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22.6.13

PHILIP-LORCA DI CORCIA | FRANKFURT

Philip-Lorca diCorcia: Photographs 1975-2012
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfert, Römerberg, D-60311 Frankfurt, Germany
20 June – 5 September
From the Press Release



Beginning June 20, 2013, the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt is hosting the first European retrospective of the oeuvre of US photographer Philip-Lorca diCorcia. Born in 1951, diCorcia is one of the most important and influential contemporary photographers. His images oscillate between everyday elements and arrangements that are staged down to the smallest detail. In his works, seemingly realistic images that are taken with an ostensibly documentary eye are undermined by their highly elaborate orchestration.

One of the primary issues that diCorcia addresses is the question of whether it is possible to depict reality, and this is what links his photographs, most of which he creates as series. For Hustlers (1990–1992), for example, he took pictures of male prostitutes in meticulously staged settings, while in what is probably his most famous series, Heads (2000–2001), he captured an instance in the everyday life of unsuspecting passers-by. Alongside the series Streetwork (1993–1999), Lucky 13 (2004) and A Storybook Life (1975–1999), the exhibition at the Schirn, which was organised in close collaboration with the artist, will also present works from his new and ongoing East of Eden project for the first time.

Max Hollein, director of the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt has said, “Philip-Lorca diCorcia is one of the absolute stars on the American photography scene. We are proud to be able to present his works to a German public for the first time in this scope and intensity. DiCorcia’s images stand out due to their iconographic visual quality, which lends the medium of photography its very own relevance.”

“Philip-Lorca diCorcia’s photographs alternate between snapshots and compositions with virtually Baroque theatrics,” remarks Katharina Dohm, curator of the exhibition. “He communicates a fundamental picture of the human figure that becomes a direct experience for the viewer. The assembly of works at the Schirn provides the unique opportunity of immersing oneself in the mysterious worlds of this important contemporary artist and becoming familiar with his eye for social realities.”

Philip-Lorca diCorcia was born in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1951. He studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston from 1972 to 1975 before receiving his Master of Fine Arts in photography from Yale University in 1979. The photographer is considered to be one of the most important American artists of his generation. In 1993, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York mounted the first solo exhibition of diCorcia’s works. This was followed by mostly solo shows focusing on individual series, including important exhibitions at the Institute for Contemporary Art in Boston in 2007 and at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2008. In Europe, only samples from diCorcia’s series had been presented up to that point in solo or group shows.

This extensive exhibition features 6 series comprising a total of 124 works, beginning with the most recent photographs from the ongoing series East of Eden to diCorcia’s earliest works from 1975.



































http://www.thisistomorrow.info/

SARAH SUZUKI | DIETER ROTH ARTIST BOOK

By 

MoMA Curator Sarah Suzuki on How Dieter Roth Invented the Artist's Book

MoMA Curator Sarah Suzuki on How Dieter Roth Invented the Artist's Book
Dieter Roth in his studio

