On View

Archipenko: A Modern Legacy

January 28 - April 30, 2017

Situated at the forefront of the historic European avant-garde, Alexander Archipenko (American, born Ukraine, 1887–1964) reinvigorated sculpture with his dynamic creativity at the beginning of the twentieth century. A celebrated innovator and inventor, Archipenko took an artistic path that led him from Ukraine to Moscow and then to Paris and Berlin, where he lived during a period of extraordinary cultural transformation. Archipenko’s arrival in New York in 1923 marked the start of a forty-year career in the United States as an artist, educator, and mentor.

Drawn from major museum collections and private holdings, the exceptional objects presented in this exhibition highlight Archipenko’s lifelong interest in abstraction as a vehicle for innovation. In particular, works made in the United States offer insight into his exploration of negative space as sculptural form and his use of concave and convex shapes to abstract the human figure. Archipenko’s signature sculpto-paintings, brightly colored mixed-media reliefs, are prominently featured alongside freestanding sculptures made of terra-cotta, marble, and bronze.

Key motifs recur in the exhibition, such as the reclining figure and the subject of dance. Archipenko sought to imbue sculpture with concepts of movement and time through his use of color, kinetic mechanisms, and unexpected materials and techniques such as polychrome patina, lead casting, and electroplating. Recognized for an artistic practice that combined fine art and industry, Archipenko integrated creative tools of the past with technologies of the present as a way of propagating and advancing modern art.

Archipenko: A Modern Legacy is organized by International Arts & Artists, Washington, D.C., in collaboration with the Archipenko Foundation, and curated by Alexandra Keiser, PhD, research curator at the Archipenko Foundation, Bearsville, New York. 

Lead support for the Frye Art Museum’s installation is provided by BNY Mellon. Additional generous support is provided by Seattle Office of Arts & Culture, ArtsFund, the Frye Foundation and Frye Art Museum members.

EXHIBITION PROGRAMS 

January 27, 8:30 pm – 10:30 pm 
Exhibitions Opening Reception 

January 28, 3:30 pm – 4:30 pm 
A Modern Legacy 
Lecture with Alexandra Keiser, Research Curator, Archipenko Foundation 

March 2, 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm 
Archipenko in the Crosshairs of the European Avant-Garde 
Lecture with Marek Wieczorek, Associate Professor of Modern Art History, University of Washington 

March 25, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm 
Archipenko: A Modern Legacy Gallery Talk with Sarah Margolis-Pineo 

April 29, 11:00 – 5:00 pm 
Exhibition Closing Sale