Tag Archives: The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

AN OPEN LETTER TO MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES

We the undersigned write with grave concern about a growing trend of layoffs targeting education staff at major global museums in the name of COVID-19. Museums—including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Mass MoCA, the Serralves Foundation, and many others—have recently reported redundancies, many of them affecting freelance and part-time educators and, in the case of the MoMA, offering no horizon of re-employment. Far from redundant, such workers—employed to give tours, design and develop programs for schools and communities of all ages—are at the heart of museum and gallery work.

As those most in touch with communities outside of the museum, educators push criticality and innovation. Their work is regularly used to attract donors and supporters to many institutions. That they are first in the line of fire for layoffs is disconcerting, to say the least.

This is especially true as gallery education posts are more often to be those in which women, people of color, and members of the working-class are employed to work with communities who are not members of the cultural elite. At a moment when museums and galleries claim an interest in their diversification, why do they de-fund the very people and communities made most vulnerable by the current crisis?

We find this treatment of educators to be a great tragedy in a moment when their skill-sets—meaning-making, public engagement, community care and support—are more essential than ever. This could be a moment in which to utilize these skills to offer more to communities than virtual museum tours. Instead of retrenching museums into conservative modes of exclusionary content dissemination, a more forward-thinking stance would be to intensify the educational dimension of their offer in this moment of fear, loss and community re-organization, and to prioritize relationships with their most excluded groups.

Sadly, the reported layoffs follow years of precarity for museum and gallery educators and other cultural workers, who are rendered dispensable in times of economic or social uncertainty. While our letter is focused on the situation of educators, we stand with cleaners, porters, visitor service staff and other low paid and precarious workers in museums and galleries and call on their employers to reverse these layoffs and to offer fairly paid, secure and protected contracts for all cultural workers.

We implore museums and galleries to take this opportunity to re-imagine—with their workers and their communities—the role of culture in the time of COVID-19 and its aftermath. And we ask those museums who are already doing so to step forward and speak out on behalf of education and other essential workers targeted by these cuts.

List of signatories here.

Donate to the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund for the World Health Organization.

From top: Barbara Kruger, Untitled (Questions), 1990/2018, Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, Los Angeles, photograph by Elon Schoenholz; Museum of Modern Art, New York City, photograph by Lauren Cavalli; Mass MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts, photograph by Jessica Rinaldi; Fundação de Serralves, Porto, Portugal, photograph courtesy of the foundation. Images courtesy and © the institutions and the photographers.

CHRISTINA QUARLES AT THE GEFFEN CONTEMPORARY

Christina Quarles makes expressive, gestural works that reference the history and techniques of painting, but also smartly test its limits. Her dynamic compositions often feature feminine tropes that reference domestic space—fabrics, patterns—alongside polymorphous and ambiguous figures arranged in contorted positions. Playing with the identity of the figure to expand the potential for representation in her work, Quarles explores the genre of figurative art as it has been captured in THE FOUNDATION OF THE MUSEUM—MOCA’S COLLECTION by Paul Mpagi Sepuya.*

ARTISTS ON ARTISTS—CHRISTINA QUARLES ON THE FOUNDATION OF THE MUSEUM*

Thursday, January 9, at 7 pm.

Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

152 North Central Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

Christina Quarles, from top: Plaid About Yew, acrylic on canvas, 2018; Quarles, photograph by Daniel Dorsa; E’reything (Will Be All Right) Everything, acrylic on canvas, 2018; Slipped, Right to tha Side, acrylic on canvas, 2018. Images courtesy and © the artist, the photographers, Regen Projects, Los Angeles, and Pilar Corrias, London.

JONAS WOOD BOOK SIGNING

JONAS WOOD—a Phaidon publication, and the artist’s first monograph—is out now. This week, join Wood at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA for a book signing.

The extensively illustrated volume includes essays by Helen Molesworth and Ian Alteveer, and a conversation between Wood and Mark Grotjahn.

JONAS WOOD BOOK SIGNING

Thursday, December 12, from 6 pm to 8 pm.

Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

152 North Central Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

Jonas Wood, 2019, Phaidon. Images courtesy and © the artist, the publisher, Gagosian, and David Kordansky Gallery. Bball Studio, 2019—the black-and-white etching of the book cover image—is a print (200 copies) included in the special hardcover limited edition of JONAS WOOD, the proceeds of which benefited the Oakland-based non-profit Creative Growth.

OOF BOOKS RECEPTION

OOF Books—the Los Angeles–based bookshop “dedicated to art books, rare books, and the art of the book, known for both its selection and programming with prominent emerging artists including Cassi Namoda, Tyler Matthew Oyer, and Katherina Olschbaur“—has opened a pop-up at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA.*

This week, join founder Christie Hayden at the opening reception.

OOF BOOKS OPENING*

Thursday, September 12, from 5 pm to 8 pm.

OOF BOOKS POP-UP

Through January 6.

Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

152 North Central Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

From top: Cassi Namoda, Crab Curry Sunday, 2017, watercolor on paper, image courtesy and © the artist; Tyler Matthew Oyer, Calling All Divas, 2018, curtain Installation, image courtesy and © the artist; Lucy R. Lippard, Changing: Essays in Art Criticism, 1971, cover image courtesy and © Dutton; shop image courtesy and © OOF Books.

DANIEL CHEW AND MICAELA DURAND AT MOCA

Dominica, Rhizome, and MOCA present FIRST and NEGATIVE TWO, a pair of 2019 films by Daniel Chew and Micaela Durand.

A conversation between Dominica founder Martine Syms and the filmmakers will follow the screening.

FIRST and NEGATIVE TWO

Thursday, September 5, at 7 pm.

Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

152 North Central Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

Daniel Chew and Micaela Durand, 2019, from top: First, still; Negative Two, stills (3). Images courtesy and © the artists.