Showing posts with label 2023. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2023. Show all posts

06/04/24

Artist Tracey Emin @ Faurschou New York - "Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made" Exhibition

Tracey Emin
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Faurschou New York
Through 14 July, 2024

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Life Model Goes Mad IV, 1996
Giclee on photo rag paper, 20.9 x 20.5 in
Image courtesy of © Tracey Emin Studio

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Life Model Goes Mad XI, 1996
Giclee on photo rag paper, 20.9 x 20.5 in
Image courtesy of © Tracey Emin Studio
”I stopped painting when I was pregnant. The smell of the oil paints and the turps made me feel physically sick, and even after my termination, I couldn't paint. It's like I needed to punish myself by stopping the thing I loved doing the most. I hated my body; I was scared of the dark; I was scared of being asleep. I was suffering from guilt and punishing myself, so I threw myself in a box and gave myself three and a half weeks to sort it out. And I did. My only regret about this project was that I didn't carry on painting from that moment. It took me another five years before I started painting again.” – Tracey Emin
In 1996, British artist TRACEY EMIN (b. 1963) locked herself naked in an enclosed room at a gallery in Stockholm for 3 weeks to reconcile her anxieties and guilt around painting, a medium she had abandoned 6 years prior. After a traumatic period in the early 90s with two abortions, Tracey Emin could not physically stand the thought of painting and wanted to face her troubled relationship with the medium. Through fish-eye lenses in the exterior walls of the room, visitors could follow glimpses of Emin’s process. This exhibition at Faurschou New York marks the first time that this seminal work of art is exhibited in the United States.

Tracey Emin’s performance is not merely to be understood as catharsis, a cleansing self-therapy, but as the staging of an artistic exorcism by Tracey Emin enacting her own life in front of the viewers. Initially, Tracey Emin had intended for the paintings made inside the room to be destroyed in a fire after the performance, but she ultimately decided against it, leaving the space and works as a testimony of the physically and mentally challenging journey she had been through. The entire collection of artworks and objects in the room were preserved as an installation, which are all exhibited here in their original constellation.

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Installation view by Victoria Hely Hutchinson, 2023
© Faurschou

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Installation view by Victoria Hely Hutchinson, 2023
© Faurschou

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Installation view by Victoria Hely Hutchinson, 2023
© Faurschou

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Installation view by Victoria Hely Hutchinson, 2023
© Faurschou

Tracey Emin
TRACEY EMIN
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made
Installation view by Victoria Hely Hutchinson, 2023
© Faurschou

The paintings and drawings that Tracey Emin created in the process refer to and appropriate works by male artists Egon Schiele, Yves Klein, Edvard Munch, and Pablo Picasso. Historically, women’s access to the artist’s studio have been as models, not artists. The representation of women has been a male affair, where the female nude stands out as the most distinct example of the objectification of the female body. However, in Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made, Tracey Emin positions herself in the double role as both model and artist, challenging the universal acceptance of women as objects of the male gaze. Further, Emin documented the performance in the photographic series The Life Model Goes Mad, in which she takes on the role of the model in her own studio, reclaiming female identity and sexuality.

Tracey Emin is known for her autobiographical and confessional works, with themes of femininity, abortion, and the political and stigmatic structures surrounding them. Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made stands out as a pivotal work and predecessor to a line of works, in which Tracey Emin uses her own life, trauma, and emotions as a means of expression, with the most widely recognized piece being My Bed (1998). After the exhibition in 1996 in Sweden, Tracey Emin once again had to distance herself from painting, but ultimately took it up again. Today, Tracey Emin’s artistic practice and voice to further the recognition of female artists is as vibrant and poignant as ever.

Tracey Emin
Tracey Emin by Harry Weller
© Tracey Emin Studio

TRACEY EMIN - Biography

Tracey Emin was born in 1963 in London. She currently lives and works between London, the South of France, and Margate, UK.

Tracey Emin has exhibited extensively including major exhibitions at Munchmuseet, Oslo (2021); Royal Academy of Arts, London (2020); Musée d’Orsay, Paris (2019); Château La Coste, Aix-en-Provence, France (2017); Leopold Museum, Vienna (2015); Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami (2013); Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (2012); Turner Contemporary, Margate, UK (2012); Hayward Gallery, London (2011); Kunstmuseum Bern (2009); Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (2008); Centro de Arte Contemporáneo, Malaga, Spain (2008); Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney (2003); and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2002).

In 2007 Tracey Emin represented Great Britain at the 52nd VeniceBiennale and her installation My Bed has been included in ‘In Focus’ displays at Tate Britain with Francis Bacon (2015), Tate Liverpool with William Blake and also at Turner Contemporary, Margate alongside JMW Turner (2017).

In 2011, Tracey Emin was appointed Professor of Drawing at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, and in 2012 was made Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for her contributions to the visual arts.

Tracey Emin’s expressive and visceral art is one of disclosure, dealing with personal experience and heightened states of emotion. Frank and intimate but universal in its relevance, her work draws on the fundamental themes of love, desire, loss and grief, unravelling in the process the nuanced constructs of ‘woman’ and ‘self’ through probing self-exploration. ‘The most beautiful thing is honesty, even if it’s really painful to look at’, she has remarked.

Wide-ranging in scope, Tracey Emin’s practice includes painting, drawing, film, photography, sewn appliqué, sculpture and neon, all of which are transformed into highly personalised mediums for her singular voice. The genres of self-portraiture and the nude run throughout, both intricately bound up with the emotional journey of her life and the travails of her own biography. In her early work, often characterised by unflinching personal revelation, Emin makes reference to her family, childhood, and chaotic teenage years growing up in the seaside town of Margate. Her relationships, pregnancies and abortions are recounted through drawings, photographs, found objects and videos in a manner that is neither tragic nor sentimental and which resonates deeply with the audience.

FAURSCHOU NEW YORK
148 Green Street, Brooklyn, NY 11222

TRACEY EMIN: EXORCISM OF THE LAST PAINTING I EVER MADE 
FAURSCHOU NEW YORK, 21 October, 2023 – 14 July, 2024 

13/01/24

David Row @ Locks Gallery, Philadelphia - "Night and Day" Exhibition

David Row: Night and Day
Locks Gallery, Philadelphia
December 1, 2023 – January 26, 2024

David Row
DAVID ROW
Untitled (Gold II), 2022
Oil on linen on panel, 14 x 26 inches
© David Row / Courtesy Locks Gallery

David Row
DAVID ROW
Untitled (Earth Gray), 2022 
Oil on linen on panel, 15 x 26 inches
© David Row / Courtesy Locks Gallery

Locks Gallery presents Night and Day, an exhibition of small-scale shaped paintings by DAVID ROW spanning from 2017 to the present.

David Row’s quartz-like paintings transform the seemingly solid, two-dimensional surface of each wood panel into an expansive, multi-perspectival space. Using hard-angle edges and intersecting lines, these image-forms destabilize the illusion of a unified shape and combine opposing tendencies, such as rectilinear and curvilinear or positive and negative spaces. As described by artist and art critic Colin Edgington, these paintings are “heavy and light, solid and liquid, mutable and multiple. Luminous layers of paint are scraped and incised to reveal underlying dimensions of color, hinting towards infinite planes beyond the surface.”

