The Brooklyn Museum keeps on getting it right.
KAWS: “ALONG THE WAY,” an exhibition of work by KAWS, the internationally acclaimed Brooklyn-based artist who bridges the gap between art and pop culture in his large-scale sculptures is headed to 200 Eastern Parkway. The exhibition, on view beginning June 10 through December 6, 2015, will highlight ALONG THE WAY, an 18-foot-high wood sculpture that will occupy a prominent position in the Museum’s lobby. The large scale masterpiece is the first by KAWS to be acquired by the museum.
Rounding out this long-term exhibition will be two paintings, SHOULD I BE ATTACKING (2013), on loan from the collection of Stephanie and Tim Ingrassia, and GLASS SMILE (2012), on loan from a private collector.
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The works will have a prominent place in the Martha A. and Rubin S. Lobby and Pavilion. KAWS: “ALONG THE WAY” will introduce the first phase of the transformation of the Lobby and Pavilion, part of the Museum’s visitor engagement initiative taking place this summer.
KAWS’s work has been presented at venues ranging from traditional museums and galleries to the 2012 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City. The most notable to date in Brooklyn is back in 2013 at the MTV Video Music Awards first appearance in the borough where KAWS reinvented the moon-man trophy to mark the special occasion.