29/04/16

Alberto Giacometti | Yves Klein. In Search of the Absolute, Curated by Joachim Pissarro, Gagosian Gallery, London

Alberto Giacometti | Yves Klein 
In Search of the Absolute
Curated by Joachim Pissarro
Gagosian Gallery, London
April 27 – June 17, 2016 (extended)

Gagosian presents the first-ever exhibition to pair key works by ALBERTO GIACOMETTI (1901–1966) and YVES KLEIN (1928–1962).

At first glance, Alberto Giacometti and Yves Klein, born a generation apart, could not be more different: Giacometti was a master of material form and figurative representation, while Klein was an influential theorist whose art married the conceptual with the cosmic. In the 1950s and early 1960s, the two artists lived and worked within a mile of each other, in Montparnasse, Paris, but there are few clues in their work to suggest that they shared the same artistic milieu. What they did have in common was an acute consciousness of the catastrophic effects of the Second World War and its aftermath on European culture. Each dealt with it in his own way: in his sculptures, Giacometti struggled to evince a vital human presence from nothing; Klein shunned the personal, autobiographical mark, attempting to dematerialize painting to the point of pure saturated colour. As exhibition curator Joachim Pissarro has observed, “Both artists, rather than creating something that reflected the chaos, chose to rise above it, transforming and deciphering it into elegant, lyrical matter.”

In the large, light-filled galleries at Gagosian Grosvenor Hill, Alberto Giacometti and Yves Klein are shown together for the first time. Within an ambitious and immersive installation conceived by Pissarro, Giacometti’s nervously modelled figures and heads are confronted by Klein’s intense and expansive colours. The artists are generously represented by works on loan from the Fondation Alberto Giacometti, the Yves Klein Archives, the Beyeler Foundation, and distinguished private collections. Twenty-five sculptures by Giacometti—including such classics as the hieratic Femme de Venise I (1956), the austere L’homme qui marche I (1960), and the almost comic Le Nez (1947)—are juxtaposed with as many works from Yves Klein, including Monochromes, Anthropometries, Fire Paintings, and a Sponge Sculpture. It is in the Anthropometries—direct impressions of the naked female body in blue paint on large sheets of paper—that Yves Klein comes closest to Alberto Giacometti in his desire to record the human trace, albeit without any overt evidence of his own hand.

The title of the exhibition, “In Search of the Absolute,” originates from an essay on Giacometti by Jean-Paul Sartre, in which the existentialist philosopher described the artist as “forever beginning anew,” noting that with each sculpture it is “necessary to start again from zero” and that Giacometti’s images of humanity are “always mediating between nothingness and being.” In the conceptual and working processes of both artists, “nothingness” became “the void,” a space of infinite potential. Giacometti devoted much of his career to the struggle between matter and meaning, investigating how to reduce the figure’s mass as far as possible while imbuing it with essential force, while Klein’s goal was to reinvest the vacuum of nothingness as a void of “blue profundity.”

In this speculative juxtaposition, In Search of the Absolute seeks to evoke the differences as well as the affinities between these two groundbreaking artists of the modern period, bringing new light to their aspirations and achievements.

The accompanying publication includes essays by Joachim Pissarro, Cecilia Braschi, and Richard Calvocoressi; interviews by Joachim Pissarro with Catherine Grenier and Daniel Moquay; and historical texts—some translated for the first time—by Isaku Yanaihara, Dino Buzzati, and Pierre Descargues, as well as detailed chronologies and a map of Montparnasse dating from the period in which both artists lived there.

ALBERTO GIACOMETTI was born in 1901 in Borgonovo, Switzerland, and died in 1966 in Chur, Switzerland. In 1922, he moved to Paris and studied at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Recent exhibitions include “Una retrospective,” Colección de la Fundación Alberto y Annette Giacometti, Museo Picasso Málaga, Spain (2011); “The Origin of Space: The Mature Works,” Museum der Moderne, Salzburg, Austria (2011); “Space, Head, Figure,” Musée de Grenoble, France (2013); and “Alberto Giacometti,” Pera Museum, Istanbul (2015). The first retrospective of Giacometti's work in China opened at the Yuz Museum in Shanghai on March 22.

