Clean Thoughts. An exhibition of sculptures by Paul McCarthy. Informed by medium and process, these sculptures present recent explorations by the artist in the area of portraiture.
Clean Thoughts
Luhring Augustine is pleased to announce
Clean Thoughts
an exhibition of sculptures by Paul
McCarthy. Informed by
medium and process, these sculptures present
recent
explorations by the artist in the area of
portraiture.
McCarthy has proven to be an artist who is
highly
influential to a generation of young artists
and has
consistently challenged the conventions of
traditional art
practice. In 1999 he made a larger than life
sculpture that
used Jeff Koons' porcelain and ceramic
sculpture Michael
Jackson and "bubbles", 1988 as a point of
departure.
This
piece led to the development of a series of
sculptures that
have pushed the limits of abstraction and
exaggeration.
The first pieces in the series are painted
fiberglass casts
of the two figures but with enlarged hands,
heads and feet
in relation to their smaller bodies.
While
making this
sculpture McCarthy stopped, keeping the
first attempt;
putting the sculpture in its rough state in
storage until
2000. He then made a second start finishing
the fiberglass
pieces. When he returned to the original
piece, he first
cast it in silicon, then in fiberglass
titled Michael Jackson
Fucked Up, (fiberglass plug).
This rougher
piece is the
opposite in materiality of its predecessor;
it is held
together by Bondo and exposed steel pipes.
The next
evolution of his idea was in the form of the
Michael Jackson,
Big Head (bronze); the heads, hands and feet
of the figures
along with the base of the sculpture are
enlarged even
further, the exaggeration and the weight of
the material
augment this sculpture's psychological
presence.
The final
incarnation of the original Michael Jackson
and "bubbles"
returns to McCarthy's original painted
fiberglass cast but in
the form of a larger than life cutout
photograph of the
piece.
Other works in this exhibition show McCarthy
exploring new
genres. He has begun a project based on
pirates; here he
makes classical busts of fictional pirates
in his
characteristic style. These are portraits of
a new cast of
characters due to appear in a future
McCarthy movie
project. Another current endeavor involves a
large-scale
public sculpture project for the city of
Rotterdam; this is a
25-foot tall bronze sculpture of Santa Claus
holding a butt
plug. McCarthy is showing a smaller example
of this
sculpture in silicon. He will also unveil
Peter, Paul, a recent
sculptural self-portrait.
This exhibition comes on the heels of the
opening of the
first major retrospective survey of
McCarthy's work. The
exhibition began at MOCA, LA, in 2000 and
has since
traveled to the New Museum of Contemporary
Art, the Villa
Arson, Nice and the Tate Liverpool. There is
also a
traveling exhibition of McCarthy's video
works, which
opened at the Kunstverein Hamburg in Germany
and is
presently at the Frans Hals Museum in
Haarlem, The
Netherlands. Catalogs accompany both
exhibitions.
For further information please contact
Natalia Mager at
212.206.9100
Luhring Augustine
531 West 24th Street
New York, NY 10011
tel. 212 2069100
fax 212 2069055