Today the artist's book—a medium combining image and text in a book-like package but meant to be engaged with as art rather than read—is a widely known and wildly popular format, with both established artists like Lawrence Weinerand Richard Tuttle to rising stars like Bjarne Melgaard andDarren Bader creating significant examples. In fact, the artist book is so firmly established—with organizations likePrinted Matter and the Editions | Artists' Book Fair long ago rising to meet demand for the works—that it's hard to believe that the medium is less than 50 years old, and more or less indebted to a single artist: Dieter Roth.  
Currently the subject of a landmark exhibition at MoMA that ends this month, the books, multiples, and editions of this tremendously protean German-Swiss dynamo both set a template for future artists to follow and reached such a level of reckless audacity and experimentation that few dare to emulate him too closely. An artist who in fact considered himself a writer first and foremost—"I make art only to support my habit, which is to write and publish books," he once said—Roth first began to create books using the printmaking techniques he learned working at an advertising agency and gradually began to evolve into more and more avant-garde terrain, printing all manner of content (concrete poems, found newspaper columns, geometric shapes) on plastic and other cheap materials, and eventually incorporating food into his books. 
These notorious food pieces involved "pressing" or "squashing" (his terms of choice) such ingredients as cheese, chocolate, lard, sausage, and fruits and vegetables into his books and editions to create works that would eventually putrefy and disintegrate. (The artist, who passed away in 1998 at the age of 68, relished the fact that his name is pronounced "Rot," and often signed his works that way.) While later in his life he moved on to making videos (one of which is included inMassimilianio Gioni's "The Encyclopedic Palace" at the Venice Biennale) as well as massive sculptures and installations, often in collaboration with his son, Bjorn, or with other artists, these food works—like the seminal Portrait of the Artist as a Birdseed Bust, a likeness of Roth's head made from chocolate and birdseed, intended to be placed in a garden and pecked into oblivion—helped his name, and today pose countless problems for the museums that hope to exhibit them. 
To find out more about Roth's role in inventing the artist's book, Artspace editor-in-chief Andrew M. Goldstein spoke to "Wait, Later This Will Be Nothing: Editions by Dieter Roth" curator Sarah Suzuki about the artist's idiosyncratic approach, his prickly relationship with the art establishment, and why his stinky food works make him "the father of modern conservation."
"book c6" (1959), artist's book of hand-cut cardstockbook c6 (1959), artist's book of hand-cut cardstock 
Dieter Roth had a terrifically varied body of work, but a large part of his legacy is his status as the inventor of the artist's book, or the book as art object. Could you talk a little bit more about the format, and how Roth came to invent it?
That's one of his contributions. In his way, Roth was a poet for most of his life, and a frustrated poet at that. As a teenager during World War II he ended up in a hotel in Switzerland that housed a number of refugees, including artists and actors and poets. He himself was reading the great poets and started writing his own verse at a young age. But what's really incredible about Roth is the way he started to totally reinvent what a book could be. When he began making books in the early 1950s he decided that, for him, a book didn't need a binding or a sequence or a text or even an image.
Instead, he called these "like-minded communities of things," and this gave him a tremendous freedom in what he could present. He made books with loose sheets that can be oriented in any direction, whose pages can be shuffled or invite other kinds of interaction, like children's book [1957], which has colored shapes that grow or shrink as you flip through it. This is an interest that starts in the '50s and runs all the way until the end of his life, even though the show stops in 1972. 
Since then, the artist's book has been widely adopted as a format—certainly Ed Ruscha would be the American counterpart to Roth—and it's so present these days. Recently I've seen projects by artists like Tauba Auerbach or Dan Walsh that seem to draw so much on Roth's legacy—this idea that a book doesn't require a text or a sequence or a narrative structure but is instead just another option, another vehicle for presenting work. 
Now, to be fair, books are always a visual medium because you need to be able to read them, but did he think of his books as a visual art medium primarily? Or were they somehow a hybrid?
There's a great interview that Roth did with [University of Chicago molecular scientist] Dr. Ira Wool, who was a great supporter of Roth's throughout much of his career and is the person in whose honor the show at MoMA was funded. In the interview, Roth basically breaks his work down into three kinds of book projects: there are non-verbal, strictly visual projects, like bok 8c or children's book; there are books that are much more text-geared, like the Scheisse from 1965, which has no images, just text; then there are what he himself called "hybrids," which are the volumes that kind of fit between the two types. So I think he was very aware in his own practice of the way that the format could be broken down and serve a lot of different functions, whether it was verbal, or visual, or a combination of the two. 
"Big Sunset" (1968), pressing of sausage on cardstock in plastic coverBig Sunset (1968), pressing of sausage on cardstock in plastic cover
As your exhibition shows, Roth also made editions, prints, multiples throughout his career, and together with his books they make up the bulk of his artistic output. The idea of multiples is not new—Duchamp, Roth's idol, made them the core of his art as well. Yet there is still something radical about an artist who primarily works in editions and multiples, given the importance that the entire art establishment—from museums to the market—places on the unique art object. What drew Roth to this approach?
I think there are a couple of different things in play here, and one of them has to do with Roth's general disdain for the art market. He was someone who moved from gallery to gallery, and was even suspicious of the market system on an institutional level. In fact, he was always subverting and kind of mucking about with his own market—he would tell a dealer in one city that a work had one price and he would tell a dealer in another city that the same work was priced totally differently. I think the idea of trying to dilute the almost mythic value of the unique art object was something that he was really invested in because of his distaste of the market, which was, in his lifetime, something that he participated in but was never monstrously successful in. 
