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"I love that the show starts with pop," Lash said. "If it was just contemporary art, I think it would be hard for the public to understand where so many artists working today are coming from. They are children of pop, or grew up with that as part of their practical knowledge." Other areas are "Realism Into Abstraction," "Handmade Sleight of Hand," and "Special Effects: The Real as Spectacle." It took a team of eight to 10 men with heavy machinery to get the table and chairs off of flatbed trucks, out of their crates and into place. Other work is less obvious. A pair of low-power binoculars might be useful to see the details of Susan Collins' "Forever Young," which looks like junk boards and rags but was fashioned from fine woods, mother of pearl, and precious and semiprecious metals and stones including silver, gold and black diamonds. That's only one way the exhibit raises questions about value, Lash said. "If I invest hundreds of hours into something, is that a measure of value? There's certainly a number of artworks that make this argument that time is as much a measure of currency as anything else." Some, like Suda's meticulously replicated "Weeds," are deliberately hard to spot. "He's an artist that truly understands subtlety," Lash said. "Each leaf is made of wood and painted and crafted so well that it looks entirely convincing. It's a feat of craftsmanship. But it's deliberately placed in a corner, out of the way
-- just as weeds grow out of the crevices. I love the fact that you have to be attentive to see it." ___ Online: New Orleans Museum of Art:
http://www.noma.org/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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