In some pieces, vibrant, neon colors radiate light from the edges, causing the painting to pulse and vibrate as if emitting energy. Other paintings on linen stretched over panel feature more lustrous, metallic sheens that reflect and glimmer, changing color when viewed from different angles. The fluorescent and metallic pigments also bounce light around the periphery of the shapes to create an incandescent glow, evoking the changing sensation of vision at dawn or dusk.

DAVID ROW (b. 1949, Portland, ME) grew up outside of New Haven, CT and now lives and works between Maine and New York City. He received his BFA from Yale in 1972 and, after a year studying Indian music in Calcutta, returned there to complete his MFA. Since the 1980s, he has been in dialogue with the trajectory of abstract painting in New York, including artists such as Frank Stella and Robert Mangold. His works are in the permanent collections of museums worldwide including The Brooklyn Museum, The Carnegie Museum of Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego among others. He is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Grant in Painting (1987) and the Isaac N. Maynard Prize for Painting from the National Academy Museum, in New York, in May 2008.

LOCKS GALLERY
600 Washington Square South, Philadelphia, PA 19106

Stephen Talasnik @ Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Jackson Hole - "Otherworldly: Select Drawings" Exhibition

Stephen Talasnik 
Otherworldly: Select Drawings
Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Jackson Hole
14 December 2023 – 4 February 2024

Stephen Talasnik
Stephen Talasnik 
Journal of Memory, 2023 
Graphite on paper, 15 ½ x 58 ½ inches

Stephen Talasnik
Stephen Talasnik 
Savant, 2013 
Graphite on paper, 70 x 48 inches

Stephen Talasnik
Stephen Talasnik 
Elusive Figure #1, 2022-2023 
Graphite and ink on paper, 30 x 22 inches

TAYLOE PIGGOTT GALLERY presents Otherworldly: Select Drawings, its first solo exhibition featuring drawings by New York-based artist Stephen Talasnik.
 
Featuring a substantive selection of black and white drawings spanning the last twenty-plus years of his career, this exhibition explores the pictorial achievements of an artist who has pushed technical drawing beyond mark making to an experience with, as Lebbeus Woods noted, “this power to fascinate, confound, and reveal.” Through Stephen Talasnik’s hand we experience an adventure into an imagined world at the intersection of drawing and building.

Stephen Talasnik’s drawings explore otherworldly landscape and objects that evoke childhood memories. “If there was ever a moment of divine inspiration, it would be the instance I saw the General Motors’ Futurama exhibition and the Panorama of the City of New York at the 1964 Fair,” said Talasnik. “A lifelong obsession with visionary architecture was established at the Fair and I started doing drawings and sculptures of future cities after wandering through the Pavilions.”
 
Originally from Philadelphia, Stephen Talasnik grew up in an urban neighborhood surrounded by oil refineries, a shipyard, a helicopter factory, and an airport, immersing him in the aesthetics of industrial building. He lived in a house that bordered a local creek, providing him an opportunity to unearth the past as he searched for fossils imbued with fictional narratives. He turned these experiences into a world explored through drawing with pencil and building complex structures from wood.
 
Stephen Talasnik has spent the better part of sixty years inventing the past and envisioning and documenting the future. His work is informed by time travel and myth-making, intrigued with the infrastructure of the urban environment. The work is, as the title of the exhibition indicates, otherworldly, suggesting a moment in time without providing absolute coordinates. Often defined as “Fictional Engineering”, he uses no system of measurement, relying on the aesthetics of intuition and invention.

Working in his Brooklyn studio and ever informed by intuitive engineering and the human form, Stephen Talasnik continues to explore the unlimited capacity of the fictional object and landscape. Seduced by a visionary’s mantra, he relies on his personal encyclopedia of experience to define an imagined world that explores the visual capacity of a self-defined beauty. Archeological in nature, the viewer is invited to examine a personalized lexicon; extracting clues but challenged to determine specific identity. Employing pencil or wood, Stephen Talasnik’s works must always suggest the unfinished yet complete.
 
Stephen Talasnik attended the Rhode Island School of Design (BFA) where he studied Black and White theory with photographers Aaron Siskind and Harry Callahan, who nurtured his passion for drawing. His graduate studies took him to Rome with the Tyler School of Art (MFA) where he drew both the human form and architecture from the Classical environment. After completing his formal studies, Stephen Talasnik moved to Tokyo where he spent three years. It was in Tokyo that a fascination with hand building re-emerged after studying the art of bamboo construction. Following his time in Japan, Stephen Talasnik spent ten years traveling through Asia, all while commuting to his studio in New York City. These seminal experiences inform Stephen Talasnik’s obsession with drawing and building landscapes and objects that defy time or place.

In 2010, Stephen Talasnik ventured into the world of land art, and has completed major installations at the Storm King Art Center (NY); the Tippet Rise Art Center (MO); the Denver Botanic Garden (CO); the Russel Wright Design Center (NY); and Architektur Galerie Berlin. Stephen Talasnik has maintained ongoing studio investigations while exhibiting internationally. His work has been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art (NY); the Albertina (Vienna); the British Museum (London); the National Gallery of Art (DC); the Pompidou Centre (Paris); and the Whitney Museum (NY) among others. Stephen Talasnik lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

TAYLOE PIGGOTT GALLERY 
62 South Glenwood Street, Jackson, WY 83001

11/01/24

Alia Farid @ Chisenhale Gallery, London - "Elsewhere" Exhibition

Alia Farid: Elsewhere
Chisenhale Gallery, London
Through 4 February 2024

Alia Farid
ALIA FARID 
Research image (2023)  
Produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London, 
and commissioned  by Chisenhale Gallery, London; 
Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain, Brest; 
The Power Plant, Toronto; and Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna. 
Courtesy of the artist.

Alia Farid
ALIA FARID 
El Amal (2023) and El Nilo (menú) (2023), left to right
Produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London, 
and commissioned  by Chisenhale Gallery, London; 
Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain, Brest; 
and The Power Plant, Toronto.
Photo: Andy Keate

Alia Farid
ALIA FARID
 
Mezquita de Río Piedras (2023), Chucherías (2023),
Tierra Santa (2023), and Mezquita de Hatillo (2023), left to right
Produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London, 
and commissioned  by Chisenhale Gallery, London; 
Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain, Brest; 
and The Power Plant, Toronto.
Photo: Andy Keate

Alia Farid
ALIA FARID
 
Elsewhere (2023) 
Installation view, Chisenhale Gallery, London, 2023 
Produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London, 
and commissioned  by Chisenhale Gallery, London; 
Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain, Brest; 
and The Power Plant, Toronto.
Photo: Andy Keate

Elsewhere is a major commission and the first solo exhibition in the UK by ALIA FARID. Working in film, sculpture, and textile, Alia Farid traces histories often marginalised or obscured by the Global North. In her artworks, communities, local practices, and traditions are reconsidered, giving the rhythms of everyday life political significance and potency.

Sixteen hand-woven and embroidered rugs span the length of the gallery. Drawing from photographs, archival material, and interviews with local people, the works detail cityscapes – buildings, shop fronts, and adverts – that conjure the presence of the Palestinian diaspora in Puerto Rico. Pharmacies and restaurants, owned and operated by Palestinians, are woven alongside brightly coloured mosques and a menu detailing ‘Arabic cuisine’.

