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The Last Supper @ Block Museum 5/9/2015-8/9/2015

The Last Supper @ Block Museum 5/9/2015-8/9/2015
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  • The Last Supper @ Block Museum 5/9/2015-8/9/2015

    Post #1 - May 8th, 2015, 2:46 pm
    Post #1 - May 8th, 2015, 2:46 pm Post #1 - May 8th, 2015, 2:46 pm
    The Last Supper: 600 Plates Illustrating Final Meals of U.S. Death Row Inmates

    5/9/2015-8/9/2015
    Main Gallery

    The Last Supper: 600 Plates Illustrating Final Meals of U.S. Death Row Inmates is an installation by Julie Green, Professor of Art at Oregon State University.

    For 15 years, Julie Green has painted images of death row inmates' last meal requests in cobalt blue mineral paint onto second-hand ceramic plates. She intends to continue making 50 plates per year until capital punishment is abolished.

    Every plate in “The Last Supper” is accompanied by a description of the meal request, date and state -- but no more. Without naming the inmate or crime, the meals highlight the human dimension of capital punishment. The plates function as anonymous portraits that when grouped together suggest a memorial to lost life on a mass scale.

    Read about the Block Museum's exhibition in the Huffington Post

    Listen to Julie Green's interview with WBEZ's The Morning Shift

    Individually, each painted plate functions as both a portrait and a still life steeped in the traditions of painting and fine craft. The influences of Dutch Delftware and Spanish still life painting can be traced in Green’s blue-tinted illustrations. Collectively, The Last Supper is a conceptual piece, part ritual and part performance. The Last Supper underscores the practice of offering a last meal before execution, while exposing the uneven practices and policies of the state-administered capital punishment system.

    As prisoners condemned to death, Green’s subjects are deprived of the most basic right to life. In illustrating their final opportunities to exercise their free will, Green represents a glimmer of humanity in the midst of a seemingly austere criminal justice system.


    Opening Day Program
    Saturday, May 9, 2pm
    Fisk Hall, room 217


    The Block Museum welcomes Julie Green, who will present The Last Supper: 600 Plates Illustrating Final Meals of U.S. Death Row Inmates. She will discuss her process and how the project relates to her larger artistic concerns. Following this talk, Green, Professor of Art at Oregon State University, will be joined in conversation by Rob Owen, Clinical Professor of Law at Northwestern, and Elliot Reichert, Curator of Special Projects at the Block, to discuss issues of representation, the criminal justice system, and social justice.

    The program begins at 2pm at Fisk Hall, with a reception to follow at the Block Museum. The museum is open from 10am-5pm and parking is free.

    Seen from Inside: Perspectives on Capital Punishment
    Tuesday, May 19, 6pm
    In partnership with the Center for Capital Defense and the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, the Block will host a series of acts exploring various perspectives on capital punishment—an exhibition overview by Block Curator of Special Projects, Elliot Reichert, followed by a capital case closing argument enacted by a death penalty defense attorney, a conversation with a former prisoner exonerated from death row, and insights from a family member of a homicide victim.

    When You CAN’T Shake It Off
    Wednesday, May 27, 6pm
    A cell phone camera captures the death of Eric Garner. White men toting assault rifles film confrontations with police officers over their right to openly carry firearms. A video of a cop lip-synching to Taylor Swift goes viral. Join Will Schmenner, Block Cinema interim curator, and Harvey Young, Northwestern University associate professor, as they discuss the role and use of social media in creating a national conversation about race, law, and the limits of police power. How does civil resistance operate in the Internet era?

    The Block Museum presentation of The Last Supper is being overseen by Curator of Special Projects, Elliot Reichert.

    Read a recent PBS NewsHour interview about The Last Supper with artist Julie Green
    Read The New York Times review of a 2013 showing of The Last Supper at the Arts Center in Corvallis, Oregon.

    Funding for the project has been generously provided by Chicago artist Angela Lustig and Northwestern alumnus Dale E. Taylor. Taylor is the president and CEO of AbelsonTaylor.

    Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art | 40 Arts Circle Drive | Evanston, IL | 60208-2140
    Phone: 847.491.4000 | Fax: 847.491.2261 |
    Cathy2

    "You'll be remembered long after you're dead if you make good gravy, mashed potatoes and biscuits." -- Nathalie Dupree
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