Showing posts with label Marlborough Chelsea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marlborough Chelsea. Show all posts

08/11/97

Icon / Iconoclast at Marlborough Chelsea, NYC - An Exhibition of Works by: Francis Bacon, Francesco Clemente, David Hockney, Robin Kahn, Alex Katz, R.B. Kitaj, Ouattara, Ad Reinhardt, Philip Taaffe, Fred Tomaselli, Terry Winters, Curated by Raymond Foye

Icon / Iconoclast
Marlborough Chelsea, New York
November 8 - December 27, 1997

An Exhibition of Works by:

Francis Bacon
Francesco Clemente
David Hockney
Robin Kahn
Alex Katz
R.B. Kitaj
Ouattara
Ad Reinhardt
Philip Taaffe
Fred Tomaselli
Terry Winters

Curated by Raymond Foye

Marlborough Chelsea presents an exhibition of paintings, Icon/Iconoclast. The exhibition, consisting of one work each by eleven artists, is about the persistent power of images in modern life. Even though creative strategies in the arts have varied widely in the past three decades, challenges to pictorialism seem only to strengthen the hold that certain images possess over us. Attempting to break or destroy imagery, artists have, in fact, created entirely new pictorial conceptions expanding our definition of what constitutes a picture. This paradox is expressed by the title of the exhibition.

Beginning with Ad Reinhardt's black painting as an ultimate statement of both the iconic and the iconoclastic impulses in art, the exhibition explores the many ways in which contemporary painters have sought to re-define the image within the formal traditions of Western art. 

Like Ad Reinhardt, Francis Bacon has served as a touchstone for subsequent generations of artists: in this case, painters who have sought to pursue aspects of figuration, portraiture, and the passions of the flesh. Yet, the attempt to instill in modern painting the secular equivalence of the experience of ecstasis - so integral to the art of the Renaissance - was a lifelong preoccupation with both these artists, each in their own way.

The iconic image stands as an object of mediation and contemplation and embodies a system of belief which may be communicated through narrative, metaphor, or allegory. The painters chosen in this exhibition may all be characterized by their commitment to expanding conceptions of picture-making by means of investigating the image itself. The mistrust for iconoclastic images, which persists to this day, springs from similar origins: that artists are conjurers of illusions, and may propagate false beliefs. Recently, similar criticism has been most sharply directed at artists employing figuration and representation such as David Hockney, R.B. Kitaj, Alex Katz, and Francesco Clemente.

In the work of Philip Taaffe and Fred Tomaselli, figurative elements are deployed in the service of abstraction while preserving the flatness and frontality of the icon. Both artists explore a diagrammatic language akin to the mandala or symbolon: ritual configurations that speak to the inner working of an image and its correspondence to archaic forms. The wider perspective of the primacy of the aesthetic experience itself is the basis of the work of Terry Winters whose imagery finds its analogy in the complex nexus of biology and cognitive science.

Conceptualizations of the female body and aspects of women's roles in society have been the subject of recent work by Robin Kahn who draws on sources as diverse as history, alchemy and anthropology. The legacy of symbols which is the inheritance of iconography from Medieval and Renaissance times have functioned as source material for many of her works. In the work of Ouattara, an African artist from the Ivory Coast, the icon comes closest to its animist origins as mediator between the worlds of the human and the divine.

All of the living artists in Icon/Iconoclast are represented by new work. A centerpiece of the exhibition is a major ensemble of paintings and drawings by R.B. Kitaj constituting a single work, The Killer Critic Assassinated by his Widower, Even, (1997). The subject of a controversial exhibition earlier this year at London's Royal Academy, the work is a visual rebuttal to the critical malign following Kitaj's retrospective and the subsequent death of his wife, Sandra, events which the artist relates in the work itself. It is Kitaj's farewell address to London, a final salvo launched at the same philistine cultural establishment that Ezra Pound once lampooned in his famous suite of poems, Hugh Selwyn Mauberley.

Icon/Iconoclast has been organized by Raymond Foye. Along with Francesco Clemente he is co-publisher of Hanuman Books, a press devoted to poetry, Hinduism, and writings by artists (a list that include William Burroughs, Rene Ricard, Francis Picabia, Willem deKooning, Cookie Mueller, René Daumal, Jack Kerouac, Robert Frank, Max Beckmann, Patti Smith and others). He has curated (with Ann Percy) a full scale retrospective of the works of Francesco Clemente, Three Worlds (Philadelphia Museum of Art), and over the past twenty years has edited books, catalogues and livres d'artiste by numerous artists in the exhibition, including David Hockney, R.B. Kitaj, Philip Taaffe, Terry Winters and Francesco Clemente. His published works on poets and poetry include James Schuyler (Farrar, Strauss & Giroux), John Wieners (Black Sparrow Press), Bob Kaufman (New Directions) and Edgar Allan Poe (City Lights Books). He presently lives and works in New York City.

MARLBOROUGH CHELSEA
211 West 19th Street, New York, NY 10011
www.malgoroughgallery.com

07/09/97

Marlborough new gallery in Chelsea, Manhattan's newest art district

MARLBOROUGH GALLERY, NEW YORK, 
TO OPEN A NEW GALLERY IN CHELSEA

Pierre Levai, Director of Marlborough Gallery, New York, has announced that Marlborough will open a gallery in Chelsea, Manhattan's newest art district, on September 18, 1997. The addition of Marlborough Chelsea marks the ninth venue for Marlborough, which, in addition to its 57th Street location in Manhattan, has galleries in London, Madrid, and Santiago, Chile, and offices in Buenos Aires, Hong Kong, Tokyo and Zurich.

