Detroit Institute of Arts opens new Robert and Katherine Jacobs Asian Wing Nov. 4 | Dynamic galleries for Chinese, Korean, Indian and Southeast Asian, and Buddhist art join recently opened Japanese gallery
Updated Sep 12, 2018
September 10, 2018 [updated Oct. 30, 2018] (Detroit)—On Sunday, Nov. 4, the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) debuts the new Robert and Katherine Jacobs Asian Wing, with galleries that highlight objects and themes representing diverse art forms, cultural practices, and systems of belief. Works span thousands of years up to the present day in galleries of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and Indian and Southeast Asian art, as well as a gallery for Buddhist art across Asia.
In addition to historical masterpieces, such as a graceful bronze sculpture of the Hindu goddess Parvati from southern India (13th century) and Chinese artist Wen Zhengming’s hanging scroll that pairs painting and calligraphy, “The First Prose Poem on the Red Cliff” (1588), the galleries also feature works of modern and contemporary art. Created by artists whose work and lives span continents, these more recent artworks demonstrate changing artistic practices and the global reach of Asia today.
“In the DIA’s new Robert and Katherine Jacobs Asian Wing, we invite visitors to make meaningful connections with the objects on view, and to see how both historical and contemporary works of art are relevant today,” said DIA Assistant Curator of Arts of Asia & the Islamic World Katherine Kasdorf. “With a number of recent acquisitions joining works that have long been at the DIA, we are able to present our collection through narratives that we hope will encourage new ways of looking and thinking.”
Among the themes explored in the galleries are: Chinese painting as an ongoing tradition in which viewers—both past and present—play an active role; the dynamic relationship that many Korean works have to the ideal of harmony; and multiple ways in which Hindu sculptures provide devotees access to the divine.
To help develop ideas for the new galleries, DIA staff collaborated with a group of seven community members from across the Detroit metro area and Lansing. These dedicated individuals worked alongside core DIA staff during the earliest phase of the project to prioritize artworks and brainstorm stories for potential inclusion in the new galleries.
“These galleries give students and other visitors new opportunities to explore the history and culture of Asia,” said Salvador Salort-Pons, DIA Director. “The community-based approach to the development of these galleries is a continuation of our commitment to the residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, who are always able to visit the new galleries for free.”
A number of innovative digital elements will further enhance the visitor experience, among them a dynamic map highlighting Asia’s diversity, a video about the making of Korean ceramics, and a video showing Hindu sculptures in different contexts of worship. A listening station offering musical selections will deepen how visitors engage with Indian paintings, and a digital handscroll will invite exploration of the full length of Wang Wen’s “View from Keyin Pavilion on Baojie Mountain,” which is over 19 feet long. Nearby in the Chinese paintings gallery, a portion of the actual artwork will be on view at all times.
Three special programs are offered on Nov. 4:
Drop-in Artmaking: Korean Paper Crafts, Noon–4 p.m.
A Conversation with Artist Neha Vedpathak, 1 p.m.
Detroit-based artist Neha Vedpathak and DIA Assistant Curator Katherine Kasdorf, Arts of Asia & the Islamic World, discuss Vedpathak’s artistic practice, her background, and the large-scale work she created for the DIA’s new gallery of Indian and Southeast Asian art. Called “Still I Rise,” the commission exemplifies Vedpathak’s original plucked paper technique and explores the idea of resilience as a common ground between India and Detroit. Vedpathak is a multidisciplinary artist renowned for her inventive and original process-based practice and deep connection to her materials.
Concert: Asian Sound Revolution, 3 p.m.
Asian Sound Revolution is a collaboration of artists that preserves pan-Asian musical traditions and uses them to create contemporary sounds. Joining Korean komungo player Jin Hi Kim are a diverse group of musicians, including Masayo Ishigure (Japanese koto), Susie Ibara (Filipino percussion), VÂN-ÁNH VÕ (Vietnamese dan tranh) and Gao Hong (Chinese pipa). Together they explore the unique ways each musical tradition influences the others.
Charles Lang Freer House Exhibition: “An Accidental Photographer in Seoul: Capturing a City in Transition” 1–5 p.m.
This show features photographs on loan from the Asia Library, University of Michigan, by Margaret Condon Taylor. While serving in Seoul, South Korea as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1969, she captured the rapidly evolving Korean lifestyle in the face of modernization. The Charles Lang Freer House is at 71 E. Ferry St., one block from the DIA. For information call 313-664-2500. Sponsored by: Korean Consulate General in Chicago; David Roden, Korean Honorary Consul General in Michigan; DIA’s Friends of Asian Arts and Cultures; & The Freer House
Museum Hours and Admission
9 a.m.–4 p.m. Tuesdays–Thursdays, 9 a.m.–10 p.m. Fridays, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. General admission (excludes ticketed exhibitions) is free for Wayne, Oakland and Macomb county residents and DIA members. For all others, $14 for adults, $9 for seniors ages 62+, $8 for college students, $6 for ages 6–17. For membership information, call 313-833-7971.
