CIA will host the North American premiere of the traveling exhibition "17 Swedish Designers” (06 November - 19 December 2009) in its Reinberger Galleries. This exhibition features 17 female Swedish design professionals, all of whom have had their work exhibited in Galerie Pascale Cottard-Olsson, Sweden’s only gallery devoted exclusively to design.
On view will be more than 60 examples of high design in the form of furniture, textiles and functional and decorative works in glass, ceramics, wood, steel and other materials. Collectively, these pieces highlight the contributions of 17 Swedish women to modern design whose work ranges from functional objects to works of sculpture, jewelry, wall hangings and public art installations. Each designer is multi-talented and exhibits a willingness to experiment. For example:
Szyber will curate the "17 Swedish Designers" exhibition and visit the Institute, speaking with students and giving a public presentation about Swedish design and the genesis of the exhibition.
In recent years, as Swedish women have entered design professions in increasing numbers, they have influenced the character of Swedish design in profound ways. According to Professor Kerstin Wickman of the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, "As more and more women have been choosing the design profession – since the 1930s so dominated by men and male values – design has changed. The narratives have altered, become more sensual and characterized by women’s experiences."
Concurrent with the "17 Swedish Designers" exhibition, CIA will host the national tour of "AIGA 365: Annual Design Competition 30", a showcase of the nation’s best in visual communication design solutions from the annual competition sponsored by the American Institute of Graphic Arts professional design association. This exhibit will also include a selection of AIGA’s 50 Books/ 50 Covers of 2008.
Also on display in CIA’s Reinberger Galleries blackbox theater will be the latest video works by Annetta Mona Chisa and Lucia Tkacova from Prague including Manifesto of Futurist Women (Let’s Conclude). This work explores gender relations as well as the role of Eastern European artists in a Western-dominated art world.
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