PRESENTATION: This Must Be the Place

Franz Marc, Die grossen blauen Pferde (The Large Blue Horses), 1911, oil on canvas, 41-5/8 x 71-5/16 inches unframed, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, Gilbert M. Walker Fund, 1942, Courtesy Walker Art CenterThe Walker Art Center is a multidisciplinary arts institution that presents, collects, and supports the creation of groundbreaking work across the visual and performing arts, moving image, and design. Guided by the belief that art has the power to bring joy and solace and the ability to unite people through dialogue and shared experiences, the Walker engages communities through a dynamic array of exhibitions, performances, events, and initiatives.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Walker Art Center Archive

The Walker Art Center presents “This Must Be the Place: Inside the Walker’s Collection”, the first significant reinstallation of works from the institution’s exceptional and growing collection in over five years. The Walker’s collection features more than 16,000 objects, including works by modern art icons and some of the most influential and celebrated artists of today. In recent years, the Walker has continued to expand its holdings with works by women artists, BIPOC artists, artists working in new media and performance arts, and artists from or with ties to Minnesota. The exhibition reintroduces audiences to the Walker’s evolving collection, presenting beloved, touchstone works alongside lesser known but equally important objects as well as new acquisitions. Through new interpretative materials—available in English, Spanish, Somali, and Hmong, the four most commonly spoken languages in the Twin Cities—the installation offers fresh insight into the development of the collection and creates new pathways for storytelling and community engagement. The exhibition will remain on view through April 29, 2029, with works periodically rotated to capture new and dynamic juxtapositions, highlight recent acquisitions, and share new ideas and artistic innovations. It is loosely organized around the many aspects that define and contribute to the idea of “home,” whether experiences of family and community, human-made and natural environments, or broader emotional and physiological expressions. The installation unfolds across three main galleries, with each dedicated to a different theme: “Kith and Kin” explores representation of friends, family, and community, and includes, among others works, paintings by Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Jennifer Packer, and Jiab Prachakul; a sculptural installation by Cameron Downey; and photographs by Catherine Opie and Wing Young Huie. The gallery also features a sub-section that explores artist networks, including a selection of portraits of artists by artists such as Rirkrit Tiravanija by Elizabeth Peyton and Lee Lozano by Hollis Frampton. “City” examines urban and built environments with works such as Yuji Agematsu’s “zip 4/1-30/2008” (2008); “Analog” (2004) by Mark Bradford; “Transcending: The New International” (2003) by Julie Mehretu; and Kahlil Robert Irving’s “Streetview | Pool & Paper (Underground star ways)” (2023), which was acquired from the artist’s solo exhibition at the Walker last year. One section is dedicated to works that consider the street as a site of social activation and protest, featuring artists Song Dong, Kerry James Marshall, and Lorraine O’Grady, among others. “Land” reflects on the US landscape and forms of settlement and displacement through works by Jim Denomie, Rashid Johnson, Ana Mendieta, Alison Saar, and Ursula von Rydingsvard, among others. Within this gallery, a focus area, titled “Light, Water, Space,” presents a group of abstract and minimalist works that engage with modes of perception, including those by Senga Nengudi, Teresita Fernández, Robert Irwin, Marie Watt, and others. Additionally, “interlude” spaces highlight key works, such as Franz Marc’s “Die grossen blauen Pferde” (The Large Blue Horses) (1911) and Edward Hopper’s “Office at Night” (1940) spotlighting core aspects of the collection. As Henriette Huldisch said “The reinstallation of the Walker’s collection is grounded in our vision to create a sense of pride and ownership among our local communities. We see the Walker collection as belonging to our local audiences, and we have been acquiring works by a diverse group of artists, from our region and across the country and globe who engage with social and political issues and expand the possibilities of art”.