For high-res images, go to https://www.dia.org/asiangalleriesmediakit
September 10, 2018 [updated Oct. 30, 2018] (Detroit)—On Sunday, Nov. 4, the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) debuts the new Robert and Katherine Jacobs Asian Wing, with galleries that highlight objects and themes representing diverse art forms, cultural practices, and systems of belief. Works span thousands of years up to the present day in galleries of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and Indian and Southeast Asian art, as well as a gallery for Buddhist art across Asia.
In addition to historical masterpieces, such as a graceful bronze sculpture of the Hindu goddess Parvati from southern India (13th century) and Chinese artist Wen Zhengming’s hanging scroll that pairs painting and calligraphy, “The First Prose Poem on the Red Cliff” (1588), the galleries also feature works of modern and contemporary art. Created by artists whose work and lives span continents, these more recent artworks demonstrate changing artistic practices and the global reach of Asia today.
“In the DIA’s new Robert and Katherine Jacobs Asian Wing, we invite visitors to make meaningful connections with the objects on view, and to see how both historical and contemporary works of art are relevant today,” said DIA Assistant Curator of Arts of Asia & the Islamic World Katherine Kasdorf. “With a number of recent acquisitions joining works that have long been at the DIA, we are able to present our collection through narratives that we hope will encourage new ways of looking and thinking.”
Among the themes explored in the galleries are: Chinese painting as an ongoing tradition in which viewers—both past and present—play an active role; the dynamic relationship that many Korean works have to the ideal of harmony; and multiple ways in which Hindu sculptures provide devotees access to the divine.
To help develop ideas for the new galleries, DIA staff collaborated with a group of seven community members from across the Detroit metro area and Lansing. These dedicated individuals worked alongside core DIA staff during the earliest phase of the project to prioritize artworks and brainstorm stories for potential inclusion in the new galleries.
“These galleries give students and other visitors new opportunities to explore the history and culture of Asia,” said Salvador Salort-Pons, DIA Director. “The community-based approach to the development of these galleries is a continuation of our commitment to the residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, who are always able to visit the new galleries for free.”
A number of innovative digital elements will further enhance the visitor experience, among them a dynamic map highlighting Asia’s diversity, a video about the making of Korean ceramics, and a video showing Hindu sculptures in different contexts of worship. A listening station offering musical selections will deepen how visitors engage with Indian paintings, and a digital handscroll will invite exploration of the full length of Wang Wen’s “View from Keyin Pavilion on Baojie Mountain,” which is over 19 feet long. Nearby in the Chinese paintings gallery, a portion of the actual artwork will be on view at all times.
Three special programs are offered on Nov. 4:
Drop-in Artmaking: Korean Paper Crafts, Noon–4 p.m.
A Conversation with Artist Neha Vedpathak, 1 p.m.
Detroit-based artist Neha Vedpathak and DIA Assistant Curator Katherine Kasdorf, Arts of Asia & the Islamic World, discuss Vedpathak’s artistic practice, her background, and the large-scale work she created for the DIA’s new gallery of Indian and Southeast Asian art. Called “Still I Rise,” the commission exemplifies Vedpathak’s original plucked paper technique and explores the idea of resilience as a common ground between India and Detroit. Vedpathak is a multidisciplinary artist renowned for her inventive and original process-based practice and deep connection to her materials.
Concert: Asian Sound Revolution, 3 p.m.
Asian Sound Revolution is a collaboration of artists that preserves pan-Asian musical traditions and uses them to create contemporary sounds. Joining Korean komungo player Jin Hi Kim are a diverse group of musicians, including Masayo Ishigure (Japanese koto), Susie Ibara (Filipino percussion), VÂN-ÁNH VÕ (Vietnamese dan tranh) and Gao Hong (Chinese pipa). Together they explore the unique ways each musical tradition influences the others.
Charles Lang Freer House Exhibition: “An Accidental Photographer in Seoul: Capturing a City in Transition” 1–5 p.m.
This show features photographs on loan from the Asia Library, University of Michigan, by Margaret Condon Taylor. While serving in Seoul, South Korea as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1969, she captured the rapidly evolving Korean lifestyle in the face of modernization. The Charles Lang Freer House is at 71 E. Ferry St., one block from the DIA. For information call 313-664-2500. Sponsored by: Korean Consulate General in Chicago; David Roden, Korean Honorary Consul General in Michigan; DIA’s Friends of Asian Arts and Cultures; & The Freer House
Museum Hours and Admission
9 a.m.–4 p.m. Tuesdays–Thursdays, 9 a.m.–10 p.m. Fridays, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. General admission (excludes ticketed exhibitions) is free for Wayne, Oakland and Macomb county residents and DIA members. For all others, $14 for adults, $9 for seniors ages 62+, $8 for college students, $6 for ages 6–17. For membership information, call 313-833-7971.
For high-res images, go to https://www.dia.org/asiangalleriesmediakit