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Pacita Abad: MoMA PS1

Past exhibition
4 April - 2 September 2024
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Overview
Pacita Abad, MoMA PS1

The first retrospective of artist Pacita Abad (b. Philippines, 1946–2004) will unfold across MoMA PS1’s third-floor galleries. Spanning the artist’s 32-year career, the exhibition includes more than 50 works—most of which have never been on public view in the United States prior to this exhibition—showcasing her experiments across mediums, including textiles, works on paper, costumes, and ceramics. Largely self-taught, Abad is best known for her trapuntos, quilted paintings made by stitching and stuffing her canvases as opposed to stretching them over a wood frame. After moving to the United States in 1970 to escape political persecution from the authoritarian Marcos regime, Abad sought to give visibility to political refugees and oppressed peoples through her work. “I have always believed that an artist has a special obligation to remind society of its social responsibility,” she said. Organized by the Walker Art Center in collaboration with Abad’s estate, the presentation celebrates the multifaceted work of an artist whose vibrant visual, material, and conceptual concerns push forward salient conversations around globalization, power, and resilience.

 

Pacita Abad is organized by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. The exhibition is curated by Victoria Sung, Phyllis C. Wattis Senior Curator at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive and former Associate Curator, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center, with Matthew Villar Miranda, curatorial fellow, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center. The presentation at MoMA PS1 is organized by Ruba Katrib, Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, MoMA PS1, with Sheldon Gooch, Curatorial Assistant, MoMA PS1. 

The exhibition is accompanied by the first major publication on Abad’s work, produced by the Walker. The volume is edited with text by Victoria Sung and includes contributions from Julia Bryan-Wilson, Nancy Lim, Ruba Katrib, Xiaoyu Weng, and Matthew Villar Miranda, as well as a comprehensive oral history by Pio Abad and Sung.

 

Major support for Pacita Abad is provided by John L. Thomson.

Additional support is provided by Lonti Ebers.

 

The Walker Art Center organized the exhibition with major support provided by Martha and Bruce Atwater; the Ford Foundation; the Henry Luce Foundation; the Martin and Brown Foundation; Rosemary and Kevin McNeely, Manitou Fund; and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

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News
  • Best New York City Art Shows of 2024

    Best New York City Art Shows of 2024

    Hyperallergic December 12, 2024
    2024 was a bustling year for art in New York, with blockbuster exhibitions at museums, museum-level shows at galleries — especially a few new, nearly...
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  • The Charismatic Vitality of Pacita Abad’s Trapuntos

    The Charismatic Vitality of Pacita Abad’s Trapuntos

    The New Yorker August 23, 2024
    The Filipina artist Pacita Abad —who visited at least sixty countries, learning from Afghan embroidery, Mexican muralism, Javanese dyeing, Sri Lankan masks, and Pakistani quilts—makes...
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  • How Pacita Abad Wove a Multicultural Tapestry of Humanity

    How Pacita Abad Wove a Multicultural Tapestry of Humanity

    Observer August 20, 2024
    In recent years, there has been a significant resurgence of interest in women’s textile practices. No longer confined to the undervalued realm of craft, they...
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  • Pacita Abad Retrospective Headed to Toronto

    Pacita Abad Retrospective Headed to Toronto

    Ocula August 16, 2024
    The eclectic artist Pacita Abad received her first retrospective last year, organised by the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, where it was first shown. The...
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  • Stitch by Stitch, Pacita Abad Crossed Continents and Cultures

    Stitch by Stitch, Pacita Abad Crossed Continents and Cultures

    The New York Times August 1, 2024
    About a year before she died of cancer, in 2004, at the age of 58, the artist Pacita Abad and a team painted a pedestrian...
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  • What Not to Miss During Frieze New York

    What Not to Miss During Frieze New York

    W Magazine May 3, 2024
    Something about this year’s edition of Frieze New York put us in mind of Miami and Palm Beach palaces, where chunky colorful work thrives alongside...
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  • Overlooked During Her Lifetime, Filipino American Artist Pacita Abad Has Suddenly Become a Global Star

    Overlooked During Her Lifetime, Filipino American Artist Pacita Abad Has Suddenly Become a Global Star

    VOGUE April 19, 2024
    It’s easy to see why Pacita Abad’s work resonated with Faith Ringgold. Like her American counterpart, Abad—a native of Basco, Batanes, in the Philippines—was also...
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  • Pacita Abad Threaded Together Bold Solidarities

    Pacita Abad Threaded Together Bold Solidarities

    The AMP April 19, 2024
    Tucked away in a corner of MoMA PS1’s third floor exhibition space, a digitally restored interview with the late artist Pacita Abad loops on a...
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  • Pacita Abad Wove the Women of the World Together

    Pacita Abad Wove the Women of the World Together

    The Nation April 18, 2024
    At the end of the Pacita Abad retrospective at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis last summer, there hung, unassumingly, her most monumental work: a...
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  • Pacita Abad Stitched the Immigrant Experience into Her Embroidered Paintings

    Pacita Abad Stitched the Immigrant Experience into Her Embroidered Paintings

    Artsy April 5, 2024
    At 24 years old, Pacita Abad faced the wrath of Filipino dictator Ferdinand Marcos head-on. In 1970, her family home was machine-gunned in the middle...
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