The result of a close collaboration with weavers in Samawa, in southern Iraq, the textiles have been crafted through a combination of flat weaving and chain stitching specific to the region. Architecture, script (Arabic and Spanish), and traditional woven motifs recur throughout, illuminating how migration from one region in the Global South to another, brings forth new meanings, forms, and expressions of shared struggle and solidarity. Hanging in two parallel rows, the installation creates panoramic views, and a layering of lived history and daily routine.

Elsewhere is a growing material archive that traces the ways styles, symbols, rituals, and other social devices coalesce across continents. It is the first chapter of an ongoing research project, initially conceived in 2013, which maps Arab and South Asian migration to Latin America and the Caribbean. Other sites of investigation include Trinidad, Cuba, and Mexico. In this accumulative and iterative process, Elsewhere marks one crossroads on an intricate map.

Elsewhere is produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London, and co-commissioned by Chisenhale Gallery, London; Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain, Brest; The Power Plant, Toronto; and Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna. It will be exhibited at CAC Passerelle, Brest from 23 February to 18 May 2024 and Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna thereafter

ALIA FARID lives and works in Kuwait and Puerto Rico. She has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from la Escuela de Artes Plásticas de Puerto Rico (San Juan), a Master of Science in Visual Studies from the Visual Arts Program at MIT (Cambridge, Massachusetts) and a Master of Arts in Museum Studies and Critical Theory from the Programa d’Estudis Independents, MACBA (Barcelona). Selected exhibitions include: In Lieu of What Is, Kunsthalle Basel, Basel, Switzerland (2022); Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It’s Kept, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2022); Forecast Form: Art in the Caribbean Diaspora 1990s - Today, MCA Chicago, Chicago (2022); Alia Farid: At the Time of the Ebb, Wäinö Aaltonen Museum of Art (WAM), Turku, Finland (2021); 10th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, QAGOMA, Brisbane (2021); Alia Farid, Kunstinstituut Melly, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (2020); Yokohama Triennale 2020, Afterglow, Yokohama, Japan (2020) In Lieu of What Was, Portikus, Frankfurt/Main (2019); Between Dig and Display, Galerie Imane Farès, Paris (2017). Farid is nominated for the Artes Mundi 10 and the Nam June Paik Award 2023, and is the recipient of The Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award 2023.

CHISENHALE GALLERY 
64 Chisenhale Road, London, E3 5QZ 

08/01/24

Heidi Bucher @ Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing - "Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins" Exhibition

Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins
Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing
Through January 21, 2024

Heidi Bucher
Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins
Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing

Red Brick Art Museum presents a major retrospective exhibition entitled "Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins", featuring the avant-garde artist HEIDI BUCHER (1926-1993). Regarded as one of the most significant but widely overlooked artists of the 20th century, Heidi Bucher's showcase is curated by Yan Shijie with assistance from Yan Zi. For the first time in China, this exhibition presents over 100 of her important works, including rediscovered and restored visual materials, early paintings on paper, abstract silk collages, wearable sculptures from her time in Los Angeles, her iconic "skinning" series that explores the relationship between architecture and the human body, and her later works created on Lanzarote Island. These transformative artworks delve into human psychology and spatial connections while also addressing important themes of gender, society, and politics that are central to her artistic expression.

In 1983, at the age of 57, Heidi Bucher set foot on Lanzarote, Spain, a volcanic island situated amid the vastness of the Atlantic Ocean. Surrounded by stretches of black lava and volcanic ash — “source of immersion and trust in the primal and the natural”, this has become the place where her finds inspiration.
  
In 1992, she created her final artwork, "La Vida El Muerte" (Life Death), using an old tree trunk to craft a cupboard. Inside were two sacks filled with volcanic ash, one labeled "Life" and the other "Death," both signed with her initials "H.B." Her son, Indigo Bucher, wondered, "Are these bags a ticket from her own life and death? Was she sending these to herself with the essence of life, using Picon (lava ash from Lanzarote) inside? "

Gazing back at Heidi Bucher's artistic journey, her true beginning can be traced back to 1972 when she showcased "Bodyshells" at Venice Beach in Los Angeles. This piece of artwork, along with "Bodywrappings," denoted her first independent series after years of collaboration with her husband, Carl Bucher. This series continued the concept of "Landings to Wear," which involved strolls on Manhattan streets and the transformation of static sculptures into dynamic, wearable, three-dimensional art. During that time, the United States was experiencing a vibrant wave of feminist movements. In Los Angeles, Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro founded the feminist art project "Woman House." As a member, Heidi Bucher actively supported "Woman House" and participated in one of its exhibitions. Her time in Los Angeles undoubtedly laid the foundation for her future artistic endeavors.

In 1973, after returning from Los Angeles to Switzerland, where women had just attained suffrage rights in 1971, Heidi Bucher divorced her husband due to creative differences. She rented an underground, windowless cold storage room in Zurich and transformed the former butcher shop into her personal studio. The studio, known as "Borg," marked the beginning of her independent artistic journey, separate from being someone's wife or daughter. In this "safe" space of self-discovery, she embarked on her most groundbreaking creations.

Bucher invented a unique method where she directly "peeled" the interior of spaces like "skin" using latex, a process she dubbed "metamorphosis." During this period, she also employed a mixture of latex and shells to preserve old clothing, creating a texture on the surface that resembled skin in both color and quality. These latex works exuded a distinctly feminine element, featuring items such as pillows, blankets, and even underwear and socks. They not only captured the wrinkles and folds of the garments but also preserved the personal history of their owners.

After her first spatial "skinning" work, "Borg" (1976), Heidi Bucher embarked on a series of architectural "skinnings" related to private domains, including her father's "Gentlemen's Study" (1978) and the "skinning" series of her parental home, which began in 1980. These works delved into a deeper exploration of power dynamics within the family. Bucher believed that the architectural spaces she inhabited and interacted with were not just composed of bricks and cement but also containers of gendered memories and experiences. As she "cleaned" away traces of the past in these rooms during the "skinning" process, it symbolized an imaginative detachment from the patriarchal family structure. Bucher viewed the physical exertion during this process as a form of spiritual liberation.

In the 1980s, Heidi Bucher's "skinning" work expanded beyond private spaces to include public sites with collective historical memories. In 1983, Bucher conducted "skinning" and a performance at the former site of the Le Landeron women's prison. In 1987, she performed "skinning" on the long-abandoned Grand Hôtel Brissago, a place that had once been used to detain Jewish women and children during World War II.

In 1988, Heidi Bucher sought out an abandoned private psychiatric clinic once run for four generations by the Binswanger family, the Bellevue Sanatorium in Bad Kreuzlingen, on Lake Constance. Dr. Binswanger collaborated with the founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, and co-published the book "Studies on Hysteria" (the term hysteria being derived from the Greek word hystera, which means uterus.) Throughout the early 20th century, psychiatrists attributed "hysteria" to women's biological characteristics, leading to the violation of many women's human rights. Curatorial Assistant Yan Zi described the floating artwork "The Parlour Office of Doctor Binswanger" as "a soul-like bodyshell, resembling a confession, an association about rituals, mourning and commemorating the countless persecuted women here, exposing and exhibiting their memories, liberating them from the shackles of the past..."

