Past Exhibitions

   

Intersections: Where Art Meets Fashion

   

July 11 – November 1, 2009; Opening Reception, July 10, 6-8 PM; Goldstein Museum Gallery

 

Co-curators: Barbara Heinemann, PhD and Mark Schultz, MA

Consultant: Margot Siegel

Intersections: Where Art Meets Fashion promises an unprecedented exhibition for the GMD through the pairing of important works of art with significant designer fashion from the collection. Inspired by journalist and Friends of the Goldstein founder Margot Siegel and her immersion in both fashion and art, this exhibition celebrates the fluid relationship between the two worlds and celebrates the exuberance of art, fashion, and popular culture. Click here for a full press release.

 

    Design Indaba 10x10 Low Cost Housing "The Sandbag House"
    September 14 – October 26, 2009; HGA Gallery
   

Organized by MMA Architects, Luyanda Mpahlwa, Principal, Cape Town, South Africa

MMA's contribution to the 2008 Indaba Expo was the Design Indaba 10x10 Low Cost House. MMA and nine other firms were commissioned by Design Indaba to design low cost houses for the families in the Freedom Park community in the township of Mitchells Plein, Cape Town. The result was a sandbag house which is constructed with an Ecobeam timber frame structure, filled with sandbags, and plastered over. This exhibition will showcase this innovative and dignified structure.

 

    Contemporary Architecture in Warsaw
   

August 24, 2009 – October 26, 2009; HGA Gallery

   

Organized by the Department of the Chief City Architect of Warsaw City Hall

This exhibition presents twenty works of recently built architecture – public, commercial, and residential - that are a confirmation of Warsaw's European aspirations. Reaction to these buildings ranges from respect and admiration to controversy and stormy debate. The exhibition features buildings financed through public as well as private funding. Most of the designs for public buildings were the result of architectural competitions – a practice deeply rooted in the architectural tradition of Europe. Cosponsored by the Polish American Cultural Institute of Minnesota.

 

   

Elemental Notes: Paintings by Ken Johnson

    July 24-September 19, 2009; Opening reception July 30, 2009, 7:00-8:30 PM ; ALA Library Gallery
 

Johnson's compositions provide a grid-like structure to visually abstract elements from nature.The dissected and magnified organic elements are presented in unexpectedly colorful and dreamlike, delicately-shaped structures.

 

   

Little Circus in Space: An Exhibit of Photography by Bruce Silcox in Collaboration with Les Filles Circus

   
May 28-July 10, 2009: Opening reception on May 28th from 7:00-8:30 PM; ALA Library Gallery
 

Sponsored by In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theater, Common  Roots Cafe, the University of Minnesota Libraries, and College of  Design. Landscape and architectural spaces define the context of Les Filles Circus. The dynamics of these spaces frame the choreography and inspiration that emerges from Les Filles movement and colorful stories. Minneapolis photographer, Bruce Silcox, has been documenting Les Filles Circus since 2007 and wondrously articulates the talent and creative energy of this young group of artists.

 

   
Expressions of Stability and Change: Ethnic Dress and Folk Costume
   
February 7 – June 21, 2009; Goldstein Museum Gallery
 

Co-curators: Kathleen Campbell, Ph.D. and Jean McElvain, Ph.D.

Ethnic dress provides a visual and emotional connection between members of an ethnic group and place; sometimes ethnic dress also connects ethnic group members to a shared language, religion, or occupation. Drawn from the Goldstein's collection of international apparel, this exhibition will showcase special occasion apparel that expresses aspects of both stability and change. Click here for a full press release.

Supported in part by the University of Minnesota Imagine Fund, supported by a generous donation from the McKnight Foundation; the College of Design; and the Friends of the Goldstein.

   

Our Deal: Graduates Ready to Stimulate

   

April 25-May 16, 2009, Party and Awards Ceremony May 15, 6:30-8:30 pm; HGA/ALA Library

 
  • This annual event and awards ceremony celebrates new graduates and reflects the professional quality of work done by students of the college.
  • Included will be students from Architecture, Clothing Design, Environmental Design, Graphic Design, Housing Studies, Interior Design, and Retail Merchandising.
  • Awards Ceremony will feature monetary prizes distributed by professionals who will review the student works.

Click here to view participants.

Click here to download a full press release

   

Preserving Early Christian Thessalonike

   

March 16 – May 10, 2009; HGA Gallery

    Organized by the Harvard Divinity School, this exhibition features some of the cultural sites and monuments of Thessalonike, Greece, which have undergone significant restoration work in the 20th century.
   

