Passion Points: Arts/Culture

Cultural Calendar October: U.S. Edition Text Size A A A
This Fall, when visiting the following U.S. cities, be sure to catch these exceptional exhibitions.
BOSTON
Contemporary American artist Tara Donovan, who masterfully transforms everyday disposable materials into stunning large-scale installations and sculptures, will be the subject of a major retrospective at the Institute of Contemporary Art. The show will feature seventeen of Donovan’s works from the last decade, as well as a new site-specific installation commissioned by the museum. Opens October 10 and runs through January 4, 2009.
Coming soon: an in-depth destination report on Boston.
Photography is on view at the Art Institute of Chicago: Henri Cartier-Bresson’s powerful images are juxtaposed with drawings and etchings of some of his contemporaries, including de Chirico, Matisse, Mondrian and Picasso.
Very different but equally compelling will be the Jenny Holzer exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art (www.mcachicago.org), where the American conceptual artist’s show Protect Protect opens on October 25. Working with text and installation, Holzer has developed a unique way of examining emotional and social realities. Selected excerpts of her work will be projected onto the museum’s façade at night (starting October 29). Through February 1.
DALLAS
It’s rare that an exhibition makes an encore city tour, but Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs was such a hit when it was shown in 2005 that this month it return to the Dallas Museum of Art (dallasmuseumofart.org) for a seven-month engagement. More than 130 extraordinary artifacts from the tomb of Tutankhamun and other ancient Egyptian sites will be on view. Opens October 3.
DENVER
Opening on October 4 at the Denver Art Museum (www.denverartmuseum.org) : a major retrospective of acclaimed contemporary artist Daniel Richter. Born in 1962 and based in Berlin (in the U.S., he’s represented by David Zwirner), Richter is known for colorful, fantastical paintings, which loosely reference pop culture, politics, music, movies, comics and history. Through January 11, 2009.
If you missed the major Louise Bourgeois show in Paris and New York, it arrives at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles on October 26. The full-career retrospective is the most comprehensive to date of the fascinating sculptor and artist and features, among other works, her fascinating Cells, large-scale, enclosed installations that are extremely personal—and powerful. Through January 25.
Art world darling Chantal Ackerman, a Belgian filmmaker and artist who is based in Paris, will have her first solo show in the U.S. at the Miami Art Museum. The show is part of the very cool MAC@MAM program, a collaboration between the museum and the cutting-edge Miami Art Central. It opens on October 10 and runs through January 18, 2009.
Posting Soon: Insider tips on how to plan a trip to Art Basel Miami Beach, running this year form December 4-7.
MINNEAPOLIS
The Walker Art Center (www.walkerart.org) will showcase the first solo U.S. museum exhibition of whimsical Japanese artist Tetsumi Kudo (1935-1990). It will include some seventy pieces of his oeuvre, made in a variety of mediums (objects, sculpture, installation, drawing and painting) and scales. Kudo floated between and experimented with a large range of styles, including French Nouveau Realisme, Pop Art, and 1980s Japanese postmodernism, among others, without ever settling into one in particular.
The Asia Society is showing the controversial Art and China’s Revolution, the first-ever exhibition to focus on the revolutionary spirit of Mao’s China from the 1950s through 1970s.
Francophiles, meanwhile, shouldn’t miss three special exhibits this season: Uptown, the Museum of the City of New York hosts Paris/New York: Design Fashion Culture 1925-1940. The Whitney dedicates serious gallery space to beloved sculptor Alexander Calder in a show entitled The Paris Years, 1926-1933, and the Museum of Modern Art features Joan Miro: Painting and Anti-Painting 1927-1937. Also at MoMA: Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night, a show that amasses more than two dozen of Van Gogh’s nocturnal and twilight paintings and drawings
Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton , the first survey of artist Elizabeth Peyton’s work in an American institution, will be on view at the New Museum
Read about ArtMuse, which focuses on unique art tours with kids.
Read about the recently opened Museum of Art & Design
The Asian Art Museum hosts an extraordinary exhibition of ancient artifacts, believed to have been stolen or destroyed, that were rediscovered in modern-day Afghanistan. Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul look at the rich cultural heritage of ancient Afghanistan and features more than 200 works, including gold objects from the famed Bactrian Hoard, bronze and stone sculptures, ivories, painted glassware and other ancient Afghan works of art.
WASHINGTON, DC
Dutch Old Master Jan Lievens is the focus of a show at the National Gallery (www.nga.gov). The 17th-century artist, a friend and rival of Rembrandt, was a brilliant painter, printmaker, and draftsman and the exhibit will feature 55 paintings, 30 prints and 50 drawings by Lievens. The exhibit will travel to Milwaukee and to Amsterdam after it closes at the National Gallery on January 11, 2009.
Lovers of photography, meanwhile, should head to the Corcoran Gallery (www.corcoran.org), where Richard Avedon’s Portraits of Power is on view. The show juxtaposes more than 200 images of government, media and business officials with photographs of artists, activists and ordinary citizens. Through January 25.
Coming soon: an in-depth destination report on Washington, D.C.
Search By Keyword
Popular Destinations
Indagare News Flash
- Editors’ Picks: Just Back From Cabo: Read our insider’s report on Cabo. Melissa’s Letter from Zurich. Guides to Courchevel and Verbier, where the skiing is better than it’s been in decades. Plus: Winter specials from travel partners.
- Member Advice Postcards from Hacienda San Antonio, Jerusalem, Parrot Cay and a first look at the Aman in Beijing.
- What’s your travel IQ? Take the quiz USA Today called “a killer” and establish your Indagare quotient.
- Indagare Insiders: Top picks in Fez from Suzanna Clarke. Marie Brandolini on Venice; the design duo behind Kirna Zabete on shopping the world. Plus: Coralie Charriol Paul on her favorite spots in Megeve.
- Reviews: In-depth guides to Buenos Aires, Delhi and Deer Valley.
- Indagare Plus: Remember that hotels marked by an Indagare Plus symbol offer preferential rates and benefits to members.
- Sample Indagare: By signing up for bi-weekly email blasts on new hot spots and insider tips. Join our mailing list.
- News: Indagare named Best Travel Website by Vanity Fair. Read an interview with our founder on Vivre.
- New feature: Members share your profiles, comments, favorite articles and IQs. Just click on the Profile tab on the upper right of your screen and look for the Edit My Profile blue tab.
- Indagare means to discover, explore, seek, scout in Latin.