From her days as a student studying fashion design to becoming an artist, Bucher consistently transcended her era, both in her concepts and creations. Curator Yan Shijie stated, "'Bodyshells' marks the first step on Bucher's path to self-liberation. Beginning with "skinning" her parental home, she attempted to break free from the constraints of the patriarchal and cultural norms of that time. The prison 'skinning' marked her entry into the realm of public spaces with political and historical significance. She decoded the power dynamics of knowledge production through her interpretation of the psychiatric clinic where "Studies on Hysteria" originated. By "skinning" the hotel where women and children were once incarcerated by the Nazis, she confronted collective historical oblivion. The "skins" she created became her embodiment."
Curatorial Assistant Yan Zi remarked, "Heidi Bucher's artworks are like energized fossils, narrating the memories and traces of an era, shifting people's perceptions to the profound meanings beyond the material. As a significant artist of the 20th century who has been overlooked in mainstream art history narratives, Heidi Bucher's works have withstood the test of time, eventually gaining recognition within the art world. They continue to thrive, seamlessly intertwining with the tapestry of time, leaving an indelible and profound impact..."
Curator: Yan Shijie

Curatorial Assistant: Yan Zi

Organised by Red Brick Art Museum

Supported by: The Estate of Heidi Bucher, Art Sonje Center, Embassy of Switzerland in China

HEIDI BUCHER - BIOGRAPHY
 
Heidi Bucher (b. 1926, Winterthur, Switzerland; d. 1993, Brunnen, Switzerland) was a Swiss artist who is best remembered for her innovative use of latex and exploration of the physical boundaries between the body and its surroundings. Serving simultaneously as means of historical preservation and metaphorical molting, Bucher’s Hauträume—or “roomskins”—act as indexes of the complicated relationship humans have to their bodies and pasts. Working across the United States, Switzerland, and the Canary Islands, Bucher forged a practice anchored in familial, cultural, and architectural histories and deeply entwined with contemporary concerns around the boundaries between public and private space, and femininity and the body. Though Bucher’s many bodies of work—from her early drawings and wearable sculptures to her later latex-encased objects and Hauträume—each reflect distinct artistic interests and origins, they all trace back to the artist’s mantra, which uniquely summarizes her career-long engagement with bodies and rooms: Räume sind Hüllen, sind Häute (Spaces are shells, are skins). 
 
Beginning in the 1970s, Heidi Bucher embalmed clothing in a mixture of latex and mother of pearl, preserving the objects as artifacts of their time and creating a surface that appeared skin-like in both color and texture. Bucher primarily used women’s clothing, such as nightdresses and pantyhose, as a critical response to the rigid gender restrictions she had experienced during her childhood and adolescence. By the end of the decade, Bucher began applying her signature latex medium to the surfaces of domestic objects and spaces, aligning women’s clothing with these designated “feminine” spaces. Allowing the latex mixture to harden, then peeling it off, Bucher produced translucent skins that held elements of paint, rust, dirt, and the minute details and markings of the architecture. During the years that followed, Bucher produced several major bodies of work based on the domestic spaces of her past—her ancestral house in Winterthur, the study in her parents’ home, and her studio in Zurich. Each space she inhabited was rendered translucent and ghostly, like a visual memory that, due to the fragile nature of the latex material, would warp and discolor over time. Displayed suspended mid-air, the series of latex Hauträume are simultaneously monumental and fragile, mimicking the very process by which they are created; the removal of the latex from the architectural space required a great deal of both physical strength and delicate dexterity. 
 
Later in her career, Heidi Bucher expanded her practice to engage with public spaces, such as Swiss hotels, government offices, and mental health institutions. Today, her work exists in many surviving drawings, sculptures, and fragments, as well as in the photographs and videos which were often integral to the documentation and even creation of each body of latex works.
 
Heidi Bucher attended the School for Applied Arts in Zurich from 1942 to 1946, specializing in Fashion Design. Solo exhibitions of her work have been organized at Art Sonje Center, Seoul, South Korea (2023); Muzeum Susch, Zernez, Switzerland (2022); Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland (2022); Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany (2021); Parasol Unit, London, United Kingdom (2018); Swiss Institute of Contemporary Art, New York, NY (2014); Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris, France (2013); Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich, Switzerland (2004); Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Warth-Weiningen, Switzerland (1993); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA (1972); Musée d’Art Contemporain, Montréal, Canada (1971); and Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY (1971) among others. Recent group exhibitions featuring her work include Textile Garden, Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich, Switzerland (2022); GIGANTISME — ART & INDUSTRIE, Fonds régional d’art contemporain du Nord-Pas de Calais, Dunkirk, France (2019); Entropy, I write your name, Le Magasin, Grenoble, France (2019); The Psyche as Political Arena, Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Baden-Baden, Germany (2019); In the Shadow of Forward Motion, Zabludowicz Collection, London, United Kingdom (2019); An Intricate Weave, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham, United Kingdom (2018); The Everywhere Studio, Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL (2017); Women House, la Monnaie de Paris, Paris, France and National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C. (2017); Viva Arte Viva, 57th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2017); No Place Like Home, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel (2017); Room, Warwick Arts Centre, Warwick, United Kingdom (2017); and Artists and Architecture, Variable Dimensions, Pavillon de l’Arsenal, Paris, France (2015). 
 
Heidi Bucher’s work is featured in numerous international public and private collections, including Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau, Switzerland; Centre Pompidou, Paris, France; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel; KADIST Art Foundation, Paris, France and San Francisco, CA;  Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Winterthur, Switzerland; Kunsthaus Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland; Kunstmuseum Luzern, Lucerne, Switzerland; Muzeum Susch, Zernez, Switzerland; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich, Switzerland; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Musée Jenisch Vevey, Vevey, Switzerland; Sammlung Goetz, Munich, Germany; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Tate, London, United Kingdom; Zabludowicz Collection, London, United Kingdom.

YAN SHIJIE - BIOGRAPHY

Yan Shijie is the founder, director and curator of the Red Brick Art Museum. Always adhering to the value of ‘academic-oriented,’ he is a pioneer in proposing and implementing the concept of ‘ecological museum experience’ in China. In 2021, he curated the project "Xu Bing : Art Beyond the Kármán Line", which explored the intersection of contemporary art and aerospace technology. He also curated the first solo exhibition in China of the American artist, "James Lee Byars: The Perfect Moment". In 2020 he curated the large international exhibition “2020+”, attempts to open a multi-dimensional space for understanding the pandemic, public crises and social upheavals have blanketed the globe. In 2019 he curated the Sarah Lucas’ largest eponymous solo exhibition in Asia, ‘Sarah Lucas’. In 2018, he curated ‘The unspeakable openness of things’-the largest solo exhibition of Olafur Eliasson in China to date. In the largest Sino-German cultural exchange project in 2017, ‘Deutschland 8-Deutsche Kunst in China’, Yan Shijie as the deputy general curator together with the general curator Fan Di’an and Walter Smerling curated ‘Prologue-German Informel Art’. In 2016, he curated the exhibition ‘Identification Zone: Chinese and Danish Furniture Design’ which was the first design-centered dialogue between Chinese classical furniture and Danish furniture masterpieces.  Other well-received exhibitions curated by Yan Shijie include ‘Izumi Kato’ (2018), ‘Andreas Mühe: Photography’ (2018), ‘Andres Serrano: An American Perspective’ (2017) and ‘Wen Pulin Archive of Chinese Avant-Garde Art of the 80s and 90s’ (2016). The aforementioned exhibitions have constructed deep and multi-dimensional explorations and reflections on contemporary art from various perspectives.