For Roth, the multiples were also a way to live, since he was able to send these objects out into the world and survive off of them—which for an artist is the endgame, to be able to make a living off what you love. He didn't necessarily have to work through a gallery or a dealer, and his work would be disseminated much wider than just Cologne or Dusseldorf, opening his work to a much broader audience. It gave him a great deal of freedom.
Also, even though his relationships with colleagues were often prickly, he was drawn to multiples from very beginning in the '50s by their collaborative spirit, both with his audience—a book isn't activated until you turn the page—and the master printers he was working with. The printer Harmut Kaminski was a great ally of Roth's and went far beyond the idea of cranking the thing through the press, actually standing outside in the garden with a hose to rust the metal plates for Root Treatment. That collaborative spirit is one of those recurring notes in Roth's work, and the edition, whether it's a multiple or a book or a print, provided the opportunity to collaborate in a way that unique objects don't necessarily offer.
In your exhibition you draw attention to a quote by Roth from one of his books that states "Power = Quantity." What did he mean by that?
As a young man, Roth was an intern at an advertising agency, and while there he acquired a knowledge of production—how typography can be effective, and how posters or advertisements could be made, whether through screenprint or lithography. That quote comes from a work he made related to the Daily Mirror, which was London's tabloid newspaper. He realized through his work in advertising that the mark of success for magazines and newspapers wasn't actually in conveying news or information, but rather in selling copies. He understood that the power of the media came from circulation numbers, from quantity: how many copies went out, how many people bought them, and how many people saw the paid advertisements. That idea of power equaling quantity is something again that plays into the idea of all of his multiples and editions. The more people who saw them, the better.
"Literature Sausage (Literaturwurst)" (1969), artist’s book of ground copy of Halbzeit by Martin Walser, gelatin, lard, and spices in natural casingLiterature Sausage (Literaturwurst) (1969), artist’s book of ground copy of Halbzeit by Martin Walser, gelatin, lard, and spices in natural casing
When most people hear "editions" they think of collectibles, but the irony of Roth's work is that he specifically designed many of his works to decay over time and have a lifespan just as he, as a human being, did. He achieved this either by using non-archival materials, or, famously and far more aggressively, by incorporating foodstuffs—particularly chocolate and cheese—into his work with the expectation that they would molder and rot. How hard is it to work with his art?
Well, it's a challenge, I have to say. In a way it teaches you brave lessons about conservation. I worked very closely with our conservators on this exhibition, and it was a reminder of why we go to such lengths to maintain environmental control in our collection storage and exhibition galleries, because while visiting private and public collections to prepare for the show I could really see just how different the condition of works with organic materials were depending on where they were kept over the course of their lifespan. 
I have to say, at MoMA we've seen a lot of nontraditional art-making materials become incorporated as traditional materials over time, so if you think of what we've shown in the galleries—like Lee Bul's 1997 show incorporating rotting fish or Wolfgang Laib's Milkstone, which is in the collection—dealing with Roth's food pieces from the '60s is another link in the chain. But it's interesting because they're an especially early link in the chain. 
A colleague once said to me that, in a way, Dieter Roth is the father of modern conservation—the issues he raised in the '60s are the same kind of issues we're dealing with today, about materials that are intangible or ephemeral in some way. We just have to make sure that the work doesn't adversely affect any of its neighbors—that other artworks don't become actively infested—but otherwise it's not that complicated to deal with because we've worked with so many kinds of unusual, nontraditional materials in the past.
"P.O.TH.A.A.VFB (Portrait of the artist as a Vogelfutterbüste [birdseed bust])," (1968), multiple of chocolate and birdseedP.O.TH.A.A.VFB (Portrait of the artist as a Vogelfutterbüste [birdseed bust]), (1968), multiple of chocolate and birdseed
Many of the works in the show are owned by MoMA, and in your show catalogue there is a discussion of how conservators at the museum have rigid ethical guidelines that disallow them from preserving work if that goes counter to the artist's intent, which is the case here. Miraculously, though, the works are in great condition and—contrary to what a visitor might expect from works containing mouldering pieces of cheese and sausage—they don't smell. How did this happen? You would expect these pieces to emit gases that over time would break apart the vitrines. 
With the chocolate pieces, when they're out from under the Plexiglas they're still so redolent of chocolate that it's really amazing. The little Duck Hunt, for instance, which is the tray of chocolate with the little plastic knights in it, is incredibly aromatic even now. But there are certain pieces that aren't in this show. There's a work in the collection of Cologne's Ludwig Museum—a bathtub filled with heads made with chocolate and lard [The Bathtub for "Ludwig van" (1969)]—and even though the whole thing is under a big Plexiglas cabinet, I've been there on a summer day when the guard had to stand outside the doorway as much as possible because the thing reeks unbelievably. 
Also, in 2006, we borrowed a copy of a poetry journal that Roth made for a show at the museum called "Eye on Europe." The pages of the journal were clear plastic envelopes on which text was printed, and these pages were filled with a combination of vanilla pudding and minced mutton, and the smell of the thing was so terrible that we essentially had to isolate it in its vitrine. So there are certainly things that do have tremendously stinky afterlives—there's just no way around it—though once you get them under Plexiglas you can't really smell it.
"Basel on the Rhine" (1969), multiple of chocolate and steelBasel on the Rhine (1969), multiple of chocolate and steel
I would guess that many collectors and institutions that own Roths are more inclined to keep their works on artificial life support rather than see them rot away and disappear as the artist intended. What measures have you seen people take to preserve the works? 
Actually, a number of the private collectors who have works by Roth were friends with the artist in his lifetime, so they have a very healthy respect and understanding for what he was trying to do. In the case of an institutional collection, what I would say is that our mission is not and never has been to try and roll back time, but rather to create a kind of stasis so the work can remain in the condition it was in when it first arrived. That has meant looking far and wide for examples of works that are in good condition, which are somewhat outnumbered by those in not-good condition.

