Mass-produced artwork featured in Ripon College exhibit

The exhibit “Art and Mass Production: From Ansel Adams to Andy Warhol” will be on view from Jan. 26 through March 9 in Caestecker Gallery, C.J. Rodman Center for the Arts, at Ripon College.

It focuses on how artists use mass-production to disseminate their work as well as how artists use the concept of mass-production as the subject of their work. Examples of work by well-known artists will be on view, along with interpretive material written by Ripon College students.

The exhibit is curated by Assistant Professor Travis Nygard along with students. At an opening reception Jan. 26, Nygard will deliver a talk at 7 p.m. in the lobby of Rodman Center.

Student curators from the Art Now class are: Becky Bajt ’19 of Mazon, Illinois; Sebastian Cooper ’18 of Black Jack, Missouri; Ellen Frost ’20 of Appleton, Wisconsin; Maddie Hantzsch ’19 of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin; and Savannah Skamra ’18 of Ripon, Wisconsin.

The curators state that mass production usually refers to the process of using industrial manufacturing to create a great amount of a product.

“The goal is to produce an abundance of items that people find desirable to purchase. This became a phenomenon after the assembly line was invented during the 1900s. Although multiple copies of art were made in the past, our era typifies the global desire for large scale production. Today, technology, culture and logistics of production have allowed creative people to engage in printing, packaging and virtual designing on an unprecedented scale. Artists have thus used innovation and ingenuity to appease the need for readily available and visually pleasing goods.

“While some fine art can cost millions of dollars, our exhibition encourages the viewer to recognize and appreciate art that anyone has the ability to purchase. Mass production has changed the way that artists produce art and audiences relate to art. While art can be one of a kind, unique, and personal, it can also be made in a factory. It has also helped to enable people to be able to connect with art by gaining easy access to it at an affordable price, rather than seeing work exclusively in museums. In this exhibition, there are examples of mass produced books, posters, advertisements, a coffee can, clothing, metal sheets, and augmented reality technology.”

Famous artists who produced works of art using mass production and are featured in the exhibit include Andy Warhol, Ansel Adams, John Baldessari, Thomas Kinkade, Kehinde Wiley, Robert Sabuda and Yoko Ono.

Gallery hours are 1-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday through Friday; 2-6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; and one hour before performances in the Rodman Center.


Related Posts

Lillian Brown

Lillian Brown to appear in play in Sturgeon Bay July 17 through Aug. 18

Assistant Professor of Theatre Lillian Brown will appear in the play “Jeeves Saves the Day,” by Margaret Raether, July 17 through Aug. 18 in Sturgeon […]

Lia Haile ’26

Lia Haile ’26 honored for work in community service

Lia Haile ’26 of Manitowoc, Wisconsin, has been inducted into the Carson Scholars Alumni Hall of Fame. The Carson Scholars Fund awards scholarships based on […]

Nicholas Eastman works with Ripon College students

Servant Leadership Fellows program launched for students

A new Servant Leadership Fellows program has been announced by Nicholas Eastman, Pieper Chair of Servant Leadership and associate professor of educational studies. A cohort […]

Patrick Willoughby

Article by Patrick Willoughby, student collaborators published in journal

Associate Professor of Chemistry Patrick H. Willoughby and three of his students contributed to an article published in Chemistry: A European Journal. Contributors to “Nitrene […]

Gibson for Art and Mass Production show