Modern Beauty campaign inspired by exhibit

Winter Night, depicting a Ukrainian peasant dying during a famine (detail; 1920), Alphonse Mucha.

RALEIGH, NC (PNAN) – To celebrate the upcoming Alphonse Mucha: Art Nouveau Visionary exhibition opening on Saturday, October 23, 2021 at the North Carolina Museum of Art, the NCMA tapped three North Carolina–based artists to reinterpret Mucha’s iconic art nouveau works from the turn of the 20th century. These reinterpretations explore contemporary definitions of beauty and widened cultural representation. The juxtaposition of the new designs and well-known Mucha images are intended to spark conversation about the art historical canon.

Blessings, 2021, acrylic, marker, coloring pencil, and pastels on paper, Courtesy of the artist Alisha Locklear Monroe.

Commissioned were Lumbee artist Alisha Locklear Monroe, an art teacher and former employee of the Museum of the Southeast American Indian at UNC Pembroke.

Healing in a Weeping Place, 2021, oil on canvas, Courtesy of the artist Lakeshia T. Reid.

     Lakeshia T. Reid, a Black painter who is the owner of 311 Gallery and has been in exhibitions in the National Humanities Center and Shaw University through partnerships with VAE Raleigh.

Painter and muralist Tori “FNoRD” Carpenter, who has shown her work statewide and is a disabled artist working with Arts Access, a group the NCMA collaborates with to make the Museum more accessible.

FNoRD holds her artwork in front of El Anatsui’s Lines That Link Humanity (2008); FnoRD, La Beauté de la Confiance (The Beauty of Confidence), 2021, watercolor and ink on paper, Courtesy of the artist

A Czech-born artist (1860–1939), Mucha was one of the most celebrated artists in Paris at the turn of the 20th century. As an influential force behind the art nouveau movement, he created sumptuous posters and advertising materials, promoting such everyday products as cigarette papers and tea biscuits, that transformed the streets of Paris into open-air art exhibitions.

Continuing the ethos of “art for the people,” these reimagined works of art will be displayed in select locations around Raleigh, including installations in North Hills and at the Citrix office building across from Morgan Street Food Hall & Market at West and Hargett streets, and given away as posters and prints at community events, including a November 5 First Friday in front of the Citrix display.

“Alphonse Mucha made it his mission to bring art to the streets and more accessible places, and that is what we aim to do with this campaign, reflecting the Museum’s goal of sharing art outside our walls and campus,” said Valerie Hillings, Museum director.

The posters will also be included in the exhibition gallery in an interpretive station for visitors to explore their own definitions of “modern beauty.”

“Beauty to me, in this context, is unapologetically being yourself,” said participating artist Lakeshia T. Reid. “It’s exuding strength, confidence and vulnerability, self-acceptance, and respect. It’s a celebration of the things that make each person unique.”

A similar project will be displayed on the Museum Park’s Park Billboards, created by area college students Pingui Ren, Fayetteville Technical Community College; Ella Mackinson, a Charlotte native currently studying at Pratt Institute; and Kiersten Joyner, East Carolina University. The biennial college art competition, “Park Pictures,” features student work that celebrates diverse visions of beauty in the art nouveau style of Mucha. The billboards will be on view by mid-November.

“I’m thrilled to be a part of this project for many reasons,” said FNoRD. “Obviously, it’s a chance to interpret my favorite artist with a new feel, but also because, as a self-taught artist and a woman of a certain age, it’s very difficult to gain eyes on my work; I was honored to be chosen.” 

For more information on this exhibit and other programming, see www.ncartmuseum.org.

Note: This exhibit celebrates the Mucha Trust Collection’s first major U.S. tour in 20 years, featuring a vast array of posters, illustrations ornamental objects and rarely seen sculpture, photographs and self-portraits, all showcasing Mucha’s distinctive style of harmonious compositions, sinuous forms, organic motifs and lush color palettes.

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