October 27, 2019–May 18,
2020 at MOCA Grand Avenue. Courtesy of The Museum of Contemporary Art. Photo by
Jeff Mclane.
With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in
American Art 1972–1985
With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in
American Art 1972–1985 is the first full-scale scholarly survey of this
groundbreaking American art movement, encompassing works in painting,
sculpture, collage, ceramics, installation art, and performance documentation.
Covering the years 1972 to 1985 and featuring approximately fifty artists from
across the United States, the exhibition examines the Pattern and Decoration
movement’s defiant embrace of forms traditionally coded as feminine, domestic,
ornamental, or craft-based and thought to be categorically inferior to fine
art. Pattern and Decoration artists gleaned motifs, color schemes, and
materials from the decorative arts, freely appropriating floral, arabesque, and
patchwork patterns and arranging them in intricate, almost dizzying, and
sometimes purposefully gaudy designs. Their work across mediums pointedly
evokes a pluralistic array of sources from Islamic architectural ornamentation
to American quilts, wallpaper, Persian carpets, and domestic embroidery.
Pattern and Decoration artists practiced a postmodernist art of appropriation
borne of love for its sources rather than the cynical detachment that became de
rigueur in the international art world of the 1980s. This exhibition traces the
movement’s broad reach in postwar American art by including artists widely
regarded as comprising the core of the movement, such as Valerie Jaudon, Joyce
Kozloff, Robert Kushner, Kim MacConnel, and Miriam Schapiro; artists whose
contributions to Pattern and Decoration have been underrecognized, such as
Merion Estes, Dee Shapiro, Kendall Shaw, and Takako Yamaguchi; as well as
artists who are not normally considered in the context of Pattern and
Decoration, such as Emma Amos, Billy Al Bengston, Al Loving, and Betty Woodman.
Though little studied today, the Pattern and Decoration movement was institutionally
recognized, critically received, and commercially successful from the mid-1970s
to the mid-1980s. The overwhelming preponderance of craft-based practices and
unabashedly decorative sensibilities in art of the present-day point to an
influential P&D legacy that is ripe for consideration.
With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 is
organized by Anna Katz, Curator, with Rebecca Lowery, Assistant Curator, The
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
https://www.moca.org/exhibition/with-pleasure
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