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Art Museum of WVU showcases ‘Walker Evans American Photographs’

Newsroom@DominionPost.com

The Art Museum of West Virginia University will be the first venue on a national tour of an installation that celebrates photographer Walker Evans’ landmark solo exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art in 1938. A leading figure in the history of American documentary photography, Evans is today considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.

The exhibition opens today and runs through April 25.

“It is an extraordinary opportunity to bring an exhibition about Walker Evans to West Virginia, where he made iconic photographs of people and places in and around Morgantown and Scotts Run,” said Director Todd J. Tubutis. “It is also the first exhibition dedicated to photography at the Art Museum since it opened in 2015.” 

In the 1930s, Evans traveled  throughout the Eastern United States, creating a collective photographic portrait of the region during a decade of profound transformation — one that coincided with the flood of everyday images, both still and moving, from an expanding mass culture and the construction of a Modernist history of photography.

Included in this reimagined exhibition are 60 photographs organized in two sections, as in the original: the first portrays American society through images of its individuals and social contexts, while the second consists of photographs of American cultural artifacts — the architecture of Main streets, factory towns, rural churches and wooden houses.

In conjunction with “Walker Evans American Photographs,” the Art Museum is featuring the work of four contemporary photographers in an adjacent gallery. Matt Eich, Mitch Epstein, Andrea Modica and Jared Thorne have each made pictures that resonate with Walker Evans’ photographs in distinctive ways. Together they demonstrate how Evans’ work continues to influence artists, nearly a century after he first visited the region.

The Art Museum of WVU is open 12:30-6 p.m. Friday-Sunday. Visiting is  free, but reservations are required. To book a time slot, visit http://artmuseum.wvu.edu/tickets.

Art Bridges is also providing support for the Art Museum of WVU to implement a photography workshop series with secondary school students, taught by professional photographers in the region and using the works in “Walker Evans American Photographs” as exemplars. In addition to these workshops, K-12 schools will be invited to participate in synchronous and asynchronous virtual tours of the exhibition that draw connections between Evans’s work and the schools’ art and social studies curricula.

Art Bridges is the vision of philanthropist and arts patron Alice Walton. Founded in 2017, Art Bridges has been creating and supporting programs that expand access to American art in all regions across the nation.

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