Early Work. The exhibition will bring together rarely seen works that span the years 1963-1973, providing an overview and reconsideration of the artist's initial engagement with Minimalism and figurative sculpture.
David Zwirner is pleased to present a selection of early work
by Los Angeles artist Robert Graham (1938-2008), on view
at 519 West 19
th
Street.
The exhibition will bring together
rarely seen works that span the years 1963-1973, providing
an overview and reconsideration of the artist’s initial
engagement with Minimalism and figurative sculpture.
In the early 1960s, while he was still attending the San
Francisco Art Institute, Graham made miniature objects
during idle moments as a Woolworth’s counter-salesman.
Although the prevailing attitude of his abstract expressionist
instructors favored large-scale objects, Graham’s early
work included small-scale Plexiglas-encased environments
populated by wax figurines engaged in leisurely and
pleasurable activities. Over the course of his career, Graham
went on to develop an exceptionally focused artistic practice
characterized by a consistent preoccupation with scale and
the human figure.
Graham moved to Los Angeles in the mid-1960s, where in 1966 he mounted his first major exhibition at Nicholas Wilder
Gallery, an important venue for contemporary art that gave Bruce Nauman and Ronald Davis their first shows. Graham’s
practice during this period was in close dialogue with that of the artists he befriended, such as David Hockney, Ed Ruscha,
Joe Goode, and Doug Wheeler, among others. In the late 1960s, Graham lived in London for four years and had his first
critical exhibition in 1970 at the Whitechapel Gallery. A selection of works presented in these early shows is on view in the
present exhibition.
Modeled after images found on television or in popular magazines, such as Life, Graham’s wax figurines inhabit spaces that
are suggestive of the geography of California as well as the modernist domestic interiors popularized by John Entenza’s Case
Study House Program. The earliest of these works, depicting playful groupings of suntanned bathers, were widely illustrated
in international art magazines of the period and became associated with Pop Art in Los Angeles (even though the artist began
some of these initial works in San Francisco). By the late 1960s, Graham’s work became increasingly identified with New Realist
sculpture as he gradually refined his figurative technique to include diminutive nude figurines with detailed fingers, toes, lips,
nostrils, and genetalia, many of which are presented in bedroom environments laden with light, space, and fantasy.
The ethereal surfaces of Graham’s plastic enclosures are evocative of the highly finished and meticulous objects that have
become associated with the so-called “Finish Fetish” aesthetic. His awareness of space, light, and form is perhaps most
evident in the plastic boxes in which the artist subtracted the wax figurines altogether and inserted only fragile architectural
elements (such as struts, partitions, and platforms), marking an intensely important stage in his artistic formulations.
Other
works contain additional compartments filled with sand or other materials within the Plexiglas case, and scraps of paper
and spreads of paint adhere to the sides of the case, adding a minimal and abstracted spatial dimension to the work that
suggests suspended or arrested time. Similarly, Graham’s colored works on paper present various shapes of color along lines
of perspective that suggest a room.
All of these pieces, arranged on tables, permit multiple vantage points that force the viewer to become a voyeur. According
to curator Robert M. Murdock, who organized a presentation of the artist’s work at the Dallas Museum of Art in 1972, “Graham
likens the edges of the boxes to the framing edge of a painting, and, like a painter, his objective is creating a spatial illusion
through the use of form, line, color and texture.”
Around 1970, Graham began to concentrate on gesture and action by repeating a single figure in multiple poses, as in a
Muybridge photograph of motion. Posed on minimal forms, these figurines are based on photographs and video of live
models taken by artist in an attempt to reconcile stillness with movement. Graham subsequently deepened the natural
wax color of the figurines to a rich brown and, though he dispensed with many superficial details, the works became more
anatomically detailed and accurate than their earlier iterations.
These figurines are arranged around mirrors rather than
abstract architectural elements, further alluding to the passage of time in space. Graham also painted the surfaces and edges
of these works to reduce their reflective qualities. The exhibition ends with a similar work in bronze, a shift that signals a
transition to the later large-scale bronze works for which Graham is presently best known.
The exhibition at David Zwirner is one of the first major presentations of the artist’s early work in the United States since his
solo exhibition at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts in 1972. Graham’s works have been exhibited widely since the early 1970s
at such venues as Whitechapel Gallery, London, Kunstverein Hamburg, and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New
York, among others. Work by the artist is held in major museum collections, including the Dallas Museum of Art; Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Museum of Contemporary Art,
Los Angeles; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New
York. Graham also received numerous public commissions, including the 1984 Olympic Gateway in Los Angeles and the Duke
Ellington Memorial in Central Park, New York (1997). Born in Mexico City in 1938, he died in Santa Monica, California, in 2008.
An illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition at David Zwirner with an essay by critic Hunter Drohojowska-Philp, an
interview with the artist by curator and educator Peggy Fogelman, and an afterword by actor Anjelica Huston.
Peggy Fogelman will lead a walkthrough of the exhibition on Saturday, November 12 at 11:30am. Fogelman is the Frederick
P. and Sandra P. Rose Chairman of Education at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Prior to her tenure at the Met, she held
education and curatorial positions at the Peadbody Essex Museum and the J. Paul Getty Museum. In 2007, she curated Robert
Graham: Body of Work at the Fisher Museum of Art, Los Angeles.
Exhibition walkthrough with Peggy Fogelman
Frederick P. and Sandra P. Rose Chairman of Education at The Metropolitan Museum of Art Saturday, November 12, 11:30am
Image: Untitled, 1971. Wax, paint, mirror, Plexiglas, and mixed media, 107/8 x 271/16 x 271/16 inches (27.6 x 68.7 x 68.7 cm). Courtesy of Robert Graham Studio.
Opening reception: November 7, 6-8pm
David Zwirner
525 West 19th Street New York
Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10am to 6pm. Monday by appointment
Admission free