Showing posts with label Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. Show all posts

22/08/24

Staatsgalerie Stuttgart: This is Tomorrow - The 20th / 21st Century Collection: New Presentation

THIS IS TOMORROW
The 20th / 21st Century Collection:
New Presentation 
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
19 July 2024 – 31 December 2025

Ulrike Ottinger
ULRIKE OTTINGER
Maison clouée du papillon, 1965
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
Acquired in 2021 with funds from the
Museumsstiftung Baden-Württemberg
© Ulrike Ottinger

Spreading out in six major rooms devoted to the display of the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart collection, the presentation THIS IS TOMORROW features contemporary pieces side by side with prominent examples of twentieth century art. Representing a wide range of mediums, they are works that take a critical look at the body, examine identity issues and social coexistence, explore the relationship between nature and artificial intelligence, process experiences of war and violence, and more. With its abundance of installations, paintings, media artworks, sculptures, and works on paper—more than 100 objects in all—, the new presentation is intended to spark discourse on themes of especial relevance for society today.

Works by such artists as Eleanor Antin, Marcel Duchamp, Katharina Fritsch, Hannah Höch, Käthe Kollwitz, Jeff Koons, Joseph Kosuth, Maria Lassnig, Yoko Ono, and Andy Warhol enter into dialogue with numerous new acquisitions and gifts of the past years, including examples by Nobert Bisky, Burhan Doğançay, Teresa Margolles, Ulrike Ottinger, Cindy Sherman, Hito Steyerl, Haegue Yang, and many others. Works by Clément Cogitore, Simone Leigh, Anys Reimann, Deborah Roberts, and Ben Willikens on loan from the ScharpffStriebich Collection, the Mercedes-Benz Art Collection, and the Weishaupt Collection further enhance the selection.

STAATSGALERIE STUTTGART
Konrad-Adenauer-Str. 30, 70173 Stuttgart

08/03/11

Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings at Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Tate Liverpool, 2011-2012

Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings 

This exhibition will be on view this year and in 2012 at:

Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 8 October 2011 - 15 January 2012
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, 11 February 2012 - 28 May 2012
Tate Liverpool, 22 June - 28 October 2012

CY TWONBLY
Untitled 2007
© Cy Twombly. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery. Photography by Robert McKeever 


JMW Turner, Claude Monet and Cy Twombly are three of the greatest painters of the last 150 years. In the autumn of 2011, Moderna Museet will bring together a groundbreaking exhibition focusing on later works by the three artists. The exhibition Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings, curated by JEREMY LEWISON , is organized by MODERNA MUSEET and will tour to Germany and the UK in 2012. 

J. M. W. TURNER (1775-1851) was one of the most innovative painters of the Romantic era, whose works Monet admired on his stay in London in 1871 and challenged in his later depictions of London and Venice. CY TWOMBLY (b 1928) has also had a lifelong interest in Turner and in the last twenty years has demonstrated a strong affinity for the work of CLAUDE MONET (1840-1926) the founder of French Impressionism. The exhibition Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings is an unique opportunity to see these three important artists together and what unites them. 
"All three artists have been considered radical in their time and met with negative comment when pushing the boundaries of the conventions of painting. Their late work has a looseness and an intensity that comes from the confidence of age, when notions of finish and completion are modified", says Jeremy Lewison, curator of the exhibition, formerly Director of Collections at Tate and now working as an independent curator. 
Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings is an exhibition that examines each artist in some depth, and will introduce their work in new ways to both new audiences and to those already familiar with the artists’ work. The exhibition features more than 60 works, and will examine not only the art historical links and affinities between the painters, but also the common characteristics of and motivations underlying their late style. It highlights modernity and classicism in the work of all three artists, characteristics that will emerge by their unique juxtaposition in this exhibition. In their later phases the three artists are not only preoccupied by mortality and memory but retain an interest in the Romantic outlook and the sublime. 

Works by Turner will mainly be drawn from Tate’s Turner Bequest and works by Monet and Twombly will be drawn from museums and private collections across the world. 

The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by Hatje Cantz Verlag in three language editions, with an in-depth essay by Jeremy Lewison and graphic design by Patric Leo. 

Curator: Jeremy Lewison 
Assistant Curator: Jo Widoff 

MODERNA MUSEET
http://www.modernamuseet.se