RED BRICK ART MUSEUM
Hegezhuang, Cuigezhuang, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100103

Initial Dates: August 5 – October 8, 2023

06/01/24

The Cutting Edge of Lu Shengzhong @ Chambers Fine Art, New York

The Cutting Edge of Lu Shengzhong
Chambers Fine Art, New York
December 4, 2023 – April 14, 2024

Chambers Fine Art prsents The Cutting Edge of Lu Shengzhong. In the history of Chambers Fine Art, Lu Shengzhong (1952-2022) played a role of particular importance, both chronologically and as an indication of the guiding principles of the gallery after It was established in New York in 2000. This display of selected works is a tribute to Lu’s singular vision as an artist and as an influence on several generations of younger artists at the Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA), Beijing where he taught for many years. 

When Christophe Mao made the decision to open a gallery devoted to contemporary Chinese art in the years immedIately before the millennium, there was an urgent need to identify a group of artists who did not conform to what had already become a stereotype in the West, the flashy oil paintings associated with Political Pop and Gaudy Art. When he was introduced to Lu in Beijing, he immediately felt that he would be an ideal candidate for his first exhibition of contemporary art as at that time the plan was to have alternate exhibitions of contemporary art and Classical Chinese art and scholar’s objects.  

Born in Shandong Province China in 1952, Lu Shengzhong graduated from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 1987, where he had been associated with the Department of Folk Arts.  Continuing his research, he made numerous trips in Shanxi Province and other areas where he developed considerable expertise in the tradition of paper-cuts pasted on walls, windows etc., particularly for Chinese New Year.  He was the author of numerous books on the subject.  

Simultaneously, he was establishing a reputation with his own remarkable paper cuts in which he said, he “walked away from the cultural confusion of the time and turned back to the villages, to traditional Chinese folk art.” He began working on a very large scale, as in the 1990 installation Hall of Calling the Soul  filled with thousands of the “little red figures ” that were to become his signature as a paper cut artist.  

The title of Lu Shengzhong’s first exhibition at Chambers Fine Arts, First Encounter (November 11, 2001 – January 2, 2002) refers not only to the first meeting between Christophe Mao and Lu Shengzhong but also to the introduction of Lu’s art to the United States. In the large vertical panels of Poetry of Harmony, lines of what appear to be Chinese characters are in fact left-over scraps of paper from the intricately cut circular forms at the top. The relationship between positive and negative forms is of crucial importance in Lu’s art. Favorably reviewed by Holland Cotter in the New York Times (January 5, 2001), he noted that Lu “used this fragile medium , notable for its lacey, intricate patterns, to create a temple-like installation.” 

Two more exhibitions followed at Chambers Fine Art, Lu Shengzhong’s The Book of Humanity (November  6, 2003 – January 4, 2004) and Square Earth, Round Heaven Lu Shenzhong Works 2007. In the former, there were two series of works, sets of books in which red on black or black on red collages were gathered in book form, some with Western style bindings, some with traditional Chinese sewn bindings, and Human Bricks in which the hundreds of sheets of red paper from which“little red figures “ had been cut were assembled in multi-layered collages. In the latter, Lu moved into three dimensions, assembling multiple layers of paper into cubes and spheres, described by Robert E. Harriet, Jr., as the “visual and spatial correlates of round/heaven  and square/earth that permeates Chinese art and architecture.  

In his role as an educator, Lu Shengzhong became the director of the department of experimental art at CAFA in 2004 and retained that position until his retirement.  Lu Shengzhong’s achievement as an artist was to develop the traditional Chinese craft of papercut in such a way that it was possible to use it not only for small scale individual works but also for installations of great complexity. For those who had the privilege to watch Lu Shengzhong at work, using his scissors with unerring skill so that complex designs in which positive and negative forms emerged effortlessly without any preliminary drawings, it was no suppose that the same gift could be used in the creation of three-dimensional versions of his “little red men.”  

CHAMBER FINE ART
55 East 11th Street, New York, NY 10003

04/01/24

Christo and Jeanne-Claude @ Saatchi Gallery, London - 'Boundless' Exhibition

Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Boundless
Saatchi Gallery, London
15 November 2023 – 22 January 2024

Saatchi Gallery presents the largest retrospective of the renowned artist duo Christo and Jeanne-Claude ever in the UK. Titled Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Boundless the exhibition traces their artistic journey, from experimental beginnings in Paris across six decades of collaboration. The exhibition showcases rarely-seen works and offers a glimpse into future projects to be undertaken by the estate of the artists.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Boundless introduces visitors to the couple’s seminal projects, ranging from their early collaborations to monumental masterpieces, among them Wrapped Coast in Australia (1969), Surrounded Islands (1983) in Miami/Florida, The Pont Neuf Wrapped in Paris (1985), The Umbrellas (1991), installed simultaneously in Japan and the USA, The Gates in Central Park, New York City (2005) and The Floating Piers at Lake Iseo in Italy (2016). It also includes the perspective The Mastaba, a project for Abu Dhabi. This exhibition is the last to ever be signed off by Christo before his death and is divided into ten thematic chapters.

The exhibition reveals a story of love and artistic collaboration between Christo and Jeanne-Claude, celebrating their artistic synergy and profound connection, contextualised alongside their artistic contemporaries, including Jean Dubuffet, Yves Klein, and Lucio Fontana. Boundless unveils a vivid narrative of passionate determination, highlighting the couple’s refusal to be confined by traditional norms and how this distinctive approach, fuelled their creative vision and shaped their artistic journey.

Jeanne-Claude’s gift for communication and her tenacity became the driving force in realising projects, often over the course of decades. It was essential to their artistic ethos that their ambitious installations were funded independently. The exhibition showcases how drawings, sketches, prints, and collages were transformed into valuable currency, providing the foundation for realising their larger-than-life visions.

A climactic juncture in their journey is showcased through the breathtaking wrapping of the Berlin Reichstag in 1995 and the Arc de Triomphe in Paris in 2021. These monumental achievements embody their daring and creative prowess, demonstrating their ability to transform public spaces into artistic canvases.

Journey through the unrealised dreams that shaped their legacy, with insight into The Mastaba (project for Abu Dhabi), which will be an enduring monument to the couple’s boundless creativity. Larger than the Great Pyramid of Giza, this visionary concept stands as a testament to the enduring impact of Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s expression and drive.

The exhibition was conceived and curated by Kay Heymer, together with co-curator Sophie-Marie Sümmermann and was first shown at Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf. Alongside Christo and Jeanne-Claude, the following artists are represented in the exhibition: Arman, Alberto Burri, César, Jean Dubuffet, Lucio Fontana, Raymond Hains, Yves Klein, Jacques Mahé de la Villeglé, Piero Manzoni, Arnulf Rainer, Niki de Saint Phalle, Daniel Spoerri, Antoni Tàpies, Jean Tinguely and Wolf Vostell.
Lorenza Giovanelli, representative of the artists’ estate: “Christo and Jeanne-Claude have a long history with the city of London. Their first project in London dates back to 1963 when they wrapped a female model in the studio of photographer and filmmaker Charles Wilp. Over the years, they returned many times and became close friends with art dealers Annely and David Ju-da, who, since 1971, organized more than a dozen exhibitions with Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

In 2018, Christo realized The London Mastaba on Hyde Park’s Serpentine Lake, his first major public out-door work in the UK. Now thanks to Ingrid and Thomas Jochheim, who shared a long friendship with the artists and have made their collection available to the public, the exhibition at Saatchi Gallery offers a unique opportunity to revisit Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s work on a large scale.”
SAATCHI GALLERY
Duke of York’s HQ, King’s Road, London, SW3 4RY

CHRISTO AND JEANNE-CLAUDE
 
BY JACOB BAAL-TESHUVA
Published by Taschen
26 x 21 cm, 96 pages
@Taschen - www.taschen.com

A short but very interesting book.

