Date/Time
Date(s) - January 22, 2019 - April 16, 2019
10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Location
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, University Center for the Arts


Jan 26 – Apr 13, 2019 | The Griffin Foundation Gallery

CHECKLIST

GALLERY GUIDE

Drawing on the museum’s longstanding strength in 20th-century art of the United States and Europe and including long-time visitor favorites and recent acquisitions, Off Kilter, On Point: Art of the 1960s from the Permanent Collection highlights the depth and breadth of mid-century artworks in the museum permanent collection. The exhibition showcases a wide range of media and styles, from abstraction to pop, presenting novel juxtapositions that reflect the tumult and innovations of their time.

The 1960s marked a time of undeniable turbulence and strife, but also a period of remarkable cultural and societal change. The decade saw the civil rights movement and the Civil Rights Act, the Cuban missile crisis, the Vietnam conflict, political assassinations, the moon landing, the first televised presidential debate, “The Pill,” and, arguably, a more rapid rate of technological advancement and cultural change than ever before. The accelerated pace of change was well reflected in the art of the time, where styles and movements were almost constantly established, often in reaction to one another. This exhibition presents most of the major stylistic trends of art of the 1960s in the United States and Europe, drawn from the museum’s permanent collection.

Lynn Boland, Ph.D., Museum Director and Chief Curator

Thank you to our in-kind sponsor, Artisan Framing!