Marvels of Modernism

   
March 16 –May 10 , 2009; HGA Gallery
    This exhibition, part of the Cultural Landscape Foundation’s “Landslide” initiative, is a yearly designation of significant landscapes at risk of being lost. Among the endangered landscapes is Peavey Plaza on Nicollet Mall in Minneapolis.
   

Horizons: Paintings by Mary Guzowski

Nature's Wonders: Drawings by Virajita Singh

   
January 20-April 30, 2009; ALA Library Gallery
  Mary Guzowski  and Virajita Singh are each engaged in a dialog with the changing phenomena of nature and with earthly objects that bring wondrous inspiration. Guzowski, an associate professor in architecture, says: “Painting is an opportunity to witness and engage the changing qualities and moods of the seasons. They are intended to capture an ever changing spirit and quality of time and place.” For Singh, a senior research fellow at the Center for Sustainable Building Research, drawing objects from nature gives her a sense of the spiritual link between human existence and nature. Click here for directions to Rapson Hall.
   

 

The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture & Design

   

January 12 – March 8, 2009; HGA Gallery

 

The National Building Museum’s acclaimed exhibition The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture and Design is the first to explore the field of green residential design as it reaches a turning point of acceptance by both home builders and the general public.

Photographic images and drawings of 22 projects from around the world will document the emergence of a new brand of sustainable building. Architects and builders now view sustainability as a catalyst for creative home design and have also begun to think strategically about the environmental costs of building. These new houses are conceived as systems with extended life cycles that must meet green standards throughout the design, construction, and living process. Environmental responsibility is an integral, but not always conspicuous, aspect of the contemporary house. Click here to download a full press release.

   

 

Sum of the Parts: Surface Design Association Membership Exhibition

   
November 22 2008 - January 18, 2009; Goldstein Museum Gallery
 

Juried by Kyoung Ae Cho and Jan Myers-Newbury

Individual strands interlock and interlace to create structure.  Multiple units connect becoming composition and texture. Color, pattern and imagery combine into complex surfaces.  In this exhibition the Surface Design Association brings together the work of its members as individuals to create a whole that is more than simply the Sum of the Parts. 

As part of the Surface Design Association’s 2007 International Conference held at the Kansas City Art Institute, members were invited to submit work measuring 52” h x 18” w for an installation showcasing innovative use of textiles.  The 100 pieces juried into this exhibition show a wide range of materials, techniques, thought processes, context and concept of its members. Fibers and materials range from window screening to gold leaf, bamboo to baling twine, chicken wire to silk organza.  The works are hand dyed, woven, knitted, crocheted, quilted, batiked, rusted, composted, digitally printed, hand stitched, painted, discharged, fused, appliquéd, hooked, Jacquard woven, collaged, stamped, braided, screen printed, bonded, felted, embroidered, waxed and pieced. Click here to download a full press release.

   

 

Journeys:Travels Far and Travels Near; Drawings by Winston Close and Roger Martin, Photographs by Roger Clemence

   
October 2 -December 19, 2008; ALA Library Gallery
  Most architects and landscape architects love to travel, but also love to document what they see by drawing and photographing.  For them, the sketch book and the camera are the constant companions in their traveler’s bag.  Each of the artists in the exhibition has traveled widely.  The exhibition features selected on-site travel sketches, drawings, and watercolor paintings by Roger Martin and Winston Close while they traveled overseas via car, train, or bicycle, and photographs by Roger Clemence who captured the seasons and settings of his tiny farm in Wilson, Wisconsin. The Exhibition will be in Rapson Hall on the Minneapolis campus of the University of Minnesota. Click here to download al press release.
   

 

Anxious Climate: Architecture at the Edge of Environment

   
October 16 – December 15, 2008; HGA Gallery
   

Three groundbreaking European architectural firms explore the relationship between nature and the built environment and take us beyond the emerging doctrines of green design in an exhibition curated by David Gissen. This show challenges accepted ideas of nature and human interaction to creatively imagine what nature might be and how humans might interact with it. The exhibition features the work of three architecture firms R&Sie of Paris, Phillipe Rahm of Lausanne and Paris, and Amid [Cero 9] of Madrid and includes computer renderings, photographs, 3D prints and diagrams to support each firm’s vision.

   

 

From Sportswear to Streetwear: American Innovation

   
August 16 – November 2, 2008; Goldstein Museum Gallery
 

The influence of sportswear on contemporary American fashion can be seen daily.  From Sportswear to Streetwear: American Innovation features garments from the Goldstein’s collection demonstrating the migration of specialty fabrics for athletic wear, such as quik-dri and stretch, and styles such as golf shirts, ski pants and athletic shoes into casual dress. Over the years, this mutual influence has shifted from sportswear to streetwear and back again, leaving viewers to ask: Is it sportswear or streetwear? Click here to download a full press release.

