers’ collaborative investigations of The Contemporary Austin’s Laguna Gloria site, or Sofía Táboas’s material-based topographical installation. Finally, the participation of the viewer completing the work appears in several projects, whether this is the body passing through a complex space, as in Ayşe Erkmen’s sensitive, site-specific installation, or the active decision making of the audience, catalyzed by Yoko Ono’s interactive project Summer Dream. Such kinships among divergent artists and works weave together the loose collection of propositions that make up the fabric of Strange Pilgrims.
Organized around three thematic sections—Environment & Place, Performance & Process, and Technology & Information—Strange Pilgrims is contemporary in focus, with each thematic section featuring a combination of newly commissioned works, site-specific refabrications, and existing works by artists Charles Atlas (based in New York, New York), Trisha Baga (American, born 1985 in Venice, Florida; lives in New York City), Millie Chen (Canadian, born 1962 in Taipei, Taiwan; lives in Buffalo, New York, and Ridgeway, Ontario), Phil Collins (British, born 1970 in Runcorn, England; lives in Berlin and Cologne), Andy Coolquitt (American, born 1964 in Mesquite, Texas; lives in Austin), Ayşe Erkmen (Turkish, born 1949 in Istanbul, Turkey; lives in Istanbul and Berlin), Roger Hiorns (British, born 1975 in Birmingham, England; lives in London), the collective Lakes Were Rivers (formed in Austin, Texas), Angelbert Metoyer (American, born 1977 in Houston, Texas; lives in Houston, Texas, and Rotterdam, Netherlands), and Sofía Táboas (Mexican, born 1968 in Mexico City, Mexico; lives in Mexico City). In addition, key works by pioneers in the field—Nancy Holt (American, born 1938 in Worcester, Massachusetts; died 2014 in New York City), Bruce Nauman (American, born 1941 in Fort Wayne, Indiana; lives near Galisteo, New Mexico), Yoko Ono (Japanese, born 1933 in Tokyo, Japan), and Paul Sharits (American, born 1943 in Denver, Colorado; died 1993 in Buffalo, New York)—provide historical resonance. And in a new partnership on the occasion of Strange Pilgrims, Trisha Baga has created work (including ceramics at The Contemporary Austin’s Art School) for multiple sites in the exhibition as the first artist-in-residence hosted jointly by The Contemporary Austin and the Visual Arts Center.
Strange Pilgrims is organized by Heather Pesanti, Senior Curator, The Contemporary Austin, with text also by Pesanti.
Special venue support and artist-in-residence partnership has been provided through the Visual Arts Center in the Department of Art and Art History at The University of Texas at Austin.
Strange Pilgrims Exhibition Support: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, AXA Art Americas Corporation, Suzanne Deal Booth, Lannan Foundation, The Moody Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Texas Monthly, Vision Fund Leaders and Contributors
A retrospective view of the pathway will be activated at Laguna Gloria every Saturday at 1P, Sunday at 1P, and Tuesday at 4P for the duration of the exhibition.
Note: The foam used in Hiorns’s artwork is nontoxic and biodegradable. Please use caution if you have sensitivities to detergent-based materials. We invite you to interact with the installation at your own risk. Guests are encouraged to wear clothes that can get wet or messy and to bring towels and a change of clothes.
Scheduled dates to experience the artwork in action:
September 27
October 10, 11, 13, 17, 18, 20, 24, 25, 27, 31
November 1, 3, 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 17, 21, 22, 24, 28, 29
December 1, 5, 6, 8, 12, 13, 15, 19, 20, 26, 27, 29
January 2, 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17, 19, 23, 24
Admission to Strange Pilgrims covers entrance to both sites at The Contemporary Austin. Admission to the Visual Arts Center is free.
