Dallas Art Fair Foundation and Dallas Museum of Art Announce Fifth Annual Acquisition Program Selection

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Dallas Art Fair Foundation and Dallas Museum of Art Announce Fifth Annual Acquisition Program Selection
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Artworks by Sarah Cain, Johnny Floyd, Danielle Mckinney, Jordan Nassar, Susan Weil, and Carrie Yamaoka Selected for DMA’s Permanent Collection

Johnny Floyd, Upon Reflection, I am Aphrodite's Pearls Strung Across the Firmament, 2021. Oil, acrylic & gold leaf on canvas. 24 x 36 in / 61cm x 91.5. Courtesy the artist and Conduit Gallery.

(DALLAS, TX — November 11, 2021) — Today, the Dallas Art Fair and the Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) are pleased to announce the selections for the fifth Dallas Art Fair Foundation Acquisition Program, an annual acquisition gift for the DMA’s permanent collection. The DMA’s Interim Chief Curator Dr. Nicole R. Myers, the DMA’s Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art Dr. Vivian Li, and a group of donors have selected works by Sarah Cain, Johnny Floyd, Danielle Mckinney, Jordan Nassar, Susan Weil, and Carrie Yamaoka from the fair.

“The works we have chosen from this year’s Dallas Art Fair demonstrate the DMA’s commitment to artists at all stages of their careers—from Johnny Floyd who began painting three years ago, to Susan Weil whose distinguished career spans over seventy years. A great number of works address the historical exclusion of female artists and perspectives, such as the arresting female gaze in Danielle McKinney's contemplative self-portrait. Others, like the new works by Sarah Cain, Jordan Nassar, and Carrie Yamaoka, ingeniously blur the distinctions between fine art and craft, visibility and invisibility, and the nation and home to reassess the categories of nationality, race, gender, and medium. We are thrilled how these artists boldly engaging in abstraction, minimalism and figuration will broaden and deepen the stories we can present at the DMA,” says Dr. Vivian Li, Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art at the DMA.

L: Jordan Nassar, A sun in the room, 2021. Hand-embroidered cotton on cotton. Courtesy the artist and Anat Ebgi.  R: Sarah Cain, Jamillah, 2021. Acrylic, color copies, UV seal, and backpack on canvas. Courtesy the artist and BROADWAY.

The acquisition program is an annual initiative connecting the Dallas Museum of Art, the Dallas Art Fair, and the Dallas Art Fair’s participating galleries. The Dallas Art Fair Foundation Acquisition Program has funded $550,000 for the Dallas Museum of Art’s permanent collection to date, including this year’s grant of $100,000.

“The Dallas Museum of Art has one of the strongest collections in the country and every year we are delighted to contribute to it. This fund ensures we and our exhibitors meaningfully connect with the museum, while helping artworks find a permanent home in a landmark cultural institution. It always excites me seeing our exhibitors’ works become part of DMA shows; at the last fair, the museum acquired a Sheila Hicks piece that became one of the starring works in its Hicks exhibition later that year,” says Dallas Art Fair Director Kelly Cornell.

“Our relationship with the Dallas Art Fair is exciting, and we are so grateful for the fair’s continued support of the Museum. Every year, the Dallas Art Fair presents works by some of the most promising young artists and well-established names, reflecting the depth and richness of our city’s artistic community. We are honored to be the recipient of the Dallas Art Fair Foundation Acquisition Program and the wonderful opportunity to  grow our collection,” says DMA Director Dr. Agustín Arteaga.

The 2021 program donors are Tricia and Gil Besing, Zoe Bonnette, Susan and Shawn Bonsell, Sheryl and Geoff Green, Dianne and Mark Laroe, Fraser and Rhonda Marcus, Cliff Risman, Linda and David Rogers, Richard Ronzetti, Gowri and Alex N.K. Sharma, Marlene and John Sughrue, and The Dallas Art Fair Foundation.

L: Danielle Mckinney, Talk of the Town, 2021. Acrylic on canvas. Courtesy the artist and Night Gallery. C: Susan Weil, Color Configurations 2 (Red), 1998. Acrylic on paper. Courtesy the artist and JDJ. R: Carrie Yamaoka, 40 by 30 (clear/black #2), 2021. Flexible urethane resin and black vinyl on wood panel. Courtesy the artist and Ulterior Gallery.