   

 

Richard Knight: Photographing Saarinen

   
September 2 – October 12, 2008; HGA Gallery

 

 

Richard Knight's photographs offer an unprecedented glimpse behind the scenes at the architectural practice and office of Eero Saarinen and Associates. His photographs cover the period from 1957 to Saarinen's death in 1961, when Saarinen was working on iconic projects such as the Dulles International Airport Terminal, the former TWA Terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis.

   

 

Techno Textiles: Inner Space to Outer Space

   
May 16-July 27, 2008; Goldstein Museum Gallery

 

The world of specialty textiles has been changing at a rapid pace with new materials, technologies and innovations in production around the world. Techno Textiles: Inner Space to Outer Space examined many of these innovative materials and how they are being used by leading designers from around the globe. Some of the concepts featured protective clothing, intelligent buildings that dynamically respond to the environment, luminous wall interiors and interactive digital displays that are part of the furniture upholstery, as well as fabric balloons used to ensure interplanetary probe vehicles land safely on the surface of Mars. Click here to download the press release

   

 

Roots of the Future: College of Design Senior Show

   
May 5-17, 2008; HGA Gallery/ALA Library Gallery
 

The College of Design graduating seniors had an exhibit featuring 1-2 examples of each of their best work for the 2008 ROOTS OF THE FUTURE: College of Design Senior Show. This annual event and awards ceremony celebrates new graduates and reflects the professional quality of work done by students of the college. ROOTS OF THE FUTURE: College of Design Senior Show represented undergraduates who graduated in 2007-2008. This included students from Architecture, Clothing Design, Environmental Design, Graphic Design, Housing Studies, Interior Design, and Retail Merchandising. They exhibited such projects as poster presentations of research, 3-D projects of clothing and architectural designs, and PowerPoint presentations displayed digitally of their design process.

ROOTS OF THE FUTURE: College of Design Senior Show also featured an awards program in which monetary and other awards were distributed from professional designers who reviewed works in the exhibition and selected award recipients.

Click here to view a full list of the participants and see samples of their work.

 

   

 

Russel Wright: Living With Good Design

   
February 9-April 20, 2008; Goldstein Museum Gallery

 

America's first celebrity designer, Russel Wright's designs and logo signature were found in nearly every American kitchen and dining room during the 1940s and '50s. Wholeheartedly believing that good design was for everyone, Russel Wright was truly the first designer committed to creating high designed functional items for everyday living. Russel Wright: Living with Good Design traces the Ohio native’s career development as his designs and concepts for a new, relaxed style of living emerged and subsequently transformed a generation of Americans following World War II. The exhibition will remain on view through April 20, 2008.  Russel Wright: Living with Good Design is organized by Arts Midwest and the Decorative Arts Center of Ohio and sponsored by Target. The exhibit was designed for the Goldstein Museum Gallery by students in the University of Minnesota course DHA 5170 Special Topics in Design, Housing, Apparel: Exhibit Design, taught by Lonnie Broden of the Science Museum of Minnesota. Click here to download the press release.

   

 

Here by Design III: Process and Prototype

   
October 20, 2007-January 20, 2008; Goldstein Museum Gallery
 

 

HBDIII is the third in a series of exhibitions focusing on the creativity of local designers. The exhibit presented digital fabrication techniques and rapid prototyping by leading Minnesota architects, product designers, and researchers. This exhibit investigated the themes that are emerging in contemporary design around the use of digital fabrication and by investigating how digital fabrication is affecting how designers design.

Click here to download the press release.

 

   

 

Products of Our Time

   
July 21-September 30, 2007; Goldstein Museum Gallery
 

 

Products of Our Time brings together the work of an international array of designers and artists who are commenting on the current environmental, economic, cultural, and political zeitgeist using a common medium—products. Guest Curator: Daniel Jasper, Assistant Professor of Graphic Design.

Click here to download the press release.

 

Affordable Housing: Designing an American Asset

April 21-July 1, 2007; Goldstein Museum Gallery

Twenty-five percent of all American households face severe housing problems. Affordable Housing: Designing an American Asset explores well-designed housing opportunities for the least wealthy Americans.

Click here to download the press release.

