Yvon Lambert
Paris
108 rue Vieille du Temple
+33 01 42710933 FAX +33 01 47718747
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Roman Opalka
dal 3/9/2010 al 8/10/2010
Tues-Fri 10am-1pm, 2.30pm - 7pm, Sat 10am - 7pm

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Didier Barroso


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Roman Opalka



 
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3/9/2010

Roman Opalka

Yvon Lambert, Paris

Passages is the Roman Opalka's first solo exhibition at the gallery. The show will run concurrently in Yvon Lambert's Paris and New York galleries (from September 9). In New York, Passages will feature four large-scale paintings from the 'OPALKA 1965/1 ' series, including the artist's most recent work, which is still in the process of being completed. In Paris, five of the canvases on view will be particularly exceptional as they depict the transition from one million to the next.


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"I wanted to express time - the changes in its duration that divulge nature- in a way very personal to man, a subject conscious of his own presence defined by death. The emotion of life in an irreversible time."Roman Opalka

YYvon Lambert is pleased to present Passages, Roman Opalkaʼs first solo exhibition at the gallery. The show will run concurrently in Yvon Lambert's Paris and New York galleries. The opening reception for the artist will be September 4 in Paris, and September 9 in New York.

Conceived by Opalka in 1965, the “OPALKA 1965/1 - ∞ ” project dictates the future of his painting, as the artist is recording the succession of numbers from one to infinity. The numbers progress from one canvas to the next, with the artist beginning each new painting where he finished the last. Each canvas, referred to by Opalka as a “Detail”, is of equal size. This project, on which the artist has worked exclusively for forty-five years, features 233 paintings to date.

In New York, Passages will feature four large-scale paintings from the “OPALKA 1965/1 - ∞ ” series, including the artistʼs most recent work, which is still in the process of being completed. In Paris, five of the canvases on view will be particularly exceptional as they depict the transition from one million to the next. These rare " passage" paintings will be on view at the Paris gallery with one hundred photographic self-portraits.

This lifelong endeavor began when Opalka painted a small white numeral “one” on the upper left corner of a black canvas. For the artist, the #0 brush dipped in white paint helps visually log numbers, numbers that he also says out loud in Polish, his mother tongue, and records on tape. After each work session, Opalka photographs himself in a white shirt with strong lighting in front of his painting. In 1972, Opalka began gradually introducing white into the black background of each canvas. This progression will inevitably lead to the white monochrome, a fusion of form and content depicted in the daily ritual of the artist.

According to Opalka, the consciousness of one's own passing can only be transcended in the physical rendering of painting. The artist does not transcribe dates like On Kawara, rather Opalka attempts to translate time through a series of numbers that preserve their graphic and symbolic qualities. If the start of this project is determined both in time and in its numerical unit, the end is still open and will take place at the death of its creator.

Roman Opalka was born in 1931 in Hocquincourt, France of Polish origins. He has lived and worked in France since 1977. Opalka won the celebrated Grand Prize of the 7th International Biennial of Arts and Graphics of Cracow in 1969; the C. K. Norwid Art Critics Award in 1970; Franceʼs National Painting Prize in 1991; and Germanyʼs Kaiser Prize in 1993. Opalkaʼs work is included in principal museum collections including: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Los Angeles County Museum, CA; The National Gallery of Berlin; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the Toyota Museum, Japan. His work is also featured in important private collections including: the Menil Collection, Houston, TX; Sammlung Lenz Schönberg, Zöll, Germany; le Fonds National dʼart Contemporain, Paris; Ludwig-Stiftung für Kunst und Wissenschaft, Vienna. In 1992, the Musée dʼArt Moderne de la Ville de Paris mounted an important solo exhibition of his work titled OPALKA 1965 / 1 - ∞. Invited eight times to participate in the Venice Biennale, Opalka represented Poland in 1995. In 2009, he received the title of « Commandeur des Artset des Lettres » from France, and the Gold Medal for Merit in the Arts from Poland.

Please contact Geneva Jann-Lewis with any press inquiries at
Geneva@yvon-lambert.com or 212-242-3611

Paris
Opening Saturday, September 4 from 6-8 pm

New York
Opening Thursday, September 9 from 6-8 pm

Yvon Lambert
550 West 21 Street, New York
Hours: Tuesday-Friday: 10am - 1pm / 2:30 pm - 7 pm
Saturday: 10 am - 7 pm
free admission

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