John Altoon
Judith Bernstein
Simone Forti
Wally Hedrick
Robert Mallary
Barbara T. Smith
Stan VanDerBeek
Mara McCarthy
Following the exhibition's critically acclaimed presentation in Zurich, the gruop show features a collection of important performance, film, dance, drawings and sculpture created during the political and social turmoil of the Sixties and Seventies in the USA. Works by John Altoon, Judith Bernstein, Simone Forti, Wally Hedrick, Robert Mallary, Barbara T. Smith and Stan VanDerBeek.
Curated by Mara McCarthy
On 23 May, Hauser & Wirth opens 'The
Historical Box' in its Piccadilly gallery in
London, following the exhibition's critically
acclaimed presentation in Zurich. Curated
by Mara McCarthy, director of The Box,
Los Angeles, this exhibition showcases
key pieces by influential American artists
including John Altoon, Judith Bernstein,
Simone Forti, Wally Hedrick, Robert Mallary,
Barbara T. Smith and Stan VanDerBeek,
many of which have never been exhibited in
the UK. 'The Historical Box' brings together
a collection of important performance, film,
dance, drawings and sculpture created
during the political and social turmoil of the
Sixties and Seventies in the USA. It aims not
only to broaden the canon of art history, but
also to highlight the contemporary relevance
of the issues which these artists confronted
over three decades ago.
Upon entering the main gallery, visitors
encounter Wally Hedrick's massive
installation, 'The War Room' (1967/68
– 2002) and the black tondo painting
'Rhondo (Irac, 2003)' (1970 – 2003).
Initially a response to the Vietnam War,
'The War Room' is constructed from eight
large canvases, which Hedrick referred
to as 'wounded veterans'. Painted black
and bolted together, these canvases
create a room into which visitors can
walk – immersing themselves in a dark
contemplative space. Since its creation,
Hedrick re-painted 'The War Room' twice
for both the Gulf War and the Iraq War,
emphasising the unavoidable parallels
between these three conflicts.
Robert Mallary's sculptures and
assemblages, made from abject
materials draped over wood
and metal frames, line the walls
of the Piccadilly gallery. 'Harpy'
(1962), named after the violent,
mythological creature with a
human head and bird-like body,
is a tattered, winged figure,
constructed from old tuxedos
over thin steel rods and frozen in
place with polyester resin. With its
looming body, outstretched arms
and precarious pointed base,
'Harpy' evokes both the foreboding presence of a large, menacing figure and the vulnerability of a
skeletal frame that could collapse to the ground at any moment.
Barbara T. Smith was a pioneer of feminist performance art during the Sixties and Seventies.
Archival material from a selection of her most well-known performances, such as 'Feed
Me' (1973) and 'Scan 1' (1974), will be on display in 'The Historical Box'. These interactive
performances used quasi-religious rituals, often led by the artist, to explore issues of gender,
power and the spiritual in an overwhelmingly secular society.
Also addressing issues of power and gender, Judith Bernstein's works combine fervent and
gestural mark-marking with her own unique brand of humour. Bernstein's 'Horizontal' (1973), a
large-scale drawing of a twisting screw that was infamously censored from a 1974 exhibition at
the Philadelphia Civic Center Museum, will be shown alongside the drawing 'Supercock' (1966),
created during Bernstein's time as one of the few female graduate students at Yale School of
Art. Both 'Horizontal' and 'Supercock' present a comical critique of the male-dominated art
world, a world into which Bernstein and many other female artists were just beginning to break.
The exhibition is accompanied by a performance of Simone Forti's seminal Dance Construction,
'Hangers' (1961), first seen in Yoko Ono's Chambers Street loft in 1961. 'Hangers' straddles
the boundaries of dance, performance art and minimalist installation. During the performance,
dancers balance in looped ropes
hanging from the ceiling whilst
additional performers walk between
them, causing the ropes to sway
subtly as they brush past. The ropes
will remain throughout the duration
of the exhibition as a sculptural
remnant of the performance.
The exhibition will be accompanied
by a screening of films by Stan
VanDerBeek. VanDerBeek is
considered by many to be one
of the first multimedia artists.
Beginning as early as the Fifties
and continuing throughout his
career, VanDerBeek experimented
ceaselessly with emerging forms
of computer-based media and
rudimentary animation. His works
combined film with painting,
photography, architecture, and
mass-produced print media to
create complex compositions in
the spirit of Surrealist and Dadaist
collages. A selection of animation
frames from VanDerBeek's films are
also on display in the exhibition.
Image: Stan VanDerBeek, A La Mode, 1959. Animation frame / Collage on paper, 21.4 x 20.2 cm / 8 3/8 x 8 in. Courtesy of the Estate of Stan VanDerBeek, Hauser & Wirth and The Box, Los Angeles
For press enquiries please contact Kristina McLean at Sutton PR on +44 (0)20 7183 3577 / kristina@suttonpr.com; or Maria de Lamerens at Hauser & Wirth on +44 (0)20 7255 8990 / marial@hauserwirth.com
Opening: Tuesday 22 May 6 – 8 pm
Hauser & Wirth
196A Piccadilly - London