 

Leading from Policy to Practice: Affordable Housing in Minnesota

April 21-July 1, 2007; Goldstein Museum Gallery

Leading from Policy to Practice: Affordable Housing in Minnesota will present an overview of affordable housing in Minnesota. Organized by guest curator Marilyn Bruin, Associate Professor of Housing Studies, the exhibition will explore and critique several state-wide case studies of affordable housing projects. A symposium will bring together funders, developers, builders and policy-makers for a lively exploration of the state and future of Minnesota affordable housing.

Click here to download the press release.

 

DESIGN REDUX: EAMES AS PAPER

January 27-March 31, 2007; Goldstein Museum Gallery

Based on the influential design and philosophy of Charles (1907-78) and Ray (1912-88) Eames, this exhibition will explore the continuing legacy of these design champions through the development of a new line of premium papers designed by the Minneapolis-based Design Guys for Neenah Paper in partnership with the Eames Office. Guest curated by Patrick Grace, the exhibition and related programs will explore the story of Design Guys' quest to translate the Eames philosophy into new forms for modern uses. Click here to download the press release.

 

 

American Fashion Transformed: Four Master Designers

September 23, 2006-January 7, 2007; Goldstein Museum Gallery

As Paris rebuilt after World War II, American optimism soared along with its fashion industry, giving rise to some of the most influential designers of the late twentieth century. American Fashion Transformed: Four Master Designers, organized from the Goldstein's extensive contemporary costume collection by guest curators Dolores DeFore and Gloria Hogan, explored four significant designers: Norman Norell, Pauline Trigere, Bill Blass and Geoffrey Beene. All four were driving forces behind the growth of America's post-War fashion design and exhibited their talent over fifty years in the fashion business. 

Click here to download the press release.

 

THE CHAIR: 125 Years of Sitting

June 4-September 3, 2006; Goldstein Museum Gallery

This exhibition featured selections from the Goldstein’s extensive collection of chairs.  It will showcase seating furniture from the late nineteenth century through the twentieth century. The popular chair form revealed explorations of materials, balance, and comfort by noted architects and designers. Many artists who have normally focused on architecture or other aspects of decorative arts have found the chair to be a very attractive form to design. Some of the wide variety of designers whose chairs will be featured include Charles and Ray Eames, Michael Thonet, Mies van der Rohe, Russell Wright and Gustav Stickley.  Visitors appreciated the designers’ philosophies about aesthetics, function, and materials, as well as learning how many classic chair designs are still being manufactured today. Included in the exhibition were a Shaker chair, an ice cream shop stool, and other familiar chair forms that have been popular over the last 125 years. Using images from the department of Design, Housing and Apparel’s Human Dimensioning Lab, visitors will also see how bodies are held in chairs, and how chairs can be designed for different functions. Click here to download the press release.

Last Call: Give Us a Shot! - Senior Exhibition

April 23 - May 10, 2006; Goldstein Museum Gallery

Each spring, seniors in the Department of Design, Housing, and Apparel display their work in the Senior Design Exhibition at the Goldstein Museum.  The exhibition is organized by the students.  The reception celebrating the excellence of our students' work includes an awards ceremony; this is an event attended by the graduating seniors, their families, faculty and designers from the community.  Faculty advisor: James Boyd-Brent

Click here to download the press release.

 

Celebrate! The College of Human Ecology

January 28 - April 9, 2006; Goldstein Museum Gallery


This exhibition's purpose was to celebrate the teaching/learning, research/discovery, and outreach/engagement scholarship of the College of Human Ecology.  Current projects were featured in relationship to the five college initiatives: cultural awareness and competence, design and technology, development across the life span, economic and social well-being, and healthy life choices.  Curated by Dr. Becky Love Yust.

Click here to download the press release.

 

Mind Over Matter, Body Under Design: Bodyworks by KeySook Geum

October 9, 2005 - January 8, 2006; Goldstein Museum Gallery

This exhibition featured the conceptual fashion of Dr. KeySook Geum, an internationally known Korean designer, teacher, and scholar. Geum's elegant works usually take the form of clothing - dresses, jackets, and coats. Often made from strands of wire and silk, these transparent web-like sculptures are enlivened with the addition of beads, sequins, feathers, coral, and amber. Curated by Dr. Marilyn DeLong.

Click here to download the press release.
Click here to purchase a catalogue.

 

Maya Textiles from the Guatemalan Highlands

June 5-September 17, 2005; Goldstein Museum Gallery

Guatemala is one of the few places on earth where traditional textile arts from ancient cultures survive. This exhibition highlighted the culture of the Mayan people who continue to wear their traditional dress, or traje, with pride.  Richard Nelson, a Twin Cities photographer and collector, built this large and impressive collection. Curated by Richard Nelson. 

Click here to download the press release.
Click here to purchase a catalogue.

 

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