artist / participant

press release

CHICAGO 3 JUNE 2014 - The Arts Club of Chicago is pleased to announce Allison Smith: Set Dressing (16 October 2014­-31 January 2015). Known for her combined interest in the cultural phenomenon of historical reenactment and the social histories embedded in craft practices, Smith has staged performances, demonstrations, installations, and workshops in spaces ranging from her storefront studio in Oakland, California to the Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, or the Museum of Modern Art, New York, where she recently participated in the Artists Experiment initiative. These projects have engaged the public in such historic trades as indigo dyeing, stoneware pottery, crewelwork embroidery, theorem painting, and various forms of trench art.

For her installation “Fancy Work” at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 2010, she looked to an exuberant early-nineteenth-century decorative arts movement known as American Fancy to trace an alternate lineage for modernist abstraction and psychedelic light shows, creating a kaleidoscopic quilt top that served as a projection screen for a faceted mirror wall sconce and outsized electrified candle. In her project “Rudiments of Fife and Drum” at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in 2013, she explored the history of American fife & drum music, tracing its roots to the Middle East and reconsidering the emblematic rope tension drum as a communication device. For that project, Smith worked with traditional drum makers and musicians to make instruments and compose music that was performed throughout the summer at parades and musters. Within Smith’s oeuvre, such spectacles of the outmoded are made to question the links between national identity, craft, social participation, and war. As Roberta Smith has written in the New York Times, “Her subject is a skewed Americana at once nostalgic and biting…”

For The Arts Club of Chicago, Smith’s first solo exhibition in Chicago, she will present a series of sculptures and photographic works printed on linen that explore the relationship between materiality and performativity. This will include a series of images taken over the course of the past decade at living history museums such as Colonial Williamsburg, Plimoth Plantation, Old Sturbridge Village, and others. Focusing on the evocative power of objects and spaces as precipitates of extinct cultures, these images animate their subjects in surprising ways. The puffed sleeve of a calico dress seems inhabited, while a carefully curled wig turned away mimics its human analog. Mirrors, doors, hallways and windows suggest entry into mysterious spaces, while sculptural furniture including tilt-top tables and braided rugs suggest the gallery as a backdrop or stage set for performative acts of the viewer. This exhibition draws historic forms into the present to show how materials and making reveal what is valued in any particular moment or culture.

Born in Manassas, Virginia, and educated at The New School, Parsons School of Design, Yale University, and the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program, Smith is a tenured professor and Chair of the Sculpture Program at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. She has exhibited extensively in the United States and abroad including solo shows or performances at the San Francisco Museum of Art, Public Art Fund, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Berkeley Art Museum, and the Indianapolis Museum of Art, among others. Her work is in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Saatchi Gallery London and other public and private collections worldwide.

The Arts Club of Chicago is located at 201 East Ontario Street, on the southeast corner of St. Clair and Ontario Streets. Exhibitions are free and open to the public. Gallery hours are Tuesday - Friday 11:00 am - 6:00 pm, and Saturday 11:00 am - 3:00 pm.