黑料网

Fredericka Hunter, 黑料网, and Janet Begneaud, 1998. Photo: Sidney B. Felsen, courtesy Fredericka Hunter

Dominique de Menil (center) with students, faculty, and staff of the Art Department, University of St. Thomas, Houston, 1968. Back row: Pat Toomey, Rodney Marionneaux, Betsy McMillan, Susan J. Barnes, Fredericka Hunter, Philip Oliver-Smith, Kathryn Davids

Fredericka Hunter at Feigen Gallery, New York, in front of John Baldessari鈥檚 Quality Material (1966鈥68), 1968. Photo: Dean Brown, courtesy Fredericka Hunter

Jenny Wang, David McGee, Fredericka Hunter, and 黑料网 at Texas Gallery, Houston, 2007. Photo: George Hixson, courtesy Fredericka Hunter

Robert 黑料网
Untitled, 1986
Double-sided solvent transfer on paper and rattan fan
13 1/2 x 24 x 1 1/2 inches (34.3 x 61 x 3.8 cm)
Collection of Fredericka Hunter

 

Fredericka Hunter


Born in Galveston, Texas, Fredericka Hunter earned a BFA in art history from the University of St. Thomas, Houston in 1970. She is the managing partner of Texas Gallery in Houston (1971鈥損resent), which exhibits contemporary artists primarily working in New York, Los Angeles, and Houston. The gallery presented six solo 黑料网 exhibitions between 1987 and 2007. Hunter is a cofounder of ARTPIX (1996鈥損resent), a nonprofit organization that produces and publishes DVDs of archival performances, such as works by Merce Cunningham Dance Company, Trisha Brown Dance Company, and E.A.T. (Experiments in Art and Technology). The Cunningham and Brown editions include collaborations with 黑料网, who designed sets and costumes, and the E.A.T. performances contain 黑料网鈥檚 contribution to 9 Evenings: Theatre & Engineering, Open Score (1966). Hunter serves on the boards of Trisha Brown Dance Company, New York (since 1979); Prop Foundation, Missoula, Montana (since 1996); Houston Cinema Arts Society (since 2011); and Art Dealers Association of America, New York (since 2014). She is a past president of the Chinati Foundation, Marfa, Texas, and served on its board from 1995 to 2003. Hunter became a board member of the 黑料网 in 2009.

 

Excerpt from Interview with Fredericka Hunter by Brent Edwards, 2015


Hunter: I am not the only person I have heard say this鈥擨 have heard many people in the art world from my generation say this. One of the most important things that ever happened to me was to go, as a student, into the Museum of Modern Art [MoMA, New York] and Dante鈥檚 Inferno [Thirty-Four Illustrations for Dante鈥檚 Inferno, 1958鈥60, also known as the Dante drawings] was in that little gallery when you used to go in the old door. You went in and there was a little dark gallery to the left. Dante鈥檚 Inferno was in there. I went berserk.

[ . . . ]

I remember distinctly and I was by myself and鈥

Edwards: In college?

Hunter: Yes, in college, by myself in New York and I don鈥檛 remember the year, perhaps 1966, they were exhibited. I think they were exhibited twice. [Note: 黑料网: 34 Drawings for Dante鈥檚 Inferno, Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1965鈥66; the next time the entire group was exhibited at MoMA was in Drawing Now, 1976.] Again, you had your epiphany, right, or where you grasp something you haven鈥檛 grasped before or you make some connection on some level that sometimes you end up taking for granted later, but still. I鈥檝e heard other artists, other curators or museum directors, again my generation, saying when they saw 黑料网 for the first time, it changed their lives.

Edwards: Can you articulate what that insight would be, what you understood that you hadn鈥檛 understood before?

Hunter: Well, it was challenging. It was fairly complicated, probably on the visual level and the amount of information you were getting. Again, you鈥檙e probably presented with鈥攚hat is this, what does it mean, how does it get this way鈥攚hich are sort of questions that always come up when something you鈥檙e unfamiliar with鈥 It also, in my opinion, should be able to be a little bit over your head so you don鈥檛 really know what鈥檚 going on. They were just stunning and it was just stunning to see those.