The Contemporary Austin – Jones Center
700 Congress Avenue
Austin, Texas 78701
512 453 5312
Regular Hours: Closed Monday; Open 11A–7P Tuesday through Saturday; Open 12–5P Sunday
The Contemporary Austin – Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria
3809 West 35th Street
Austin, Texas 78703
512 458 8191
Regular Hours: Galleries Closed Monday, Open 10A–4P Tuesday through Sunday; Grounds Open 9A–5P Monday through Saturday, Open 10A–5P Sunday
Visual Arts Center
The University of Texas at Austin
2301 San Jacinto Boulevard
Austin, Texas 78712
512 232 2348
Regular Hours: Open by appointment on Monday, utvac.org; Open 10A–5P Tuesday through Friday; Open 12–5P Saturday; Closed Sunday
Maps of all three exhibitions sites as well as parking and bike routes are included to help you navigate Strange Pilgrims. Please note that parking is limited at all sites. We encourage guests to make use of public transportation or Austin's bike-friendly routes for travel between sites.
Strange Pilgrims is accompanied by a 250-page, full-color catalogue that provides additional scholarly, critical, and creative context for the exhibition (University of Texas Press, September 2015).
The publication features a curatorial essay by Senior Curator Heather Pesanti; a scholarly essay by University of Texas at Austin Art History Professor Ann Reynolds; a conversation between philosopher Alva Noë and writer and critic Lawrence Weschler; and original artist’s contributions by Trisha Baga and Jessie Stead, Roger Hiorns, and Lakes Were Rivers. The catalogue also includes short texts and biographies for each artist, authored by Tatiana Reinoza and Robin Williams, as well as full-color plate spreads.
To purchase, please inquire at the reception desk at the Jones Center or Laguna Gloria. The catalogue may also be purchased online at utexaspress.com or amazon.com.
Members are invited to celebrate the opening of Strange Pilgrims at The Contemporary Austin.
Members are invited to join us to celebrate the opening of Strange Pilgrims at The Contemporary Austin – Laguna Gloria. Artists and writers will be present at a book signing for the accompanying exhibition catalogue.
As part of the exhibition Strange Pilgrims, artist Roger Hiorns’s A retrospective view of the pathway will be activated in the Laguna Gloria landscape.
Enjoy refreshments and conversation and explore the art in the Visual Arts Center galleries as part of Strange Pilgrims, a multi-venue exhibition organized by The Contemporary Austin. Strange Pilgrims also opens to the public with free admission today at the Jones Center and Laguna Gloria.
Join us for the opening reception for Angelbert Metoyer: Life Machine, presented by Co-Lab Projects Pop-Up @ Canopy.
Learn how to sculpt a unique bubble wand, inspired by a foam-tastic new artwork, Roger Hiorns’s A retrospective view of the pathway, on the grounds of Laguna Gloria. Test your bubble-making skills, then catch a magical performance by a local bubble artist!
As part of the exhibition Strange Pilgrims, artist Roger Hiorns’s A retrospective view of the pathway will be activated every Saturday and Sunday at 1P and Tuesday at 4P.
Sleepwalk with Andy Warhol during an unusual late-night, sensory experience inspired by Strange Pilgrims, featuring a screening of his dreamy durational film Sleep, a flashlight art tour, and more.
The Visual Arts Center hosts a symposium that brings together scholars, critics, and The University of Texas at Austin faculty and students to discuss themes connected to the exhibition Strange Pilgrims.
Peek inside the past life of the historic Driscoll Villa! Time-travel with The University of Texas Museum Theatre students, who will bring works of art in the Strange Pilgrims exhibition to life, then make a photo-inspired project to take home!
Philosopher Alva Noë and writer Lawrence Weschler, contributors to the Strange Pilgrims exhibition catalogue, present a public conversation and book signing, investigating ideas of art and philosophy.
As a one-night-only component of Strange Pilgrims, The Contemporary Austin presents a new performance with Atlas center stage, joined by collaborators and using video technology, live music feed, and other elements to create an immersive, thought-provoking experience.
Four 16 mm films chart “strange pilgrimages” through the maze of our contemporary urban landscape.