New
Museum
Sunday 10/11/15 3PM
New Museum TheaterVisit Us
Screenings · Exhibition-Related

Screening: Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists

Cover Image:

Leslie Buchbinder, Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists, 2014 (still)

Join us for a one-day-only screening of Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists in conjunction with “Barbara Rossi: Poor Traits.” The film will be introduced by Natalie Bell, Assistant Curator, the New Museum, and followed by a question-and-answer session with the film’s director, Leslie Buchbinder.

Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists chronicles the lives and careers of an eclectic group of artists that emerged in late-1960s Chicago and whose popularity was catalyzed by a series of group shows at the Hyde Park Art Center (“Hairy Who,” “Nonplussed Some,” “False Image,” “Marriage Chicago Style,” and “Chicago Antigua”) whose titles often doubled as monikers for the group. Like Pop artists internationally, many Imagists borrowed heavily from vernacular culture, but while Pop was polished, distant, and cool, Imagist works embraced eccentric and distorted figuration, non-Western and non-mainstream forms of art, and comic gags and puns. This screening of Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists contextualizes Barbara Rossi’s work by profiling the dynamic scene in which her practice took shape.

Leslie Buchbinder, Director, began her career as a professional dancer with companies in Chicago and San Francisco and worked as an Account Executive for an arts-focused public relations firm in New York City, before establishing her own arts communications company in Chicago, LB-PR, which specialized in communications for art museums locally and internationally for over ten years. In 2011, Buchbinder was nominated to the Committee on Prints and Drawings of the Art Institute of Chicago. Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists is her first film.

Sponsors

Exhibition Supporters
Support for “Barbara Rossi: Poor Traits” is provided by Corbett vs. Dempsey, Chicago, Charles and Kathleen Harper, Laura Skoler, Michael J. Robertson and Christopher A. Slapak, and an anonymous gift.

The Producers Council of the New Museum is gratefully acknowledged.

Education Supporters
Exhibition-related programs are made possible, in part, through the support of the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

Generous endowment support is provided by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Skadden, Arps Education Programs Fund, and the William Randolph Hearst Endowed Fund for Education Programs at the New Museum.

Get Updates

We want to hear from you!

Help us improve our website by taking a 5-minute survey with a chance to win $100!

Take Survey
Back to mobile site