Currents 31: Robert Melee

Exhibitions

Robert Melee, High Life #2, 2004.

Wood, enamel paint, and plaster. 90 × 48 × 5 in. (228.6 × 121.92 × 12.7 cm). Gift of Meg and Kevin Kinney, Joanne and Jim Murphy, Reva and Philip Shovers, and Diane and Randy Strauss. Photo by John R. Glembin

Overview

  • June 18–September 19, 2004

  • Cudahy Gallery

  • Free for Members

  • Included with admission

Currents is an ongoing series at the Milwaukee Art Museum that features the work of contemporary artists. Robert Melee’s work incorporates film, video, photography, painting and sculpture in his elaborate mock suburban installations. For Currents 31, Melee transforms the Cudahy Gallery into an interior of a suburban home, complete with fake wood paneling and furniture wall units, replete with family memorabilia, and brightly colored wall sculptures and paintings.

Every surface of the installation, walls, floors, ceiling and furniture will be covered in fake wood paneling and marbleized paint. The home entertainment units will contain vintage televisions featuring Melee’s home movies—of the artist, his flamboyant mother, and friends—and framed photographs and treasured bottles of liquor. Melee’s work, while seemingly reproducing the mundane and abject nature of a certain kind of working-class suburban experience, actually turns reality on it’s head, offering a sensationalistic and gleefully artificial vision which can only be mistaken for reality in the same way that “reality TV” can.

Robert Melee has had numerous one-person gallery exhibitions, both in Europe and America, and has exhibited at the Corcoran Museum in Washington D.C. and The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art in Ridgefield CT.