Guild Hall in East Hampton presents the final two exhibitions of 2021, including “90 Years: Selections from the Permanent Collection” in the Moran and Woodhouse galleries and a selection of works by the winner of the 2018 Artist Members Exhibition, “Jeff Muhs: The Uncanny Valley” in the Spiga Gallery.
Museum Director and Chief Curator Christina Mossaides Strassfield has curated 90 Years: Selections from the Permanent Collection in celebration of Guild Hall’s 90th anniversary, founded on August 19, 1931. The exhibition will feature a selection of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and works on paper showcasing Guild Hall’s commitment to collecting artists of the eastern end of Long Island.
The exhibition will include works by Ross Bleckner, John Chamberlain, Chuck Close, Elaine de Kooning, Willem de Kooning, Eric Fischl, Audrey Flack, Jane Freilicher, April Gornik, Robert Gwathmey, Mary Heilman, Jasper Johns, Lee Krasner, Barbara Kruger, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Motherwell, Alfonso Ossorio, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, David Salle, Andy Warhol, Jane Wilson, and many more.
“We are so thrilled to be able to showcase 90 works from our collection of nearly 2,500 works,” said Strassfield. “Guild Hall’s Permanent Collection is a testament to the vibrant art community that continues to exist to this day. Every group of artists from all art movements from the 19th century and beyond has included artists who have made the East End their desired destination. And as an institution whose mission includes a focus on exhibiting and collecting artists who have lived and worked on Eastern Long Island, we are a repository for a microcosm of art history.”
After a postponement due to the pandemic, “Jeff Muhs: The Uncanny Valley” will open on October 30 in tandem with the Permanent Collection exhibition. As a local multidisciplinary artist, Muhs has worked in a variety of mediums and genres. In 2018, Muhs participated in Guild Hall’s annual Artist Members Exhibition where he received the Top Honors award for his concrete sculpture “Callipyge,” selected by Connie Choi, Associate Curator at The Studio Museum of Harlem. The prize for the recipient of the top honor is a solo exhibition in the Spiga Gallery.
The Uncanny Valley originates from a sculptural process the artist calls “Dynamic Free Casting.” By discovering this method, the artist has developed new means for forming concrete, all while embracing its inherent fluidity and weight. By pushing the physical limits of the materials as well as his own ability to manipulate, he has discovered a personal source of infinite creativity.
“The Uncanny Valley is a hypothesized relationship between the degree of an objects’ resemblance to a human being and the emotional response to such an object,“ shared artist Jeff Muhs. “For me, The Uncanny Valley was the moment when I first saw the results of my concrete sculpture as flesh. What had previously been an exploration of more architectural forms, by manor of my process, presented itself as flesh-like. I have been participating in the Guild Hall Artist Members Exhibition for about 25 years. I see it as a great focal point for our creative community. An opportunity for camaraderie and to share our artistic expressions with one another. It is a great honor to have been chosen as the Top Honors recipient for my sculpture and to be awarded the opportunity to exhibit at this cultural institution, so rich in the history of our local artistic community and 20th century art.”
“I am incredibly pleased to be curating ‘Jeff Muhs: The Uncanny Valley’ as I have known Jeff for 31 years and have watched his work evolve,” said Strassfield. “He is a Renaissance artist — equally talented as a painter, sculptor, and furniture designer. Jeff has been included in past exhibitions at Guild Hall, and we are very happy to have one of his works in our Permanent Collection.”
Strassfield continued “In this exhibition, ‘Jeff Muhs: The Uncanny Valley,’ we will feature sculptures which he has exhibited regularly in our Members Exhibition, and which he won the Top Honors for in 2018, as well as paintings from several series that he has been working on in recent years. The sculptures are created by a technique that Muhs invented himself and has experimented with to reach extraordinary technical virtuosity.”
Both exhibitions will open on Saturday, October 30, and run through January 2. The public is invited to stop by on Saturday, October 30 from 3 to 5 PM for a “meet the artists” open house. Galleries are open Friday to Sunday, noon to 5 PM and admission is free courtesy of Dime Community Bank and Landscape Details.