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Private Eye: The Imagist Impulse in Chicago Art
On view through December 5, 2021
Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA) Galleries at Newfields
Indianapolis, Indiana
discovernewfields.org

In the mid-1960s, a cadre of adventurous young artists began exhibiting at the Hyde Park Art Center in Chicago. With myriad influences from Surrealism and non-Western art to comic books and popular culture, their audacious, highly idiosyncratic, and personal approach set them apart from contemporaries working on either the East or West Coast. By the mid-1970s, this loose-knit assembly was commonly referred to as the Imagists. Now, more than 50 years after their first appearance, the Chicago Imagists are regarded as among the most important postwar American artists.

“Private Eye: The Imagist Impulse in Chicago Art” is focused on works by artists who comprise the original Imagist exhibition groups along with independent artists who shared their iconoclastic sensibility. Also featured will be works by Chicago-based artists from the preceding generation, known as the Monster Roster, and a complementary selection of younger, Imagist-influenced artists.

[Image: Roger Brown (American, 1941–1997), Chicago Hit By the Bomb, 1985, oil on canvas, 55 × 74 × 3 in. (framed). Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, Promised Gift of Michael J. Robertson and Christopher A. Slapak © The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Brown family. Courtesy of Kavi Gupta and Venus Over Manhattan]