Marlborough Gallery's program in Chelsea will include exhibitions of work by artists represented by Marlborough as well as exhibitions organized by independent curators that will feature artists represented by Marlborough in addition to other artists. Furthermore, Marlborough Chelsea will house the offices of International Public Art, Ltd. the independent corporation of Marlborough Gallery Inc. formed last fall, which-under the direction of Dale M. Lanzone, formerly Director of the United States Federal Government's public art program-is committed to the development of international public art projects, with an emphasis on the integration of art, architecture, and the urban and natural environments.
"Marlborough Chelsea provides an excellent opportunity for us to continue our commitment to an expanded international presence on behalf of our artists. Moreover, the new gallery will give us an alternate forum to mount exhibitions that are unique and separate from Marlborough Gallery's 57th Street program," stated Pierre Levai.
Located at 211 West 19th Street, Marlborough Chelsea is comprised of architectural elements characteristic of downtown exhibition spaces. The 4,000 square-foot, glass storefront-which has been designed by Mr. Lanzone in collaboration with architect Eli King-features 14 foot ceilings, a concrete floor and a central row of columns.

The Marlborough Chelsea inaugural exhibition, which will be on view September 18 through October 25, will feature large-scale sculpture by gallery artists Magdalena Abakanowicz and Sir Anthony Caro, as well as Louise Bourgeois. This is Anthony Caro's first exhibition with Marlborough since joining the gallery this month. Marlborough Chelsea, 211 West 19th Street, opens to the public Thursday, September 18th. 1997. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 

MARLBOROUGH GALLERY
www.marlboroughgallery.com

02/09/97

Abakanowicz, Bourgeois, Caro - Marlborough Chelsea, New York - Inaugural Exhibition

Abakanowicz, Bourgeois, Caro
Marlborough Chelsea, New York
September 18 - October 25, 1997

For its inaugural exhibition, Marlborough Chelsea, New York, presents sculptures by Magdalena Abakanowicz, Louise Bourgeois and Sir Anthony Caro. 

The gallery's inaugural exhibition presents one work each by Abakanowicz, Bourgeois and Caro. Each of these works through their physical and conceptual presence, commands and defines the gallery's architectural spaces, creating three interrelated but markedly different environments. These sculptures are of such independent and forceful character that they dominate their environments through the drama of a physical discourse that captures the viewer as if he or she had stumbled into a theater and onto a stage occupied by giants.

Magdalena Abakanowicz channels her deeply personal feelings about loss, isolation, displacement and regeneration as experienced throughout her childhood in Poland into her sculpture. Gouged and smooth bronze surfaces display the marks of the artist's fingers and nails; her work becomes an expressionist rendering in three-dimensional form of angst, aggression and strength. Rather than representing a single historical moment, group or tragedy, Magdalena Abakanowicz says that her work "is about the human condition in general". Backward Seated Figures (1992-93), comprised of 20 bronze forms, suggests a crowd of people seated on the floor, hunched over slightly. The air between each sculpture is heavy and fraught with tension; the installation creates a mood which fills the gallery and pushes at the walls, enveloping the viewer. The installation at Marlborough Chelsea will be the first showing of this piece in the United States.

A native of France, American sculptor Louise Bourgeois' work developed initially in the 1940s through her exposure to the Surrealists. Her later works reflect a continuing interest in feminism and forms related to the body. While many of her recent projects have explored and represented personal recollections of childhood memories and experiences through seemingly fragile and delicate forms, Eyes (1995), included in this exhibition, is monumentally forceful in both its physical and conceptual presence. The pair of massive granite spherical eyes with hemispherical irises captures everything that falls within their gaze. At the direction of  Louise Bourgeois, the eyes have been positioned at a distance apart to reflect the proportions of a monolithic face. The eyes are positioned to create a field of vision and depth of focus that extends beyond the walls of the gallery into the city - the sculpture is both a corporeal anchor and conceptual window.

British sculptor Sir Anthony Caro, who recently joined Marlborough for his North American representation, shapes mass and the spaces which his forms inhabit in a powerful yet carefully constructed way. His new work created specifically for this exhibition, Wareham Ziggurat (1997), rises over 12 feet high with its towering stepped shape. Ascending from floor to ceiling, the work forces one's attention upwards into the spaces that most sculpture does not reach. Because of the internal architectural "rooms" within the sculpture, the spectator is drawn inside and therefore deals with both external and internal notions of architectural form and space. The giant railroad sleepers from which the sculpture is made are stacked high like a vast pyramid, giving the work a physicality that is primal, ancient and mysteriously ritualistic in character.

Abakanowicz, Bourgeois, Caro will be followed by a group show curated by Raymond Foye, on view from November 1 through November 29, 1997. An exhibition of work by Spanish sculptor Francisco Leiro opens December 3, and will remain on view through January 3, 1998.

Marlborough Chelsea
211 West 19th Street, New York, NY
www.malgoroughgallery.com