Interactive Feature: Zoom, Explore, Respond
Charioteer

Julie Mehretu, Charioteer, 2007
Ink and acrylic on linen, 60 x 84 in. Collection of Nicolas Rohatyn and Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, N.Y. © 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Steven Gerlich


Julie Mehretu: City Sitings brings together nine monumental paintings by this renowned contemporary artist. Inspired by cities, Mehretu employs a dynamic visual vocabulary in her intricately layered canvases combining maps, logos, urban grids, and architectural renderings. Mehretu’s paintings explore timely issues of migration, globalization, conflict, and social action using the urban landscape as the setting. Her multifaceted canvases engage viewers in a new vision of their own urban landscape. Don’t miss this internationally celebrated artist’s first exhibition in the Southeast.

This exhibition is organized by the Detroit Institute of Arts in collaboration with Julie Mehretu. Support has been provided through generous grants from the Joyce Foundation and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

This exhibition is also made possible, in part, by the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources and the North Carolina Museum of Art Foundation, Inc.

Visitor Information

Admission: Free
Dates: August 17–November 30, 2008
Location: Entry-Level Gallery
Related Events:
Lunch and Lecture, Saturday, November 15, 11 a.m.
Resources:
  • Gallery guides are available in the exhibition gallery.
  • Large-print and Spanish label copy is available in the exhibition gallery.
  • A fully-illustrated exhibition catalogue is for sale in the Museum Store. There are also several exhibition-related books for sale.
Tours:
Docent-led tours for groups of 10 or more are available September 30–November 30. Tours are free. Three weeks advance notice is required. Enhance your Museum experience by combining a tour with lunch in Blue Ridge, the Museum Restaurant. To arrange, contact Jen Coon at (919) 664-6841.
Visitor Tips:
  • Zoom in to explore the paintings, find details and submit your own observations.
  • Be sure to check construction updates to help you better plan your visit.
  • No photography, food, or beverage is permitted in the gallery.
News Release:
Media may find news releases and contacts in our Press Room.

The Exhibition

Cities fascinate artist Julie Mehretu.

Her paintings are multilayered, intricate—often huge—and explore how we humans socialize and take action in cities that have been designed to structure our daily experience.

Because of their sheer scale, many of Mehretu’s paintings invite us to travel through them, to lose ourselves in their depths, to discover them in much the same way we might explore the space of a city.

“My aim,” says Mehretu, “is to have a picture that appears one way from a distance—almost like a cosmology, city, or universe from afar—but then when you approach the work, the overall image shatters into numerous other pictures, stories, and events.”

Julie Mehretu: City Sitings brings this internationally acclaimed artist’s work to the NCMA for the first time and provides a rare opportunity to see multiple works in her first showing in North Carolina. The exhibition features some of her most monumental paintings—many of which were created just for this show—that address contemporary themes of place, power, (post)colonialism, and globalization with dramatic flair.

In her expansive canvases, Mehretu draws on a dynamic array of popular imagery accessible to diverse audiences—maps, urban grids, graffiti, calligraphy—and configures these into an unanticipated, irresistible personal visual vocabulary. Mehretu’s compelling works reenvision the urban experience and rewrite narratives of exclusion, reconciling divergent histories through her expansive, dynamic compositions. Inspired by community action, historical events, and the built environment, she engages viewers in a new vision of the metropolitan landscape.

Read more: Meet the Artist: An Interview with Julie Mehretu

The Artist

Born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to an Ethiopian father and American mother, Julie Mehretu (American, born 1970) immigrated to the United States at the age of seven and grew up in East Lansing, Michigan. She graduated from Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Michigan, in 1992, after having spent a year abroad in Dakar, Senegal, and completed a master of fine arts degree at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1997. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship.

Mehretu’s work has been exhibited in museums and galleries throughout the United States, including the Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota; the Saint Louis Art Museum; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and worldwide in England, Belgium, Korea, Italy, Germany, Japan, and elsewhere.

Her work toured Europe in a solo exhibition organized by the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León, Spain, in 2006. As her reputation has expanded, so, too, have her extensive travels; she represented the United States at the 2006 Contemporary Art Biennale of Sydney in Australia, and she will begin a two-year residency in Berlin in fall 2008.

These and other diverse international experiences inform her work in which cities are sites to examine issues of mobility, dislocation, empowerment, and competition in global economies. Truly a citizen of the world, she widely adapts diverse images from architecture, urban planning, hip-hop culture, and mass media, rendering such themes both relevant and widely accessible to audiences worldwide and close to home.

The Paintings

Because of their sheer scale, Julie Mehretu’s paintings invite us to travel through them, to lose ourselves in the depth of their layers, to discover their intricacies in much the same way we explore the spaces and details of a city.

Mehretu layers diverse graphic elements such as road maps, graffiti, media logos, and blueprints of sports arenas. The paintings look drastically different up close than they do from a distance.

Click on the ZOOM button to explore the painting and record your observations.

Charioteer

Julie Mehretu, Charioteer, 2007
Ink and acrylic on linen, 60 x 84 in.
Collection of Nicolas Rohatyn and
Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, N.Y.
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Steven Gerlich

Grey Space

Julie Mehretu, Grey Space (distractor), 2006
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 72 x 96 in.
Collection of Nicolas Rohatyn and
Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, N.Y.
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Immanence

Julie Mehretu, Immanence, 2004
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 72 x 96 in.
Collection Mehretu-Rankin
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project and the artist, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Palimpsest

Julie Mehretu, Palimpsest (old gods), 2006
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 60 x 84 in.
Collection Mehretu-Rankin
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project and the artist, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Stadia I

Julie Mehretu, Stadia I, 2004
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 108 x 144 in.
Collection San Francisco MoMA, Fractional gift of Dominique Levy and purchase through the Accessions Committee Fund with the additional support of Gay-Lynn and Robert Blanding, Jean and James E. Douglas, Jr., Ann and Robert S. Fisher, and Pat and Bill Wilson
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Stadia II

Julie Mehretu, Stadia II, 2004
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 108 x 144 in.
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Gift of Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn and Nicholas Rohatyn and A.W. Mellon Acquisition Endowment Fund, 2004.50
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Stadia III

Julie Mehretu, Stadia III, 2004
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 108 x 144 in.
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond,
The National Endowment for the Arts Fund for American Art and partial gift of Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy The Project, PHOTO: Erma Estwick

Black City

Julie Mehretu, Black City, 2007
Ink and acrylic on canvas, 120 x 192 inches
Private Collection, Paris
© 2007 Julie Mehretu, Courtesy White Cube and The Project, Photo: Erma Estwick