Shelf Location:
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona: University Library
Special Collections, Bldg 15, room 4434,
Remote Storage
Collection
Description:
Contains two binders documenting the Envisioning the Future
artistic process. Binder 1
includes correspondence, photographs, emails, letters, sketches, and programs
of the entire project. Binder 2
includes artist statements and photographs of projects completed in January
2004. A DVD is also included with
chapters on Judy Chicago, the artists, the programs, and sample videos.
Background
After two years in development, the exciting project, Envisioning the
Future, officially began on September 22, 2003 following two weekends of
lectures and panel discussion about art, globalization and the future. Art world figures Henry Hopkins (former
director of the UCLA Armand Hammer Museum and San Francisco MOMA) and British
art historian Edward Lucie-Smith got the project off to an enthusiastic
start. Held at Western University
of Health Sciences in the Pomona Arts Colony, these noted speakers were joined
by well-known Los Angeles muralists Judy Baca and Gilbert Lujan Magu, artists
Isis Rodriguez from San Francisco and Patrick Nagatani from Albuquerque, a
recent recipient of the Governor’s Award for the Arts in New Mexico.
In addition, artists, art historians and scholars from across the United
States and Canada participated in lively discussions on the impact of
globalization and new technologies involving both the arts and the future. Nine facilitators trained by Judy
Chicago and Donald Woodman worked directly with the 70 participants chosen to
create both individually and collaboratively a variety of images of what the
future might hold. The
participants and facilitators from throughout Southern California were selected
through a rigorous application process.
The facilitators' intensive training was based on Chicago's
participatory art pedagogy, honed over a 30-year period through arts activism,
teaching, and the production of four major collaborative projects.
For the next three months, the focus of the project was the creation of art
in a variety of media including painting, sculpture, installation, photography,
digital media and the performing arts.
One team’s vision of the future included a representation of the Goddess
of Pomona, which will become a legacy for the Pomona Arts Colony in the form of
a monumental mural facing Thomas Plaza.
Project idea originator Cheryl Bookout, Pomona artist/gallery director and
Dean Barbara Way of Cal Poly Pomona, spearheaded this project which exemplifies
an extraordinary public/private partnership, one which has brought together the
art, academic and business communities of the Pomona Valley to promote the
power and importance of art to educate, inspire, and promote change.
Scope and Content:
1 box, chronological order
3-ring binders, photographs, posters, cubes from the "Envisioning the
Future" exhibit at the Cal Poly Pomona Downtown Center on January 10,
2004.
Container List:
Envisioning the Future
Collection, UA2004/2/1-9
1) Box 1
- Binder 1 - includes correspondence, photographs,
emails, letters, sketches, and programs of the entire
project.
- Binder 2 - includes artist statements
and photographs
of projects completed in January 2004.
- Judy Chicago business card (in front
cover of Binder
2)
- Photos from the "Envisioning the Future" exhibit
in original Costco envelope
- Large
photo on poster board of Judy Chicago and Donald Woodman in front of Cal
Poly Pomona Downtown Center.
- Book
of Judy Chicago's artwork, signed by Judy Chicago. [Removed
from Envisioning
the Future collection and added to Special Collections]
- Two
cubes with photos of various people pasted on each side, some
with quotes.
One cube is of women, the other of men.
- Poster
"Participatory Art Pedagogy" on poster board
- Poster
"Envisioning the Future" on poster board with photos of Judy Chicago and
Donald Woodman
Processed by:
Sonia Angulo
Date Completed:
April 2004