Vik Muniz: Extra-Ordinary

Vik Muniz, "Double Mona Lisa (Peanut butter and Jelly), After Warhol," 1999, Digital C Print, Frame size:  49.6 x 61.4 x 1.9"
 Vik Muniz, "Double Mona Lisa (Peanut butter and Jelly), After Warhol," 1999, Digital C Print, Frame size: 49.6 x 61.4 x 1.9",

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

Vik Muniz: Extra-Ordinary

Vik Muniz (Brazilian-American, born 1961) is distinguished as one of the most innovative and creative artists of our time. Endlessly playful and inventive in his approach, Muniz harnesses a remarkable virtuosity in creating his renowned “photographic delusions.”

Working with a dizzying array of unconventional materials—including sugar, tomato sauce, diamonds, magazine clippings, chocolate syrup, dust, and junk—Muniz painstakingly builds tableaux before recording them with his camera. From a distance, the subject of each resulting photograph is discernible; up close, the work reveals a complex and surprising matrix through which it was assembled. That revelatory moment when one thing transforms into another is of deep interest to the artist.

Muniz’s work often quotes iconic images from popular culture and art history, drawing on our sense of collective memory while defying easy classification and mischievously engaging a viewer’s process of perception. His more recent work incorporates electron microscopes and manipulates microorganisms to explore issues of scale while unveiling both the familiar and the strange in spaces that are typically inaccessible to the human eye.

This major mid-career retrospective canvasses more than twenty-five years of Muniz’s work to transform the ordinary into the extraordinary, reminding us of the power of art to surprise, delight, and transform our perceptions of the world.

 

Featured Press

NBMAA to present work of Vik Muniz
Claudia S. Hilario, The Bristol Press, September 23, 2024

Sponsors:

This Exhibition has been co-organized by the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, Minneapolis/Paris/Lausanne, and the High Museum of Art, Atlanta in association with the New Britain Museum of Art.

At the NBMAA, this exhibition is made possible by Kenneth L. Boudreau and Judith W. Boudreau; The Saunders Foundation; Jay Bombara and Allison Reilly-Bombara; The Gong-Graham Family; and The O’Neil Family – Baltimore, MD. Additional support provided by Dr. Timothy P. McLaughlin & Dr. Marian Kellner.

In-kind support provided by Thomas Mach Interiors, Inc.