02/01/24

Kim Lim @ The Hepworth Wakefield - "Space, Rhythm & Light" Exhibition

Kim Lim: Space, Rhythm & Light
The Hepworth Wakefield
25 November 2023 – 2 June 2024

The Hepworth Wakefield presents the first major museum exhibition of Kim Lim’s work since 1999, offering unparalleled insight into the artist’s life and work. Space, Rhythm & Light displays over 100 artworks created over four decades by Kim Lim, alongside extensive archive material, most of which has never been seen publicly before, to show the full breadth of Kim Lim’s work.

KIM LIM (1936-1997) was born in Singapore to Chinese parents. She travelled to the UK in 1954 to study art, first at Central Saint Martin’s School of Fine Art (1954 - 1956) where she was taught by Anthony Caro and Elizabeth Frink and then at the Slade School of Art (1956 - 1960). Kim Lim remained in Britain for the rest of her life, establishing a successful career that has since fallen from view; her work was acquired for museum collections across the globe and she had substantial exhibitions at Axiom Gallery, London, National Museum of Art, Singapore, and Tate Gallery, London. In recent years, Lim’s work has begun to feature more prominently in major group survey exhibitions and publications, bringing her important artistic legacy back into view in British post-war art histories.

Space, Rhythm & Light explores Kim Lim’s focused engagement with abstraction across a wide range of media and materials. Inspired by forms found in the natural world as well as those in global cultures, Lim’s distinct contribution to 20th-century British sculpture and printmaking has been widely overlooked compared to her contemporaries. On display are Kim Lim’s multipart wood and metal sculptures that defined her work between the 1950s and 1970s, as well as her later minimalist stone carvings made in the 1980s and 1990s. The exhibition pays special attention to Lim’s printmaking - a practice she felt was equally important as sculpting, but for which she is less well known. Prints and unique ‘paper cut’ works are displayed with corresponding sculptures to show how methods of carving were interconnected in Lim’s interdisciplinary exploration of nature, light and architecture. Also featured are selected maquettes, sketchbooks, audio recordings, and documentary photographs of Lim’s own personal library of research objects and her studio.

Kim Lim cited travel as one of the most important aspects of her art education and development, and visited Japan, Cambodia, Malaysia, China and India between the 1960s and 1980s to ‘see things in its place where it was meant to be, in the light that it was meant to be’. Rarely seen photographs taken by the artist documenting her travels in Asia with her husband, the artist William Turnbull, will highlight how Lim absorbed diverse cultural and historic references, as well as drawing on her own multicultural background, to develop her minimalist approach to abstraction.
Dr Abi Shapiro, Curator, said: ‘Space, Rhythm & Light is the most comprehensive exhibition of Kim Lim’s work to date. Lim’s contribution is often overlooked in histories of post-war British art, but here, in the context of the legacy of Barbara Hepworth at The Hepworth Wakefield, there couldn’t be a better time or place to showcase the quality and value of Lim’s work. I am very grateful to the Kim Lim Estate for their generosity in allowing us to share so much information which provide visitors with an in-depth understanding of how Lim developed her technical mastery of numerous materials as well as her own unique style and visual language.’
The Estate of Kim Lim commented on the exhibition: ‘We are delighted that UK audiences have the opportunity to encounter the breadth of Kim Lim’s artistic practice through this exhibition at The Hepworth Wakefield. Over the last few years, we have felt an incredibly positive response from the public sector in promoting Kim Lim’s work, and rebalancing many of the outmoded and limiting art historical narratives still in play. It seems fitting that Kim Lim’s first major UK museum show since 1999 should be hosted by an institution so closely associated with another artist, Barbara Hepworth, who challenged these very narratives through her practice and life.’

Kim Lim
Kim Lim: Space, Rhythm & Light 
Exhibition Catalogue
An illustrated book, published by Lund Humphries and supported by Paul Mellon Centre, accompanies the exhibition. It is the first monograph of the artist and  includes writings by a range of leading academics, artists and curators from across the globe, situating Kim Lim’s work more firmly within post-war British sculpture histories, as well as exploring reasons for her marginalisation in narratives since her death.
THE HEPWORTH WAKEFIELD
Gallery Walk, Wakefield, West Yorkshire WF1 5AW

01/01/24

Anish Kapoor @ Palazzo Strozzi, Florence - "Untrue Unreal" Exhibition

Anish Kapoor. Untrue Unreal
Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
7 October 2023 – 4 February 2024

Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi in Florence presents Anish Kapoor. Untrue Unreal, a major new exhibition devised and produced with the celebrated artist who has revolutionised the notion of sculpture in contemporary art. Curated by Arturo Galansino, Director General of Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, the show features monumental installations, intimate environments and thought-provoking forms that will forge an original and captivating dialogue between the art of Anish Kapoor and the architecture and audience of Palazzo Strozzi. 

With a wide range of early, mid-career and recent works, including a new architecturally scaled work especially conceived for the Renaissance courtyard of Palazzo Strozzi, the exhibition offers an opportunity to engage directly with the artist’s oeuvre in all its versatility, discord, entropy and ephemerality. Palazzo Strozzi becomes a venue at once concave and convex, whole and yet fragmented, in which visitors are called on to question their senses.

In Anish Kapoor's art, the unreal merges with the untrue, transforming or negating the common perception of reality. He invites us to explore a world where the boundaries between what is true and false dissolve, opening the doors to the realm of the impossible. One of the distinguishing features is the way Anish Kapoor’s works transcend their materiality. Pigment, stone, steel, wax and silicone, to name only a few of the materials he works with, are manipulated – carved, polished, saturated and formed – to the point of a dissolution of boundaries between the plastic and the immaterial. Colour in Anish Kapoor’s hands is not simply matter and hue, but becomes an immersive phenomenon, containing its own spatial and illusive volume.

Anish Kapoor’s works merge empty and full space, absorbing and reflecting surface, geometrical and biomorphic form. Shunning categorisation and distinguishing himself by a unique visual language that embraces painting, sculpture and architectural forms, Kapoor explores space and time, the interior and the exterior, urging us to probe in the first person the limits and potential of our relationship with the world around us and to reflect on perceived dualities such as body and mind, nature and artifice. His work sparks amazement and uneasiness, encouraging us to question certainties and embrace complexity. In a world where reality seems increasingly elusive and manipulable, Anish Kapoor challenges us to seek truth beyond appearances, inviting us to explore the territory of the untrue and the unreal.
Arturo Galansino, General Director of the Palazzo Strozzi Foundation and curator of the exhibition states: “In the wake of our series of exhibitions dedicated to the leading figures of contemporary art, Kapoor has engaged in a direct dialogue with the Renaissance architecture. The result is entirely original, almost a kind of dialectical juxtaposition, where symmetry, harmony, and rigor are called into question, and the boundaries between material and immaterial dissolve. Amidst the rational geometries of Palazzo Strozzi, Kapoor invites us in this exhibition to lose and rediscover ourselves, prompting us to question what is untrue or unreal."
Anish Kapoor. Untrue Unreal unfolds in the spaces of Palazzo Strozzi in between the galleries at the Piano Nobile and the Renaissance courtyard, in a journey through Kapoor’s diverse artistic practice that challenges the very notion of form and formlessness, fiction and reality.

