PROVOCATIVE SERIES OF ETCHINGS BY SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ARTIST, SANDOW BIRK, EXAMINES DEATH IN AMERICA
Sandow Birk: Leading Causes of Death in America
June 4-August 14, 2005
Request High-Resolution Images
SAN DIEGO—The third installment of the San Diego Museum of Art's acclaimed Contemporary Links series
will present eleven commissioned etchings by the provocative West Coast artist, Sandow Birk. Titled Leading
Causes of Death in America, the prints take a humorous look at a normally serious subject and are loosely
based on a selection of images from SDMA's collection of 149 lithographs by George Bellows, the early
20th-century American Realist artist who was associated with the Ashcan School.
For more than fifteen years, Sandow Birk, who is based in Long Beach, California, has been successfully
appropriating the look and imagery of well-known historical prints and paintings to create poignant satires
of contemporary American life. His eleven etchings for SDMA, including an introductory title page, borrow
from the imagery, techniques, and compositions of a number of lithographs by Bellows. Several works by Bellows
that Birk draws from will be presented in the exhibition in addition to other important historical prints by
Honoré Daumier, Edouard Manet, John Sloan, and Paul Cadmus, some of which the artist directly references as well.
Like Bellows, Birk is a sharp observer of the impact of the changing city and social mores on the lives of
citizens. He is known for his astute yet humorous social commentary on topics ranging from consumerism to
popular culture. In the past Birk has parodied works by other famous artists, including the 18th-century
British painter and printmaker William Hogarth. He has also appropriated the styles of 19th-century American
landscape painters such as Thomas Moran and Albert Bierstadt.
In Leading Causes of Death in America, Birk reveals the way American's live, focusing on why we die by drawing
on current research on disease trends like a medical anthropologist. He depicts the causes as excesstoo much
smoking and drinking, overeating, compulsive consumption of junk foodwhich result in heart attack, diabetes,
stroke, cancer, lung disease, or liver disease. Even his depiction of accidents suggests an excess of external
stimulation that distracts us from paying more attention to what is at hand. With these and other recent works,
Birk joins the ranks of the illustrator-commentator printmakers (like Bellows, Hogarth, and Daumier) who, with
wit and skill, reveal poignant aspects of society through visual imagery.
Sandow Birk created the prints for the SDMA exhibition at the Hui No'eau Visual Arts Center in Makawao, Maui,
Hawaii, where he is working closely with master printer, Paul Mullowney, to create etchings that simulate the
rich tones and gradations and blacks that characterize the Bellows lithographs.
Born in Detroit in 1962, Birk received a BFA from the Otis Art Institute of Parson's School of Design. He has
been featured in solo exhibitions throughout California, including at the Koplin del Rio Gallery in Los Angeles
(2003), and has a forthcoming show opening in late May at PPOW Gallery in New York. Birk was also included in
Made in California: 1900-2000 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2000). He is a recipient of the J. Paul
Getty Fellowship for Visual Arts, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, and a National
Endowment for the Arts travel grant to Mexico.
The Museum's annual Contemporary Links series commissions noted contemporary artists to respond to works in
SDMA's collections. The series debuted in 2003 with Regina Frank's memorable performance and installation,
Whiteness in Decay, a work inspired by Juan Sánchez Cotán's Quince, Cabbage, Melon, and Cucumber. In 2004,
the Pakistani-born artist Shahzia Sikander responded to a display of eighteen paintings from the Museum's
Edwin Binney 3rd Collection of South Asian art in the thought-provoking mixed-media installation, Flip Flop.
Museum Information
San Diego Museum of Art
1450 El Prado, Balboa Park
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 122107
San Diego, CA 92112-2107
General Information: (619) 232-7931 / Facsimile: (619) 232-9367
Group Sales: (619) 696-1915
Web site: www.sdmart.org
The historic San Diego Museum of Art provides a rich and diverse cultural experience for more than 400,000 annual
visitors. Located in the heart of beautiful Balboa Park, the Museum's nationally renowned collections include
Spanish and Italian old masters, South Asian paintings, and 19th- and 20th-century American paintings and
sculptures. In addition, the Museum regularly features major exhibitions of art from around the world, as
well as an extensive year-round schedule of supporting cultural and educational programs.