By Bobby Tanzilo Senior Editor/Writer Published Jun 22, 2018 at 9:01 AM

As part of its new season of technique and innovation, Milwaukee Art Museum is running a trio of exhibits more or less simultaneously. While all three feature beautiful and important work, it’s not hard to see why the museum’s director Marcelle Polednik calls the monumental "William Kentridge: More Sweetly Play the Dance" the "jewel in the crown."

The sweeping multimedia installation fills the Baker/Rowland Galleries in the Santiago Calatrava-designed Quadracci Pavilion and it’s not only the first time the gallery is housing a single work of art, it’s also the first time an exhibition uses the entire gallery without any interior walls.

The show  featuring a roughly 14-minute projected installation that incorporates drawing, stop-motion animation, video, music, dance and drama (all on-screen)  opens today and runs through Aug. 19.

"William Kentridge is among the most important living artists working today, and we are proud to be able to share his work with Milwaukee," says Margaret Andera, the museum’s interim chief curator and curator of contemporary art.

"Whether visitors are drawn to the captivating figures in silhouette, the skill with which Kentridge combines various media into one monumentally singular work or the audacious scope and scale of the installation, I believe they are going to be mesmerized by this work."

Of course it’s not simply the impressive breadth of the work that impresses, it is the timeless relevance, says Andera.

"When you look at any work by William Kentridge, it starts with (his native) Johannesburg," she says. "It starts with that idea of inequality and injustice, but the brilliance of William Kentridge's work is that it starts there in those very specific places, but he has a unique ability to connect that experience across time and across cultures.

"And so, while he's starting from this very specific experience, his work is a commentary on things that unite us. That is, the human condition, and so, you can look at this piece that was done in 2015 and you can see things that are incredibly timely for the very moment, the very day, we are standing in this gala even though it was done in 2015, and you know what? If we would be watching this 10 years from now, a curator could be standing here and saying that exact same thing. That's the brilliance of William Kentridge's work."

Taking a cue from the dance macabre, that oldest allegory of mortality, Kentridge parades a stunning variety of figures across the eight screens that comprise the installation.

There’s a brass band, patients walking with their IV bags, South African dancers, ballet dancers, people pulling corpses, figures holding aloft images of birds and fronds and classical busts and cages, and on and on ... from one end of the room all the way to the other, these figures and others form an unexpected procession.

All the while, keep an eye tuned to the stark grey and white background, which is constantly changing thanks to its stop-motion medium, tracing a contrapuntal rhythm against that of the figures that parade before it.

"Johannesburg is the beginning and the end of Kentridge's work, so are his drawings, and the consistent star of any William Kentridge artwork is the Johannesburg landscape that has been scorched from mining," says Andera. "It is not a beautiful landscape and he doesn't try to dress it up.

"So, what you're seeing here is a landscape based on Johannesburg, and if you look at any other Kentridge's drawings, any other of his works, the landscape is always similar. These are charcoal drawings, and the stop-motion animation, the way that the background of the film seems to be moving at a different pace from the live action figures that are progressing, the way he does those is he's making these drawings. He photographs them. He erases and changes them, photographs them again."

That landscape is more than simply a stark backdrop for the procession, says Andera. It’s a key to understanding the installation.

"There is an equivalence in Kentridge's work where he equates what happened when a landscape gets used up or abused and the human condition, what happens when mass numbers of people are subjected to inequalities. That is a yin and yang with Kentridge always."

Mortality is a thread that runs through Kentridge’s work and it’s something that struck me about another of his works, one I saw years ago in an exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.

Called "Her Absence Filled the World," the work was a similarly stark sketch of a figure alone atop a hill. It spoke of loss, of grieving and I couldn’t get it out of my head as I watched the march taking place in "More Sweetly Play the Dance."

"What he's doing is he's documenting change," says Andera. "He's also documenting memory and when you think about it, that in connection with an artist who is so consciously reaching back into time to tell present day people how things have and have not changed, that's a really not so subtle kind of link through Kentridge's works."

The other exhibitions in this season of technique and innovation are "Photographing Nature’s Cathedrals: Carleton E. Watkins, Eadweard Muybridge and H. H. Bennett," which runs through Aug. 26, and "Daring Technique: Goya and the Art of Etching," which closes on Sept. 9.

Bobby Tanzilo Senior Editor/Writer

Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., where he lived until he was 17, Bobby received his BA-Mass Communications from UWM in 1989 and has lived in Walker's Point, Bay View, Enderis Park, South Milwaukee and on the East Side.

He has published three non-fiction books in Italy – including one about an event in Milwaukee history, which was published in the U.S. in autumn 2010. Four more books, all about Milwaukee, have been published by The History Press.

With his most recent band, The Yell Leaders, Bobby released four LPs and had a songs featured in episodes of TV's "Party of Five" and "Dawson's Creek," and films in Japan, South America and the U.S. The Yell Leaders were named the best unsigned band in their region by VH-1 as part of its Rock Across America 1998 Tour. Most recently, the band contributed tracks to a UK vinyl/CD tribute to the Redskins and collaborated on a track with Italian novelist Enrico Remmert.

He's produced three installments of the "OMCD" series of local music compilations for OnMilwaukee.com and in 2007 produced a CD of Italian music and poetry.

In 2005, he was awarded the City of Asti's (Italy) Journalism Prize for his work focusing on that area. He has also won awards from the Milwaukee Press Club.

He has be heard on 88Nine Radio Milwaukee talking about his "Urban Spelunking" series of stories, in that station's most popular podcast.