At the centre of the courtyard stands "Void Pavilion VI"I (2023), a large pavilion that serves as both a point of departure and arrival in the dialogue between Kapoor’s art and Palazzo Strozzi. Upon entering the sculpture, visitors are confronted by a triad of rectangular voids that invite the gaze to descend within, offering a meditative experience of space, perspective and time that unsettles the rational geometric structure of the Renaissance building in which it sits and the orderliness it so emblematically represents.

At the Piano Nobile, the exhibition takes off with the iconic work "Svayambhu" (2007), a title that derives from the Sanskrit term denoting self-originated entities, akin to the Christian concept of acheropoieta, images not made by human hands. As this vast block of blood-red wax moves slowly along its track between two rooms of Palazzo Strozzi, it creates a dialectic between void and matter as its formless substance is shaped by the architecture it pushes through.

This work is presented in dialogue with "Endless Column" (1992), a work that references Constantin Brâncuși's iconic modernist sculpture of the same title from 1937. Anish Kapoor’s red pigment sculpture penetrates floor and ceiling to create an aethereal architectural physicality that stands as a link between earth and cosmos. On a different scale but equally architectural is "To Reflect an Intimate Part of the Red" (1981), a seminal work from Anish Kapoor's early career that marked his breakthrough on the international art scene as a profoundly original voice in contemporary art. A suggestive combination of yellow and red pigment forms, appear to emerge from the floor—fragile, otherworldly, yet powerfully present.

In "Non-Object Black" (2015) – characterised by the use of the highly innovative material Vantablack, capable of absorbing over 99.9% of visible light – Kapoor challenges the very idea of a physical and tangible object, presenting us with a form that dissipates as the gaze moves around it. In these groundbreaking works Anish Kapoor provokes us to question the very notion of being, offering a reflection not only on the fictional object but on the immateriality that permeates our world. The fullness of the experience of the no-thing is continued in "Gathering Clouds" (2014), concave monochromes that absorb the space around them in their brooding darkness. Anish Kapoor’s work offers a new way of seeing and thinking about how we experience ‘reality’, with his unique use of form and saturation these works are permeated with psychic resonance.

Flesh, organic matter, body and blood are recurring and fundamental themes in Kapoor’s artistic creation. An entire room is dedicated to works in which Kapoor examines a flayed and ravaged interiority that renders the body as entropic and abjected. The large sculpture in steel and resin "A Blackish Fluid Excavation" (2018) evokes a gnarled vaginal void, that crosses the space and the senses of the spectator. On the wall, Kapoor’s paintings created with silicone are shaped with fluid forms that appear to us as visceral masses, pulsating with their own life. These structures twist, expand, and contract, evoking a sense of continuous movement and transformation. At the same time, a strong tactile sensuality arises from the interplay between softness and solidity, organicity and linearity. These qualities underlie works with evocative titles such as "First Milk" (2015), "Tongue Memory" (2016), "Today You Will Be in Paradise" (2016), "Three Days of Mourning" (2016).

The notion of boundaries and the duality between subject and object are central to Anish Kapoor’s mirror works like "Vertigo" (2006), "Mirror" (2018) and "Newborn" (2019), a work that again pays homage to Constantin Brâncuși’s formal experiments. With their inverted reflections, the specular is thrown into the realm of the illusory in works that seem to defy the laws of physics. These large-scale sculptures reflect and distort the surrounding space, enlarging, reducing and multiplying it, creating a sense of unreality and destabilization while drawing the viewer into the indefinite space they emanate.

The exhibition path of the Piano Nobile concludes with "Angel" (1990): large slate stones covered in numerous layers of intense Prussian blue pigment. These weighty masses appear in contradiction with their ethereal appearance; they seem to solidify the air and suggest the transformation of slate slabs into pieces of sky, transfiguring the concept of purity into a material element. Anish Kapoor manipulates the hyper-materiality of this work to evoke a sense of mystery that responds to the esoteric ambition of achieving the fusion of opposites.

ANISH KAPOOR is one of the most influential artists of our time. Born in Mumbai, India in 1954, Anish Kapoor has lived and worked in London since studying sculpture at Hornsey College of Art and Chelsea College of Art in the mid-seventies. In recent years dividing his time between studios in London and Venice.

His works are permanently exhibited in the most important collections and museums around the world from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to the Tate in London; the Prada Foundation in Milan and the Guggenheim Museums in Venice, Bilbao and Abu Dhabi. Recent solo exhibitions have been held at Galleria dell’Accademia di Venezia & Palazzo Manfrin, Venice, Italy (2022); Modern Art Oxford, UK (2021); Houghton Hall, Norfolk, UK (2020); Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany (2020); Central Academy of Fine Arts Museum and Imperial Ancestral Tempie, Beijing (2019); Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires (2019); Serralves, Museu de Arte Contemporanea, Porto, Portugal (2018); University Museum of Contemporary Art (MUAC), Mexico City (2016); Chateau de Versailles, France (2015); Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, Moscow, (2015); Gropius Bau, Berlin (2013); Sakip Sabanci Muzesi, Istanbul (2013); Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney (2012).

Anish Kapoor represented Great Britain at the 44th Venice Biennale in 1990 where he was awarded the Premio Duemila Prize. In 1991 he won the Turner Prize and has gone on to receive numerous international awards and honours. Also renowned for his architecturally scaled works, public projects include: Cloud Gate (2004), Millennium Park, Chicago, USA; Leviathan (2011) exhibited at Monumenta, Paris, France; Orbit (2012), Oueen Elizabeth Olympic Park, London; Ark Nova, an inflatable concert hall created for Lucerne Festival, Japan (2013); Descension (2014) most recently installed in Brooklyn Bridge Park, New York, USA (2017) and the soon to be completed Traiano and Universitá Monte St Angelo Metro Stations, Naples, Italy (2002–24).

Curated by Arturo Galansino

PALAZZO STROZZI, FLORENCE

31/12/23

Tim Eitel @ Pace Gallery, NYC - "Tim Eitel: something there somewhere outside" Exhibition

Tim Eitel: something there somewhere outside
Pace Gallery, New York
November 17, 2023 – January 13, 2024 

Pace presents a focused exhibition of new paintings by Tim Eitel at its 540 West 25th Street gallery in New York. The exhibition, titled Tim Eitel: something there somewhere outside, features a selection of works that meditate on painting’s relationship to time and space. This presentation, which takes its title from a line in a Samuel Beckett poem, marks Tim Eitel’s first solo show in New York since 2009.

Tim Eitel’s practice has been influenced by both European figurative painting and American abstract painting. He rose to prominence as a member of the New Leipzig School, a group of figurative painters that coalesced at the Leipzig Academy of Fine Arts in post-reunification Germany. After studying painting under Arno Rink, Tim Eitel moved to Berlin and co-founded the cooperative gallery Liga in 2002. For the past two decades, the artist has culled and simplified elements from a rich repository of photographs and memories to create his atmospheric paintings. Methodically layered and meticulously composed, his work centers on precise representation.

