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Franz West

Zwirner & Wirth is pleased to present an exhibition of work from the 1990s by Austrian artist Franz West. Considered one of Europe’s most influential living artists, West is known for work that has played a critical role in redefining the possibilities of sculpture and the ways that art is experienced.

Since the 1970s, West has experimented with a variety of media and genres. While he is known primarily as a sculptor, his work has incorporated drawing, collage, video, and installation, using papier-mâché, furniture, cardboard, plaster, found imagery, and other diverse materials to create not only a singular aesthetic, but also a conceptually coherent oeuvre that calls artistic and societal conventions into question. By playfully manipulating everyday materials and imagery in novel ways, he creates objects that serve to redefine art as a social experience.

This exhibition will focus on a decisive decade within the artist’s practice, presenting a selection of sculptures and collages from the 1990s, a prolific period during which his work was presented in significant solo exhibitions at the Austrian Pavilion of the XLIV Venice Biennale (1990); documenta 9 (1992); Kunstverein Graz (1993); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1994); DIA Center for the Arts, New York (1994); and the Carnegie International (1995). A major traveling retrospective (Franz West: Proforma) was organized by the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna in 1996; and his work was presented in a Projects exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the XLVII Venice Biennale; documenta X; a solo show at the Fundação de Serralves, Porto (all in 1997); and at the Rooseum, Centre for Contemporary Art, Malmö (in 1999). During the 1990s, West’s work was featured in four solo exhibitions at David Zwirner: the gallery’s inaugural show in 1993 was dedicated to his work; Franz West: Home Elements (A Retrospective) was presented in 1994; and further exhibitions of the artist’s sculptures and installations took place at the gallery in 1996 and 1999; Franz West: works from the 1990s will bring together several works that were first shown in those exhibitions.

West’s sculptures and installations often invite the public’s interaction, engaging his viewers in order to subvert traditional exhibition models. The exhibition will include examples of his so-called PaBstück (Adaptive) sculptures, an ongoing series of ambiguous three-dimensional forms that are generally made from cardboard, wire, gauze, and other found materials that the artist has covered with plaster and painted white. West intended for the PaBstücke to be picked up, carried, or worn so as to be physically experienced in a psychologically intimate kind of performance.

While interactive work remains characteristic of his practice, West became increasingly interested in autonomous sculpture in the 1990s, creating a series of abstract, painted papier-mâché and plaster forms that rest on unusual supports, humorously playing with the notion of the sculptural pedestal. New York, 1993, for instance, is comprised of a painted, amorphous sculptural form that has been placed on top of a found television set that rests on a wooden stool. Other such sculptures from the period are supported by paint cans and other common materials, or by pedestals that could easily also serve as cupboards or liquor cabinets.

West himself has perhaps best characterized the way his work blurs the boundaries between art and everyday life:

Early on I realized that the purely visual experience of an artwork was somehow insufficient. I wanted to go beyond the purely optical and include tactical qualities as well. My works aren’t things one just looks at, but things that the viewer is invited to handle. There have been many theories of art that try to break down the border between art and the world, but I don’t find such attempts to be particularly meaningful. Art remains art. I really see my work as quite compatible with the l’art pour l’art philosophy. One may think that I try to bring the art object out into the world since my works sometimes appear to have a practical function, but really it’s the other way around: things in the world can, under certain special circumstances, enter the realm of art. And, in fact, once they have entered this realm they are art.
-Franz West, 1998


Franz West (b. 1947) continues to exhibit internationally. Most recently, his work was presented in a comprehensive solo exhibition at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (2003) and in an outdoor installation of large-scale aluminum sculptures at Lincoln Center Plaza sponsored by the Public Art Fund (2004). His work is currently the subject of a major retrospective, Franz West, To Build a House You Start with the Roof: Work, 1972-2008, organized by the Baltimore Museum of Art and traveling to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (March 15-June 7, 2009).

ZWIRNER & WIRTH

MoMA | Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective

Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective

March 1, 2009–May 11, 2009

The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Exhibition Gallery, sixth floor

"Everything in moderation," counseled Aristotle. Martin Kippenberger never got this message, as a good friend pointed out after the artist's death at age forty-four in 1997. Kippenberger's artistic career—based in his native Germany but encompassing such far-flung locations as Florence, Madrid, Vienna, New York, Los Angeles, Rio de Janeiro, Syros, and the Yukon—was a twenty-year commitment to unrestrained excess. It began in the late 1970s, at a moment when the greatness of modern art seemed suddenly distant—a century-long celebration whose door was now closed to newcomers. Kippenberger's response was to create his own party and cast himself as an artist-jester whose antics both disguised and permitted a piercing analysis of contemporary art and society. The scores of posters he designed for his exhibitions begin to suggest the creative energy channeled into his thousands of works, including paintings, sculptures, installations, drawings, prints, multiples, books, and recordings. Embracing the full range of his output and yet by no means comprehensive, this exhibition contributes to the ongoing process of absorbing one of the most inventive and influential bodies of artwork of the late twentieth century.

MoMA | Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective

The End of the Line: attitudes in drawing

"The End of the Line : attitudes in drawing
27 February - 10 May 2009
ground floor galleries

The End of the Line: attitudes in drawing presents new or recent works by eleven highly acclaimed international artists, whose work has not been shown extensively in the UK. The exhibition explores a diverse range of contemporary approaches to drawing by a new generation of artists, whose works will appeal to the imaginations of a broad public."

mima

Generative Arbeiten

" Generative Arbeiten

Manfred Mohr

Ausstellungseroffnung

Freitag, 13. Marz ,

13. Marz - 30. April"

Ausstellung bei Galerie Lausberg: