![]() Courtesy the artist BAMPFA and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London. Image Credit: Cecilia Vicuña, Burnt Quipu, 2018, installation view, Cecilia Vicuña: About to Happen, UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, 2018. Generous support provided by VIA Art Fund and Wagner Foundation Barrio Brewing Foundation and MOCA Tucson’s Board of Trustees, Ambassador Council, and Members. ![]() MOCA Open Hours: Thursdays – Saturdays: 11-6PM Sundays: 11-4PMįor further information about this call, the exhibition, how to donate, or if you would like to donate materials in bulk, please contact: support for the exhibition is provided by The Diane & Bruce Halle Foundation National Endowment for the Arts The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Arizona Humanities and Lehmann Maupin. Visitors will receive free admission to the museum upon donation. Please refrain from collecting plant matter from public spaces or city, state, or federally owned and operated sites.Ĭollected items may be dropped off at MOCA during the museum’s open hours.MOCA is committed to thinking globally, acting locally, and engaging with the ethics and aesthetics of contemporary life. Established by artists, MOCA is Tucson’s only museum devoted exclusively to contemporary art from Tucson and around the globe. For example: seed pods that have fallen to the ground, stray twigs or branches underfoot, etc. MOCA Tucson's mission is to inspire new ways of thinking through the cultivation, interpretation, and exhibition of cutting-edge art of our time. Select material that is no longer living or attached to a living plant.Collect only what presents itself on your personal property.Vicuña and MOCA Tucson are seeking lightweight, small-scale, plant matter and inorganic debris that you may find in your gardens, yards, stoops, and sidewalks.Ĭollected materials might include: seed pods, dried plants, twigs, broken jewelry, natural or synthetic fibers, plastics, bits of metal, small pieces of wood, and remnants from carpentry, mechanical workshops, studios, or home work. Collected items will be incorporated by the artist into the installation, joining hundreds of fibers and small hanging sculptures that will fill MOCA’s Great Hall. Cecilia Vicuña invites Tucson community members to collect plant matter and found debris from their surroundings for inclusion in Sonoran Quipu.
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