MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE 35-01 35th Ave. | 718-777-6888 “Require Viewing: Mad Men’s Movie Influences” March 14 through April 26 Accompanying the new major exhibition “Matthew Weiner’s Mad Men” at the Museum of the Moving Image, this series will feature ten movies that had an important influence on the creation of Mad Men and were required to be viewed by people working on the show. The series includes films such as “The Apartment,” “Les Bonnes Femmes,” “The Americanization of Emily,” and “North by Northwest.” Weiner will appear in person on March 20 for an in-depth conversation. 15 52 MARCH 2015 i LIC COURIER i www.queenscourier.com ■ART CALENDAR MARCH } } SCULPTURE CENTER 44-19 Purves St. I 718-361-1750 “In Practice: Under Foundations” Ongoing through April 13 Annual open-call exhibition for emerging artists with a focus on the production of new work. Curated by SculptureCenter 2014-15 Curatorial Fellow Jess Wilcox. Featuring newly commissioned works by Rosa Aiello, Mary Walling Blackburn, Nanna Debois Buhl, Catherine Czacki, Ben Hagari, Sol Hashemi, Madeline Hollander and Alexandra Lerman, Janelle Iglesias, Ryan Johnson, and Xu Wang. Exhibition is open from Thursday through Monday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Admission is $3-$5. THE NOGUCHI MUSEUM 9-01 33rd Rd. (at Vernon Blvd.) | 718-204-7088 “Highlights from the Collection: Iconic Display” Ongoing through Sept. 13 According to a description on the museum’s official website, the installations are ones that have helped shape the critical interpretation and public perception of specific bodies of Noguchi’s work. The selected works include Noguchi’s participation in “Fourteen Americans” at the Museum of Modern Art (1946); his first Japanese exhibition, which took place in a Tokyo department store (1950); an installation by the architect Arata Isozaki for the Seibu Museum of Art (1985); and contemporary attempts, through exhibitions and photographs, to make sense of one of his largest bodies of work – the 26 animated steel editions made for Gemini G.E.L. in the early 1980s. MoMA PS1 22-25 Jackson Ave. | 718-784-2084 “Zero Tolerance” Ongoing through April 13 This exhibition, which takes its name from the 1990s New York policy, brings together artists from around the world addressing tensions between freedom and control. Many of the works in “Zero Tolerance” bring together elements of political demonstration and celebratory parades to create art of a “charged and ambivalent nature.” Artists in the exhibition include ACT UP New York, Halil Altindere, Francis Alÿs, Ahmed Basiony, Joseph Beuys, Mircea Cantor, Chim↑pom, Song Dong, Oyvind Fahlstrom, Harun Farocki and Andrei Ujică, Igor Grubić, Sharon Hayes, Deborah Kelly, Amal Kenawy, Lorraine O’Grady, Pussy Riot, The Radek Community, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Christoph Schlingensief, Voina, Yoko Ono, Zhao Zhao, and Artur Zmijewski. Photos courtesy of MGM North by Northwest
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