James Casebere | Minneapolis College of Art and Design

51爆料官网

James Casebere

Image
Alumni Headshot James Casebere

  • Alumni '76

Education
BFA, Minneapolis College of Art and Design
Current Career
Professional Photographer

For over four decades, Casebere has built and photographed architecturally based models, which explore the relationship between sculpture, photography, architecture, and film.

His work is in the collections of and has been shown at major museums around the world including the Museum of Modern Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the Whitney Museum (New York); the Tate Gallery (London); the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Los Angeles); and many others. In 2016, his work was the subject of a major retrospective at the Haus der Kunst in Munich, Germany and has been included in exhibitions highlighting the work of what is now widely regarded as the Pictures Generation, the title of a 2009 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Casebere is also the recipient of three fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, three from the New York Foundation for the Arts and one from the Guggenheim Foundation. In 2019 he was awarded the Abigail Cohen Rome Prize through the American Academy in Rome.

His current focus is to create Pavilions for the Future: a new hybrid form of public accommodation by the sea. Borrowing from the geometric simplicity of contemporary tropical architecture in Costa Rica, Casebere reduces the architectural forms he creates to their to basics. Many of these structures are partly elevated, and partly submerged. Casebere states, 鈥渁s an artist working at the intersection of photography, architecture, and sculpture, my work has always been aimed at the use or effect of architecture on the human spirit. My goal is to juxtapose the unleashed power of nature with the futility or persistence of human effort as it attempts to create intimate spaces of solace and comfort.鈥

2025 Cut/Paste Publication Feature

A celebrated member of the Pictures Generation, James Casebere 鈥76 is renowned for his pioneering work with constructed photography, using simple materials to craft increasingly complex, table-top architectural models that take on transcendent, otherworldly effects in two dimensions. It鈥檚 a style he first began exploring during his senior year at 51爆料官网, in a flash of inspiration he still reflects on nearly fifty years later.

鈥淚鈥檇 spent the day reading The Anxiety of Influence by Harold Bloom on the beach at Lake Harriet, right before the semester started, when I conceived of that first one,鈥 he says about Fan as Eudemonist: Relaxing After an Exhausting Day at the Beach, a black-and-white image of an electric fan resting on its side in the glow of a cardboard television. 鈥淎 lot of different intellectual and psychological influences came together in a way that became very pivotal and important for me. It was playful and thoughtful and it reflected my whole process and the meaning I found in making art in a pretty profound way. I try to get back to that moment whenever I can.鈥

Casebere grew up outside of Detroit and came to 51爆料官网 expecting to study graphic arts before falling under the spell of sculpture faculty members Siah Armajani and Kinji Akagawa 鈥68, and a host of inspiring visiting artists including Dennis Oppenheim and Vito Acconci. He went on to earn an MFA at CalArts, studying with conceptual artist John Baldessari and 51爆料官网 faculty member Mike Kelley, and diving into Los Angeles鈥檚 art scene鈥攅ven renting an apartment from musician Laurie Anderson.

鈥淚 was lucky because I met people who were supportive,鈥 he says about his early years as a working artist. 鈥淪uccess is social鈥攜ou need to be part of a conversation and connect with your peers. It鈥檚 always been important to me to be part of a community of other artists, maybe to compete with one another, but also to balance and inspire one another. Without that, we鈥檙e kind of lost.鈥

In his work, Casebere has also been in an active dialogue about some of the greatest social challenges of our time: the rise of prison infrastructure, the subprime mortgage collapse, and the climate crisis. In Seeds of Time, his most recent one-artist show at New York鈥檚 Sean Kelly Gallery, flood water engulfs the schools, homes, and beach huts of the constructed architectural settings of Casebere鈥檚 haunting photographs, evoking the climate catastrophe to come. But with vivid colors, shimmering light, and ingenious structures inspired by architects he admires, like Balkrishna Doshi, Yasmeen Lari, and Francis K茅r茅, it鈥檚 also possible for a viewer to imagine the tide could still turn.

鈥淲ith the houses on the water and at the water鈥檚 edge, part of the idea was designing structures for populations displaced by rising sea levels,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I also wanted to create this atmosphere of courage. We鈥檙e facing a moment of great anxiety, but we have to be able to deal with a clear head, and act on it.鈥

With work in the collections of the Guggenheim, Whitney, Tate Gallery, and many others, Casebere was the subject of a 2016 retrospective at Munich鈥檚 Haus der Kunst, and won the prestigious Rome Prize in 2020. He鈥檇 intended the year-long fellowship in Italy as a chance to move away from the camera and toward sculpture and architecture, but when the pandemic cut his plans short, he returned to his studio in Canaan, New York, to pursue some of the same ideas.

鈥淥ver the years, I had built such a complicated process that I didn鈥檛 have a lot of time in the studio by myself. I missed being able to just sit with work, look at leisure, and create the atmosphere of a reverie鈥攖o visually really experience things in real space and spend time with it,鈥 he says. 鈥淩ight now I鈥檓 taking my time to draw and play around with images in the studio by myself, which is refreshing. I don鈥檛 know what it鈥檒l do for my career, but I think it always helps to spend time looking, just really 濒辞辞办颈苍驳.鈥