What's Up!

February 10, 2019

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

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FEBRUARY 10-16, 2019 WHAT'S UP! 9 performance piece, "They Wonder," as Hill dons a Wonder Woman costume and spins in a circle until the dancer collapses. "You think about the Lynda Carter Wonder Woman — the way she would transform from everyday Diana Prince to Wonder Woman was simply by spinning around," Benedetti says. "And Sarah Hill was thinking about that as they created this work, because it's very much about this constant performance and the fact that it's not so easy to simply transform into something else or someone else." A few key pieces in the 70-plus piece exhibition will floor viewers when they see them, Benedetti anticipates. One tugs at the heartstrings while offering a larger- than-life and emotional look at an intimate relationship, and the other will excite true comic book fans — and likely a fair number of non-comic readers as well. "There's a work by Jason Bard Yarmosky, [and] until you see it in person, there's no way to fully appreciate it," Benedetti confesses. "It's a painting of his grandmother … where [she is] wearing a Wonder Woman outfit. We often see Wonder Woman typically very youthful and traditionally beautiful [and he is] pushing against these expectations that that's always what a hero needs to look like. "The other part that is really beautiful and part of the strength of his work is that, because she was living with Alzheimer's, he talked about how she would wake up every day and she was brave every day," Benedetti continues. "She would face down this disease fearlessly … and he equates that same level of [Wonder Woman's] bravery with his grandmother." On the lighter side of the exhibition's content, only two actual comic books are part of the show, but they are impressive titles, to be sure. The first two cover appearances of Superman and Wonder Woman — 1938's "Action Comics No. 1" and 1942's "Sensation Comics No. 1," respectively — are, for the comic world, like the Holy Grail of collecting, Benedetti reveals. Not an actual comic, but Crystal Bridges does slide its own graphic novel-style pieces into the exhibition with the inclusion of "Superpower Profiles" on interactive iPads near seven key works. Specially created character "The Curator" — based on Benedetti himself — engages guests as he guides them through various superpowers related to the works. "The themes of the show are a little bit heavier than a lot of superhero- based work would be, [and] there was also a certain amount in my mind of trying to keep the visual information accessible to someone that might not read comics," shares local artist Gustav Carlson, who created the animations for the iPads. Carlson was tapped for the project partially because of his own background in comics. The artist started with his Ozark folklore-based stories "Backwood Folk" and "Eve of the Ozarks" and now focuses on his sci-fi work "Tourist Unknown." His educational, supplemental comic for the exhibition will elevate his work and his love of the genre to this national platform — just as the exhibition does for the genre as a whole. In musing on the significance of presenting the themes and characters from comics the same way Crystal Bridges would any work of art, Carlson hopes the exhibition "shows the malleability of these concepts and a lot of these characters, and furthers the [understanding] that these are powerful mythic imageries on their own, and how we can change the context on them, can change the messages of these characters just by degrees into powerful statements in and of their own right." FAQ 'Men of Steel, Women of Wonder' WHEN — Through April 22 WHERE — Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville COST — $12; members/free INFO — 418-5700, crystalbridges.org FYI Artist Gustav Carlson At Crystal Bridges Today — Carlson is the artist featured in the museum store from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. for the artisan demonstration and sale. Feb. 16 — He will be doing portraits during the Black Hearts Ball. $25. Feb. 22 — He will also lead the Art by the Glass event with the theme of Comic Posters. $30. See more: touristunknown.com "Nunna My Heros: After Barkley Hendricks' 'Icon for My Man Superman'" Fahamu Pecou Courtesy Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University "They Wonder" Sarah Hill Photo courtesy Max Fields "Christopher (phone)" Siri Kaur Courtesy of the artist "Wonder Woman" Mel Ramos Courtesy Rochelle and Darren Leininger Family Collection

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