The selected works are:
Sarah Cain
Jamillah, 2021
Acrylic, color copies, UV seal, and backpack on canvas
60 x 48 in / 152.4 x 121.9 cm
Acquired from BROADWAY

Jordan Nassar
A sun in the room, 2021
Hand-embroidered cotton on cotton
27 x 29 inches / 69 x 74 cm
Acquired from Anat Egbi

Johnny Floyd
Upon Reflection, I am Aphrodite's Pearls Strung Across the Firmament, 2021
Oil, acrylic & gold leaf on canvas
24 x 36 in / 61cm x 91.5
Acquired from Conduit Gallery

Susan Weil
Color Configurations 2 (Red), 1998
Acrylic on paper
60 x 66 in  / 152.4 x 167.6 cm
Acquired from JDJ

Danielle Mckinney
Talk of the Town, 2021
Acrylic on canvas
20 x 16 in / 50.80 x 40.64 cm
Acquired from Night Gallery

Carrie Yamaoka
40 by 30 (clear/black #2), 2021
Flexible urethane resin and black vinyl on wood panel
40 x 30 x 2 in / 101.6 x 76.2 x 5.1 cm
Acquired from Ulterior Gallery

VISUAL ASSETS
For high-res artwork images, please view our Dropbox folder here.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

Sarah Cain (b. 1979) lives and works in Los Angeles, California. Her work is in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California; Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin; Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, Skidmore College, New York; North Carolina Museum of Art; Perez Art Museum, Miami, FL; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, California; and San Antonio Museum of Art, Texas, among others.

Johnny Floyd (b. 1984) is a self-taught painter working in Detroit, MI. He started painting when it became clear that creating was the only thing that made sense. Building on a foundational academic infrastructure based in Psychology and Sociolinguistics, Floyd’s work examines the African American experience through an interrogation of both historical and current cultural phenomena while simultaneously imagining a future in which Blackness in The United States of America is a sustainable condition. Through the melding of figurative, surrealistic, and abstracted practices, Floyd employs a broad artistic lens that coalesces into a visual language better suited to articulate this future. His practice is a process-driven meditation on an amalgamation of classical mythologies, ancestral connection, modern Black cultural artifacts, and historical record. Floyd addresses these themes through an improvisational approach to traditional art techniques and methodologies--a process that allows him to produce works that adhere to a specific thematic/narrative arc while remaining uniquely responsive to the environment(s) in which he is creating. He strives to allow his practice to be one of resistance, recovery, and reparation. Conduit Gallery presented Johnny Floyd’s first solo gallery exhibition, October 9 through November 13, 2021. His work was also donated to the 2021 Two X Two Auction for AIDS and Art, where it received great recognition.

Danielle Mckinney (b. 1981, Montgomery, AL) received her MFA in Photography from Parsons School of Design. She has recently presented solo exhibitions at Marianne Boesky Gallery, Aspen, CO; Night Gallery, Los Angeles CA; and Fortnight Institute, New York, NY. Her work has also been included in group exhibitions at Asia Art Center, Taipei; Night Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Half Gallery, New York, NY; and FLAG Foundation, New York, NY. Mckinney has been featured in several publications, including Elephant, Mousse Magazine, Artnet News, and Juxtapoz, among others. She lives and works in Jersey City, NJ.

Jordan Nassar’s (b.1985, New York, NY) hand embroidered textile pieces address an intersecting field of language, ethnicity and the embedded notions of heritage and homeland. Treating craft within its capacity as communicative form, Nassar examines conflicting issues of identity and cultural participation using geometric patterning adapted from Islamic symbols present in traditional Palestinian hand embroidery. Nassar generates these symbols via computer and then meticulously hand stitches them onto carefully mapped-out patterns. In the enmeshing and encoding of these symbols within his work, Nassar roots his practice in a linguistic and geopolitical field of play characterized by both conflict and unspoken harmony. He earned his BA at Middlebury College in 2007. His work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions globally at institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; BRIC, Brooklyn, NY; Museum of Arts and Design, New York, NY; Abrons Art Center, New York, NY;  Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY; Anat Ebgi, Los Angeles, CA; James Cohan Gallery, New York, NY; Evelyn Yard, London, UK, Exile Gallery in Berlin, Germany, and The Third Line, Dubai, UAE. His work is included in the current group exhibition Making Knowing: Craft in Art, 1950 – 2019 at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Nassar’s work has been acquired by museum collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, and the Israel Museum, Tel Aviv. Nassar lives and works in New York, NY.

Susan Weil (b. 1930) draws inspiration from nature, literature, art history, and her own lived experience. Weil came of age as an artist in the postwar period studying under Josef Albers at Black Mountain College with Willem & Elaine de Kooning, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg & Cy Twombly. Three bodies of work art on view in this presentation: the spray paint drawings and screenprints from the early 1970s, the soft fold paintings from the 1980s & 1990S, and the configurations from the 2000s. Despite the fact that the works have been made in a time span of nearly four decades, they all articulate a sense of corporeality though her inventive use of abstraction.  Her work has been exhibited at institutions across the United States and Europe, including the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Black Mountain College Museum + Art Center, Asheville, NC; and the Museo Reina Sofa, Madrid. Her work is included in a number of international museum and institutional collections, such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Menil Collection, Houston; The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and Moderna Museet, Stockholm among others. She will open a solo exhibition in 2022 at JDJ the Ice House, Garrison, NY. She lives and works in New York.

