Donate
gallery crawl see more art

KQED e-Newsletters

Newsletters

Get regular updates on great programs and events

Please leave this field empty

More from KQED

Art Review

Treasures from the 'Mooseum:' The Manitoba Museum of Finds Art

Large Image

Since opening in January 2012, the gallery Will Brown has made an effort to exhibit almost everything but "art." At least, art in the sense of work made by local living artists pursuing a career in the field. Their first show featured a number of heavy-hitters, but the pieces were displayed covertly in the gallery basement; all were acquired illegitimately and loaned anonymously. The second show, Untitled (Black Painting), removed the pretense of even showing objects, opting for chalk outlines of famous monochromatic paintings from throughout art history. In this, the gallery's third full exhibition, the space transforms once again. For the next month Will Brown plays host to the Manitoba Museum of Finds Art, formerly housed (unsanctioned) within a larger and possibly better-known institution: the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

The brainchild of SFMOMA employee Alberta Mayo, the MMOFA existed within her office (the waiting room for SFMOMA Director Henry Hopkins' office) from 1975 to 1978. Beginning with a show of photographs by fellow museum employee Joel Sackett, May expanded her programming to include artists who might not necessarily be noticed by the museum at large.

In the Will Brown installation, objects from the MMOFA permanent collection are displayed much as they were in Mayo's office, on rows of shelves above her desk. These tchotchkes run the gamut: a prank pat of butter, a handmade MMOFA porcelain piece, a small bottle of International Klein Blue pigment balls, a signed baseball, multiple "Manitoba" trinkets. In this current display, the shelves gradually devolve into moose paraphernalia (a result of wordplay and the alternate title of "mooseum"), with multiple Bullwinkle figurines featured prominently.

The fact that these items continue to exist and have stayed with Mayo since she left SFMOMA imbues them with significance, but the viewer has no way of knowing if they would like to share in that feeling. The stories behind each object are left undefined. Without Mayo there to tell the story of the strange "corduroy pouch with rock inside," the collection remains -- to a certain extent -- an impenetrable bunch of funky stuff.

The show provides the sense of being in the midst of a large-scale and long-term inside joke. In a panel discussion at the show's opening, Mayo emphasized how much the SFMOMA staff liked each other. These exhibitions, their openings, and the ephemera they produced are rife with jokes about "the other museum" (a.k.a. SFMOMA).

Two tabletops show a variety of show announcements and internal correspondence that document the peculiar history of the MMOFA. The most telling is a scrap of paper with a typed note from Mayo requesting the removal of an Ellsworth Kelly painting from her office so that she could finish installing a Manitoba Museum show.

Instead of trying to determine the import of the "mooseum's" collection or figure out what fame-bound artist touched what, the MMOFA functions best as an inspiration for all those who suffer through dreary day jobs. Arts institutions tend to attract creative individuals with personal commitments to the field, but can, in turn, suck the pleasure from all they once loved about the art world. The Manitoba Museum argues for carving out a creative space in your work environment without asking permission, building camaraderie with coworkers separate from the institution, and refusing to allow your job title to decree your every move at the workplace.

As Jordan Stein, one-third of the leadership behind Will Brown, remarked at the opening, there is something to be said about pursing a line of action without a mission statement, for the pure enjoyment of seeing what will happen, despite the risks you take in the process.

For an in-depth essay on the history of the MMOFA at SFMOMA and a revealing interview with Alberta Mayo, see Tanya Zimbardo's fantastic post on the SFMOMA Open Space blog.

The Manitoba Museum of Finds Art is on view at Will Brown through June 2, 2012. For more information visit wearewillbrown.com.

Resources

More on Visual Arts

The Latest on KQED Arts

Art Review | May 19, 2013

SFAI MFA Students Overtake the Old Mint in 'Currency'

Don't miss the SFAI class of 2013 and their year-end MFA exhibition at the strange and wonderful Old Mint building. By Sarah Hotchkiss  

Theater Review | May 18, 2013

Everybody's Helen of Troy at EXIT Theatre's DIVAfest

One Helen of Troy was enough trouble for the ancient world. What happens when you get five of them in the same room? By Sam Hurwitt  

NPR Film | May 17, 2013

'Into Darkness,' Boldly And With A Few Twists

The 12th film based on Gene Roddenberry's '60s sci-fi TV show is the second to star a new group of actors as Kirk, Spock and their crew. J.J. Abrams returns as director, and Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch plays the memorable villain. By David Edelstein  

NPR Film | May 17, 2013

Polley's 'Stories': A Family Saga Strikingly Spun

A director's film memoir of her theatrical family is transformed by surprising discoveries about her parents' past -- and her own heritage. Sarah Polley's film becomes a superb meditation on how we dramatize memory. (Recommended) By Bob Mondello  

The Do List | May 16, 2013

The One About Orange Peels And Music On A Mountain

Cy Musiker and David Wiegand scout the Bay Area for things to do this coming weekend and turn up orange peels, music on a mountain, and much more!   

Art & Design
  • Giant Renaissance Food People Descend Upon New York

    Giuseppe Arcimboldo was a 16th-century artist who liked to play with his food, transforming it into the building blocks of many of his fantastical portraits. Artist Philip Haas has taken those portraits out of museums, reinterpreting them as colossal statues that interact with the natural environment.

  • Litterbugs Beware: Turning Found DNA Into Portraits

    A dropped cigarette butt, a chewed-up piece of gum, a stray hair. Artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg uses DNA from trash she's picked up around New York City to generate 3-D portraits of those who left it behind.

  • Banksy Mural May Be Coming To U.S. After All

    The stencil of a young boy sewing the Union Jack is the centerpiece of an exhibition in London, after which it will head to the U.S. where it is to be part of a private collection. Organizers say Slave Labour is not being put up for sale, but residents of the London neighborhood from which it disappeared want it back.

  • A Fresh Answer To Vermeer's Mystery

    The work of the Dutch master Johannes Vermeer has long puzzled the art world. Some of his pieces just don't quite fit. They're a little off. What gives? Author Benjamin Binstock has an idea, an idea that commentator Alva Noƫ finds appealing.

Also on KQED.org this week ...

The Earth
We Need You!

Volunteer during our current on-air radio fundraising drive. It's a great way to support KQED Radio with your time. You can really make a difference!

ImageMakers - 88:88 (You Should Be Paranoid, 2013)
Enter the New "ImageMakers" Screening Room

Enjoy films from present and past seasons of KQED's short independent film series, divided into Animation, Comedy, Drama, and Suspense.