Photo: Franz Marc, Die grossen blauen Pferde (The Large Blue Horses), 1911, oil on canvas, 41-5/8 x 71-5/16 inches unframed, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, Gilbert M. Walker Fund, 1942, Courtesy Walker Art Center

Info: Curators: Henriette Huldisch, Siri Engberg, Taylor Jasper and Laurel Rand-Lewis, Walker Art Center, 725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, MN, Duration: 20/6/2024-29/8/2029, Days & Hours: Wed & Fri-Sun 10:00-17:00, Thu 10:00-21:00, https://walkerart.org/

Julie Curtiss, Quarantine, 2018, acrylic, oil on canvas, 40 x 34 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of Annie, Connor, and Peter Remes, 2019, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Julie Curtiss, Quarantine, 2018, acrylic, oil on canvas, 40 x 34 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of Annie, Connor, and Peter Remes, 2019, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Mark Bradford, Analog, 2004, oil, paper on canvas, 125-1/2 x 125-3/8 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2006, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Mark Bradford, Analog, 2004, oil, paper on canvas, 125-1/2 x 125-3/8 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2006, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Edward Hopper, Office at Night, 1940, oil on canvas, 22-3/16 x 25-1/8 inches unframed, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, Gilbert M. Walker Fund, 1948, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Edward Hopper, Office at Night, 1940, oil on canvas, 22-3/16 x 25-1/8 inches unframed, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, Gilbert M. Walker Fund, 1948, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Norma & Eyenga, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1998, chromogenic print, 40-5/8 x 50-5/8 inches framed, Walker Art Center Collection, Clinton and Della Walker Acquisition Fund, 1999, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Norma & Eyenga, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1998, chromogenic print, 40-5/8 x 50-5/8 inches framed, Walker Art Center Collection, Clinton and Della Walker Acquisition Fund, 1999, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Catherine Opie, Tammy Rae & Kaia, Durham, North Carolina, 1998, chromogenic print, 40-5/8 x 50-5/8 inches framed, Walker Art Center Collection, Clinton and Della Walker Acquisition Fund, 1999, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Catherine Opie, Tammy Rae & Kaia, Durham, North Carolina, 1998, chromogenic print, 40-5/8 x 50-5/8 inches framed, Walker Art Center Collection, Clinton and Della Walker Acquisition Fund, 1999, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Yuji Agematsu, zip 4/1-30/2008, 2008, mixed media, cigarette cellophane wrapper, acrylic, 28-1/2 x 33-1/4 x 5-1/2 inches, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of James Cahn and Jeremiah Collatz, 2019, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Yuji Agematsu, zip 4/1-30/2008, 2008, mixed media, cigarette cellophane wrapper, acrylic, 28-1/2 x 33-1/4 x 5-1/2 inches, Walker Art Center Collection, Gift of James Cahn and Jeremiah Collatz, 2019, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

Left: Elizabeth Peyton, Rirkrit, 1991, ink on paper, 5-1/8 x 3-5/8 inches sheet, Walker Art Center Collection, Miriam and Erwin Kelen Acquisition Fund for Drawings, 1996, Courtesy Walker Art CenterRight: Njideka Akunyili Crosby , “The Beautyful Ones" Series #8, 2018, acrylic, color pencil, transfers on paper, 59-7/8 x 42-1/2 inches sheet, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2021, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Left: Elizabeth Peyton, Rirkrit, 1991, ink on paper, 5-1/8 x 3-5/8 inches sheet, Walker Art Center Collection, Miriam and Erwin Kelen Acquisition Fund for Drawings, 1996, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Right: Njideka Akunyili Crosby , “The Beautyful Ones” Series #8, 2018, acrylic, color pencil, transfers on paper, 59-7/8 x 42-1/2 inches sheet, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2021, Courtesy Walker Art Center

 

 

CatJulie Mehretu, Transcending: The New International, 2003, ink, acrylic on canvas, 107 x 237 x 2 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2003, Courtesy Walker Art Center
Julie Mehretu, Transcending: The New International, 2003, ink, acrylic on canvas, 107 x 237 x 2 inches overall, Walker Art Center Collection, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2003, Courtesy Walker Art Center