Carrie Yamaoka (b.1957, Glen Cove, NY) has exhibited her work widely in the US and Europe since the 1980s. Yamaoka has shown widely in the US and Europe since the 1990s. Her work is included in the collections of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; Centre Pompidou, Paris; The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; and the Art Institute, Chicago. Yamaoka received an Anonymous Was a Woman Award in 2017 and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in 2019. Recent solo exhibitions include pour crawl peel at Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles, California (2020), Panorama at Ulterior (2019) and Lucien Terras, New York, NY (2015). Her work was featured in arms ache avid aeon: Nancy Brooks Brody / Joy Episalla / Zoe Leonard / Carrie Yamaoka: fierce pussy amplified at Beeler Gallery, Columbus College of Art & Design, Ohio, and included in exhibitions at the ICA in Philadelphia (2018–2019) and the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2020). She is also a founding member of the queer art collective fierce pussy.

ABOUT THE DALLAS MUSEUM OF ART
Established in 1903, the Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) is among the 10 largest art museums in the country and is distinguished by its commitment to research, innovation, and public engagement. At the heart of the Museum and its programs is its global collection, which encompasses 25,000 works and spans 5,000 years of history, representing a full range of world cultures. Located in the nation’s largest arts district, the Museum acts as a catalyst for community creativity, engaging people of all ages and backgrounds with a diverse spectrum of programming, from exhibitions and lectures to concerts, literary events, and dramatic and dance presentations. With a free general admission policy and community outreach efforts, the DMA served more than 900,000 individuals on-site and off-site in 2019. The DMA is an Open Access institution, allowing all works believed to be in the public domain to be freely available for downloading, sharing, repurposing, and remixing without restriction. The Dallas Museum of Art is supported, in part, by the generosity of DMA Members and donors, the citizens of Dallas through the City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs, and the Texas Commission on the Arts. www.dma.org

ABOUT DR. AGUSTÍN ARTEAGA
Dr. Agustín Arteaga is the Eugene McDermott Director of the Dallas Museum of Art. Arteaga previously served as director at the Museo Nacional de Arte (MUNAL) in Mexico City, the director of the Museo de Arte de Ponce (MAP) in Puerto Rico, and the founding director of Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (MALBA) Fundación Costantini in Argentina. Arteaga has organized more than 100 exhibitions and has received several international awards Born in Mexico City, Arteaga received an MA and PhD from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, and a BS in architecture from the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana.

ABOUT DR. NICOLE MYERS
Dr. Nicole R. Myers is Interim Chief Curator and The Barbara Thomas Lemmon Senior Curator of European Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. Myers oversees the European collection of paintings and sculptures spanning the Renaissance to the mid-20th century. Since joining the DMA in 2016, she has been responsible for organizing special exhibitions, conducting original research on the Museum’s collection, overseeing permanent gallery installations, and acquiring new works, among other responsibilities. From June 2021, Myers has concurrently served as Interim Chief Curator. Myers earned her master’s and doctorate degrees in art history from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where she wrote her doctoral thesis on the French Realist painter Gustave Courbet. She is a summa cum laude graduate of Washington University in St. Louis and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

ABOUT DR. VIVIAN LI
Dr. Vivian Li is the Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. She joined the DMA in October 2019. With expertise in both contemporary art and Asian art, Li specializes in modern and contemporary art in China, with a focus on sculpture from the early 20th century through the postwar period. Li forms part of the Museum’s contemporary curatorial team along with Dr. Anna Katherine Brodbeck, Hoffman Family Senior Curator of Contemporary Art. She contributes to exhibitions, acquisitions, and research that develop the Museum’s international approach to contemporary exhibitions and programming. Li earned her doctorate and master’s degrees in art history from the University of Michigan and Ohio State University, respectively. She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Texas at Austin. The subject of her doctoral thesis was post-1949 sculpture in China. With the support of a Fulbright fellowship, she conducted research in Beijing and Sichuan, and her research has also been supported by the Freer and Sackler Galleries and the Getty Research Institute.

ABOUT THE  DALLAS ART FAIR
In the heart of the downtown arts district, the Dallas Art Fair offers collectors, arts professionals, and the public the opportunity to engage with a rich selection of modern and contemporary artworks presented by leading national and international galleries. Thoughtfully curated exhibitions and innovative programming encourage lively conversations and close looking in a robust and rapidly growing arts community. www.dallasartfair.com

PRESS CONTACTS

Dallas Museum of Art:
Jill Bernstein
Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Dallas Museum of Art
JBernstein@dma.org

Dallas Art Fair:
Jill Robinson
Associate Director, Cultural Counsel
jill@culturalcounsel.com

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