Dispossessed: A call to PRAYER AND PROTEST

ACTION

An artistic intervention at the University Art Gallery (UAG) at University California San Diego (UCSD). In response to an unofficial announcement of permanent closure released May 20, 2016. Collective Magpie spray painted a red X over the doors of the UAG, displaying a 16-foot banner announcing the notice of permanent closure. The content of the banner, taken from the UCSD UAG ‘about page’ describing the historic significance of this space, was amended with our visual annotation, intervening in misinformation and misleading language embedded within the document itself.

Action team: Cara Carter, Lawrence Chit, Kim Garcia, Elizabeth Stringer.

UAG Gallery Collective Magpie

“Dispossessed: a call to PRAYER & PROTEST” banner and red X, exterior of the University Art Gallery, UCSD. Photo by Yi Mao

Collective Magpie duo spray paints the Red X on the University Art Gallery doors

Campus wide protests erupt ultimately leading to preventing the closure of the historic and culturally relevant art gallery

READ THE PETITION TO STOP THE CLOSURE HERE

ACTION ARCHIVE & EVENT LISTINGS

RELATED PRESS:

Hyperallergic: UC San Diego Plans to Convert Art Gallery into Classrooms, Sparking Protests

Art Forum News: UC San Diego Plans to Shut Down University Art Gallery

The Guardian: UCSD to Convert University Art Gallery into Classroom

City Beat: UCSD’s University Art Gallery to permanently close

KPBS: USCD’s Art Gallery Remains Open (For Now)

Banner created by Collective Magpie and installed on the UAG to inform the campus population of the history of the gallery and impending permanent closure

In response to the first Collective Magpie banner, an official statement announcing the gallery closure was released by the universiity. Collective Magpie created and installed a second banner on the UAG to inform the campus population of statement inaccuracies, protests followed.

About the UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY

The University Art Gallery, founded in 1966, has had a long-standing commitment to new and diverse forms of artistic practice, hosting some of the earliest exhibitions of performance and installation art on the west coast.  It is deeply tied to the history of artistic innovation in Southern California and the border culture of the US and Mexico.  The Gallery maintains an ongoing commitment to innovative forms of public programming, exhibition, and public intervention.  It incorporates artistic and organizational practices that both include, and expand the terrain beyond, the traditional process and form of the art exhibition.  The Gallery aims to activate new fields of knowledge production, new material, discursive, and critical possibilities — alternative forms of organization, exchange, collection, and presentation that can be incorporated into new understandings of artistic endeavor.  Working with the conditions and interrelationships of publics, space, discourse, and pedagogy, it enhances the dialogue around diversity within contemporary cultural practice and supports fellows and students in their academic and professional development as curators, critics, writers and scholars.

History

The University Art Gallery’s inaugural exhibition was Art of Latin America Since Independence, which featured over four hundred paintings, prints and drawings from sixteen different countries. The following year saw an extensive survey of contemporary Chilean Art. This dialogue continued with the Arte Picante juried exhibition of Chicano art, Chile from Within, and an important early exhibition of photographs by Tina Modotti curated by Patricia Albers. Throughout the 1970s and ‘80s curators such as David Antin, Moria Roth, Donald Lewallen and Gerry McAllister presented some of the first west coast exhibitions featuring performance, installation-based work, and sound art. In 1968 alone the Gallery presented work by influential Conceptualists such as Michael Asher, John Baldessari, Paul Brach and Miriam Shapiro (the last three were also faculty members), along with Frank Stella, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis and Philip Pearlstein. Fluxus: the Big Book, in 1969 was one of the first Fluxus exhibitions in California and included a Fluxus parade directed by John Baldessari and Robert Watts. Throughout the 1970s the Gallery continued to feature innovative new work by younger artists or groups which were soon to achieve fame (Richard Serra in 1970, Nancy Spero and Mabou Mines in 1971, Simone Forti’s performance work in 1972, Ed Ruscha’s artist’s books in 1973, Mary Beth Edelson in 1977, Juan Downey, Betye Saar, and Douglas Huebler in 1979.

The 1980s saw exhibits by Niki de Saint Phalle, a major survey of women’s performance art (featuring Laurie Anderson, Jacki Apple, Lynn Hershman, Pauline Oliveros, Yvonne Rainer, Martha Rosler, and Adrian Piper), early works by Los Angeles-based artists Michael Kelley and Jeffrey Vallance, along with shows featuring Terry Allen and Komar and Melamid. During the 1990s and early 2000s, under gallery director Gerry McAllister, the Gallery presented video installations by Norman and Bruce Yonemoto (1990), public works by Alexis Smith, the first sculptural installation created by painter Leon Golub (1992), along with an exhibition by activist artist Conrad Atkinson. The Gallery also presented exhibitions during this time of painters such as Philip Taaffe, Lari Pittman, and Ross Bleckner, and John Ahearn’s body cast sculptures from the South Bronx. Exhibitions over the past decade have included Living in Context, which explored collaborative approaches to urban housing projects in San Diego, a solo exhibition by Luis Gispert, a retrospective of works by the Cuban photographer Mario Algaze, the first solo exhibition of the young African-American artist lauren woods, a solo show dedicated to Ken Gonzales-Day’s work exploring the history of lynching in the American Southwest, and one of the first exhibitions in the United States to present the work of contemporary art collectives working in Argentina.


slideshow with a selection of actions conducted

For a more complete collection of the 15 days of continuous actions see: ACTION ARCHIVE & EVENT LISTINGS