With the support of the Fondation Alberto Giacometti, exhibitions of Giacometti’s work have been presented in Europe, the United States, and Asia, including Living, Looking, Making (Gagosian London, 2007); Isabel and Other Intimate Strangers: Portraits by Alberto Giacometti and Francis Bacon (Gagosian New York, 2009); Giacometti in Switzerland (Gagosian Geneva, 2011); and Alberto Giacometti: Without End (Gagosian Hong Kong, 2014).

YVES KLEIN was born in Nice, France in 1928, and died in 1962 in Paris. He began painting monochromes in 1950, exhibiting them publicly for the first time in Paris in 1955. In 1960, he patented the formula for International Klein Blue. In 1961 he presented “Yves Klein: Monochrome und Feuer,” a major retrospective in Krefeld, Germany. Recent retrospectives include “Yves Klein,” Guggenheim Bilbao (2005); “Body, Colour, Immaterial,” Centre Pompidou (2006-7) and “Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers,” Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, D.C. (2010). 

This is the third time that Gagosian has collaborated with the Yves Klein Archives, following earlier exhibitions Sponge Reliefs (Gagosian New York, 1989); and Fire at the Heart of the Void (Gagosian New York, 1993).

GAGOSIAN GALLERY
20 Grosvenor Hill, London W1K 3QD

18/04/16

Dutch Flowers, National Gallery, London

Dutch Flowers
National Gallery, London
6 April – 29 August 2016

The National Gallery presents an exhibition exploring the evolution of Dutch flower painting over the course of two centuries. This is the first display of its kind in the UK for more than 20 years.

Through 22 works, Dutch Flowers examines the origins of the genre, the height of its popularity in the Dutch Golden Age, and its final flowering in the late 18th century.

Approximately half the works on display come from the National Gallery Collection, and the rest from private collections. Many of the paintings are on display here for the first time, having only recently come to the Gallery on long-term loan.

At the turn of the 17th century, Netherlandish painters such as Jan Brueghel the Elder, Ambrosius Bosschaert, and Roelandt Savery were among the first artists to produce paintings that exclusively depicted flowers. The sudden emergence of this genre is undoubtedly linked to the development of scientific interest in botany and horticulture at the close of the 16th century. This period saw the establishment of botanical gardens in the Netherlands as well as a booming international trade in exotic cultivars. By the 1630s, speculative prices for the most coveted bulbs and flowering plants had reached spectacular heights – the so-called ‘tulip mania’. Prices soon crashed, however the Dutch enchantment with flowers endured.

The earliest flower paintings feature flat, symmetrical arrangements comprising flowers from different seasons. Over the course of the 17th century, bouquets became more relaxed, with asymmetrical rhythms and a willingness to overlap even the most costly flowers to create a more natural sense of depth. By the end of the 18th century, flower paintings were considered largely decorative, with a lighter palette more in keeping with ‘modern’ tastes.

Throughout the period, many artists favoured smooth copper or wood panel supports that enhanced the illusionistic perfection of their brushwork. Coinciding with the Chelsea and Hampton Court Flower Shows, visitors to the exhibition will have the opportunity to examine the flower paintings in detail to appreciate the stylistic and technical characteristics of each artist.

Betsy Wieseman, Curator of Dutch and Flemish Paintings said:
“This gorgeous display draws attention to the National Gallery’s extensive collection of Dutch flower paintings from the 17th and 18th centuries. It is the first exhibition in London to be devoted to this perennially popular theme in over 20 years. The recent addition of several extraordinary long-term loans to the National Gallery Collection, on view here for the first time, enables the Gallery to show how flower painting developed in the Netherlands over the course of two centuries. Every major figure in the genre is represented, including Jan Brueghel the Elder, Ambrosius Bosschaert, Jan Davidsz de Heem, Jan van Huysum, and Rachel Ruysch.”
Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery said:
“The exhibition is an opportunity to admire the exquisite skill of Dutch flower painters over a period of nearly 200 years in works from the National Gallery and from private collections. They are paintings of astounding quality and beauty, often rich in symbolism and historic interest.“
THE NATIONAL GALLERY, LONDON

maj 26.11.2021