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The Cleveland Show


In 1796, Moses Cleaveland probably wasn’t thinking about how art would play a vital role in the cultural development of the city. It took about 80 years for artists to develop a presence in Cleveland. In 1876, Cleveland painter Archibald Willard exhibited his work “The Spirit of ’76” at The Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia and returned to Cleveland to form the Cleveland Art Club. In 1878, women organized the first loan exhibition, and a few years later the Western Reserve School of Design for Women was founded which later became the Cleveland School of Art.  It wasn’t until 1916 that the Cleveland Museum of Art opened. Construction began on the iconic terminal tower in 1926 which was the second tallest building in the world when it was completed. In 1932 the Art Deco Guardians of transportation began to stand over traffic on the Lorain-Carnegie Bridge. The Free Stamp was created by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen in 1985 and has become one of many images that remind us of Cleveland.

 

Defamiliarization is artistic technique of presenting to audiences common things in an unfamiliar or strange way so they could gain new perspectives and see the world differently. This show reimagines Cleveland as if you are seeing it for the first time.

 

Co- Curators,  Cheryl Lynn Craver and Chevy shape this exhibition looking beyond the “Cleveland” iconography and seek out the unfamiliar people, places and events that are both challenging and beautiful. The Cleveland Show celebrates painting, printmaking, and photography by featured Northeast Ohio artists, Karen Beckwith, Jeff Benedetto, Tim Callaghan, Tim Herron, Ingrid Hoegner Leek, Jesse Rhinehart, Vivica Satterwhite, Joan Satow, Jeff Suntala, and Dawn Tekler

 

Earlier Event: October 19
Stranger Things
Later Event: January 18
Parts to the Whole