So most people aren't trying to turn back time but rather to keep the works in as good condition as possible. But it's interesting because sometimes when I go to collectors' homes, they've got his chocolate objects sitting on the windowsill in their living room and they'll ask, "Why is this turning yellow?" or "Why is the chocolate all melty?" And I say, "Well, you've got it near a sunny window. You wouldn't keep your box of Godiva chocolates there so you probably shouldn't keep this chocolate art object there either." 


© Andrew M. Goldstein
Expert Eye | ARTSPACE    http://www.artspace.com/
Art_prospect

19.6.13

THE UPPER ROOM | DAVID ZWIRNER

THE UPPER ROOM: Reading the Surface


June 19 - August 3, 2013   DAVID ZWIRNER GALLERY
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To coincide with the London auctions, on Tuesday June 25 & Wednesday June 26 the gallery will remain open until 6:30 PM.

Opening to coincide with the London gallery’s first solo exhibition of works by Donald JuddReading the Surface takes a minimalist approach to the notion of surface. With artists including Nina Beier, Ryan Gander, Bob Law, George Henry Longly, John McCracken, and Maaike Schoorel, the show considers different attitudes to the surfaces of artworks, focusing on the dialectic between viewing at a glance and deeper reflection. With art typically encountered on short visits to museums and galleries, viewing experiences are often dictated by temporal and spatial concerns. Exploring themes of absence, materiality, and anxiety, the works in the show can be seen to negate, and even ignore, the ideas beneath the surface.

On view in the THE UPPER ROOM, Reading the Surface is the second in a series of curated shows which supplement the annual program at David Zwirner with smaller, intimate presentations featuring the gallery’s artists and beyond. The exhibition is curated by Associate Director Rodolphe von Hofmannsthal.
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http://www.davidzwirner.com/