The eight new works in Tim Eitel’s exhibition with Pace in New York vary in scale, with several works— including the two largest—painted entirely in egg tempera and two small-scale ones in oil. The show is staged on the seventh floor of Pace’s New York gallery, and all the works on view can be understood as reimaginings, or hauntings, of exhibition settings—including their own. The most direct, clear-cut reference to Pace’s seventh floor appears in Out Where, which depicts a spectral figure reflected in the gallery’s floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the Chelsea skyline. This work suggests that the figures in all the paintings in the show move through the same gallery space as the viewer—both the real and imagined visitors to the seventh floor occupy the space at different times.

As with some of the artist’s most celebrated works from his early career, these contemplative, subdued paintings consider the ways that this two-dimensional medium can shape our understanding and experience of three- dimensional spaces—specifically, in the case of this body of work, the ways that gallery and museum spaces are supporting characters in the story of art. Featuring almost ghostlike depictions of tripods and electrical cords, Tim Eitel’s new paintings also examine the presence of elements of reproduction, like photography and videography, in art and exhibition making.

A distinct sense of quietude cuts across all the works in the show, which is anchored by a large-scale diptych. In this painting, titled Loop, a figure traverses the gallery space as an apparition would, floating between Tim Eitel’s two canvases. As its title suggests, this work focuses on the circuity of both time and movement.

In his latest paintings, the artist uses vacant space or nearly vacant space to explore the relationships between abstract and figurative elements. Departing from his past work in figuration, Tim Eitel’s new works insist on greater distance between the painted figure and the viewer—the result is an emphasis on the spatial conditions negotiated within the painting rather than the figure in and of itself.

Tim Eitel’s work is on view in the group exhibition Österreich – Deutschland at the Albertina Modern in Vienna through January 21, 2024. He was also included in Figures Seules, a 2023 group show at Lee Ufan's Espace MA in Arles, France. In the past several years, the artist has presented solo exhibitions at the Museen Böttcherstraße Stiftung in Germany, the Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig in Germany, and the Daegu Art Museum in Korea.

TIM EITEL (1971, Leonberg, Germany) conveys a deep command of color, technique, and form in his figurative paintings inspired by his observations of contemporary life and art history. He studied at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig from 1997 to 2001 and was a Meisterschüler (Master Student) of Professor Arno Rink from 2001 through 2003. He has received a number of prestigious awards throughout his career, including the Landesgraduiertenstipendium, Saxonia, Germany (2002) and the Marion Ermer Preis (2003). Cofounder of the collective Galerie LIGA in Berlin, he was one of the leading protagonists of the New Leipzig School before gaining a reputation as one of the most important painters of his generation. Tim Eitel has participated in over fifty group exhibitions and twenty monographic exhibitions worldwide since 2000, including at the Museum zu Allerheiligen, Schaffhausen, Switzerland (2004); Saint Louis Art Museum, Missouri (2005); Kunsthalle Tübingen (2008); Rochester Art Center, Minnesota (2013); Essl Museum, Klosterneuburg, Austria (2013); Kasteel Wijlre, Netherlands (2018); Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig, Germany (2019); and Daegu Art Museum, South Korea (2020). Eitel‘s work is held in numerous important collections, including the Albertina, Vienna; ARKEN Museum of Modern Art, Ishøj, Denmark; Daegu Art Museum, South Korea; Deutsche Bank Collection, Germany; Hamburger Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin; Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden; and the Rubell Family Collection, Miami.

PACE GALLERY NEW YORK
540 West 25th Street, New York City

30/12/23

Exposition The Gold Emperor from Aventicum du J. Paul Getty Museum - Buste en or de Marc Aurèle découvert à Avenches en 1939

Exposition The Gold Emperor from Aventicum du J. Paul Getty Museum
Buste en or de Marc Aurèle découvert à Avenches en 1939
Jusqu'au 29 janvier 2024

Buste en or de Marc Aurèle
Buste en or de Marc Aurèle découvert à Avenches en 1939 
et conservé par les Site et Musée romains d’Avenches  
Crédit: NVP3D

Buste en or de Marc Aurèle
Le buste en or de Marc Aurèle exposé au sein du 
Getty Villa Museum  dans le cadre de l’exposition 
« The Gold Emperor from Aventicum », mai 2023
Crédit : Site et Musée romains d’Avenches

L’histoire du canton de Vaud est riche et les vestiges de cette dernière, conservés au sein des collections cantonales, le sont tout autant. La renommée du patrimoine cantonal dépasse ainsi parfois les frontières nationales et l’exposition temporaire actuelle de la Getty Villa, conçue en collaboration avec les Site et Musée romains d’Avenches, en est un brillant exemple.

La Getty Villa, deuxième site du renommé J. Paul Getty Museum de Los Angeles et dont l’activité se centre sur les arts et cultures de l’Antiquité, a ouvert mercredi 31 mai une nouvelle présentation intitulée The Gold Emperor from Aventicum. L’événement, comme son nom l’indique, est totalement dédié et construit autour du buste en or de l’empereur Marc Aurèle qui régna entre 161 et 180 après J.-C.

La sculpture en or, unique et d’une valeur inestimable, est une des pièces maîtresses des collections patrimoniales cantonales et un bien culturel d’importance nationale. Réalisée à l’aide d’une seule feuille d’or travaillée selon la technique du repoussé, elle pèse un peu plus de 1,5 kilo et fut trouvée à Avenches en 1939 lors des fouilles du sanctuaire du Cigognier. Afin de contextualiser ce chef-d’œuvre, la Getty Villa expose à ses côtés d’autres pièces significatives également trouvées sur sol avenchois, dont quatre inscriptions latines relatives aux élites indigènes romanisées de la ville et aux cultes des divinités locales, ou encore un médaillon de la « mosaïque de vents » trouvée en 1786.

Outre la belle mise en lumière du patrimoine gallo-romain vaudois, de la ville romaine d’Aventicum et plus particulièrement des collections des SMRA, l’occasion est d’importance et doit être soulignée de par sa rareté. En effet, le précieux buste n’a été prêté et exposé depuis sa découverte que cinq fois à l’étranger et cinq fois en Suisse. Le dernier prêt à l’étranger remonte à 2008 et la dernière présentation en Suisse à 2018, lors de l’exposition Cosmos au Palais de Rumine.

Pour Nuria Gorrite, conseillère d’Etat et cheffe du Département de la culture, des infrastructures et des ressources humaines, « cet événement témoigne de la grande valeur des trésors conservés avec soin par les institutions patrimoniales cantonales.  La concrétisation ces prochaines années d’un nouveau Musée romain d’Avenches, permettra enfin aux SMRA de déployer de manière adéquate l’exceptionnel patrimoine dont ils ont la responsabilité et offrira à l’ensemble de la population vaudoise un cadre approprié lui permettant de profiter de son précieux héritage. »

Le buste en or de Marc Aurèle sera exposé jusqu’au 29 janvier 2024 au sein de la Getty Villa à Malibu.

Source : Bureau d'information et de communication de l'État de Vaud, Communiqué de presse, 1er juin 2023

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