THOMAS RUFF | BOUNDARY-BLURRING PHOTOGRAPHY

By 

Thomas Ruff's Boundary-Blurring Photography
"Porträt (C. von Heyl)," 1985

Over the course of his decades-long career, German photographer Thomas Ruff (born 1958) has explored the nature of photography, considering the particularities and possibilities of the medium.  Ruff attended the Staatlichen Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf from 1977 to 1985, where he studied under iconic husband-and-wife duo Bernd and Hilla Becher, known for their series of typological photographs cataloging the full range of abandoned industrial structures. Fellow students included Andreas GurskyCandida Höfer, and Thomas Struth who, along with Ruff, are often dubbed the "Düsseldorf School," characterized by their shared, Becher-inspired analytic approach to their subject matter.  
In a wide range of photographic series, Ruff has moved from straight photography in the 1980s to employing found images in the '90s and, more recently, 3D imagery. Most iconic are his huge portraits of blank-faced subjects set against plain backgrounds. In his ever-changing practice, Ruff seeks to track the shifting nature of how we see, from examining ruined buildings in vivid detail to making art out of the endless stream of images (pornographic and otherwise) made available on the Internet.
His method is often described as highly experimental: typically working on a large scale, Ruff has said that he likes the physical presence of a monumental work, making size just as much a part of the viewer’s experience as what is depicted in the photograph itself. Currently living and working in Düsseldorf, he most recently had a show of photograms—works created by placing objects directly on light-sensitive paper, but in this case, computer generated—at David Zwirner Gallery in New York. Below, we examine several key themes and series in Ruff's work. 
INTERIORS & EXTERIORS
"Maison N°10 I," 1989Maison N°10 I, 1989 
Ruff first gained notice as a photographer with his contemplative images of abandoned German buildings, which he began showing in gigantic color prints in the 1980s. Rather than use the typical black-and-white style that characterized the documentary photography of the time, Ruff chose vivid color to highlight the beauty in destroyed surroundings. In his “Interieurs” series, an ongoing project begun in 1979, he photographs the homes of friends and family members in bright color and intense detail, often cropping the image in a wry, suggestive manner.
PORTRAITURE
"Porträt (J. Sasse)," 1984
Porträt (J. Sasse), 1984
Ruff’s famed portrait series examines expressionless faces from the chest up, starkly considering how we view and understand others. In Porträt (C. von Heyl) (1985, shown at top), a woman—the artist Charlene von Heyl— stares out past the frame with her big blue eyes, which are echoed by the light blue background. She exists completely in this space, each freckle made prominent, her lipstick deliberately applied. The photographer achieved international acclaim with this series, and the work has been collected by many major museums. Later, Ruff began to utilize more advanced technology to develop this conceit further, using theMinolta Montage—a police device that can blend together suspects’ faces—to make invented portraits.
FOUND IMAGERY
"Nudes ree07," 2000Nudes ree07,  2000
In the 1990s, Ruff increasingly turned to repurposing images found from the countless pictures on the Internet. For one series, he abstracted images of Japanese manga; elsewhere, for his famous “Nudes” series, Ruff found pornographic images on the Internet and distorted them until they were only vaguely recognizable. The blurred or fuzzy images look forever caught in motion, slightly abstracted—becoming more about the act of looking than content of the illicit images themselves.
THE GREAT BEYOND
"Cassini 10," (2008) Cassini 10, (2008)  
Ruff has made multiple series that deal with outer space. "Sterne" (1989–1992), takes telescope photographs of stars from the European Southern Observatory in the Chilean Andes, turning them into mere white dots against a black background. For "cassini" (2008/2009) he appropriated interplanetary images from NASA’s website, blowing up these images of planets and galaxies into sizes so massive that the original message is completely reinvented; in the series "ma.r.s." (2010), he did the same with digital images taken of the surface of the planet. Originally in black and white, the images have been rendered in color and with altered perspectives by Ruff—and some in 3D, no less.
THE DIGITAL AGE
"Zycles," 2010Zycles, 2010
For his "Jpegs" series, Ruff created huge works from images found on the Internet, again blown up until they reach the point of abstraction, appearing entirely as pixels. More recently Ruff has taken this line of thinking even further for his "zycles" series, in which he uses algorithms to create computer-generated abstractions of magnetic fields. The resulting wild loops and lines only vaguely suggest their highly ordered origins. In "photograms," he reenvisioned the process favored by Surrealists, who would place abstract shapes on photo-sensitive paper with unexpected results. Instead, Ruff created software to imitate the effect with more control over composition and color, creating the illusion of experimentation.
Ali Pechman
ARTSPACE | http://www.artspace.com/

14.6.13

MAURIZIO CATTELAN | FONDATION BEYELER






















Maurizio Cattelan is one of the most-discussed artists of our day. 
Back in the 1990s he began to produce sculptures that surprised and 
    astonished the public and the art world. His multi-faceted oeuvre reflects 
    society’s paradoxes and alienation, as well as individuals’ struggle to find 
    their place in it. Critical and humorous but always profound, Cattelan concerns 
    himself with a variety of themes.Maurizio Cattelan is one of the most-discussed 
    artists of our day. 
    Back in the 1990s he began to produce sculptures that surprised and astonished 
    the public and the art world. His multi-faceted oeuvre reflects society’s paradoxes 
    and alienation, as well as individuals’ struggle to find their place in it. 
    Critical and humorous but always profound, Cattelan concerns himself 
    with a variety of themes.

FONDATION BEYELER 
JUNE 8 - OCTOBER 6, 2013