"Sophisticated Devices" provides a survey of Holzer's practice, encompassing her spray paint canvases, granite benches, Led works, painted signs and cast plaques. The American artist finds ways to make narrative a part of visual objects, employing an innovative range of materials and presentations to confront emotions and experiences, politics and conflict.
Sprüth Magers London is delighted to present a solo exhibition of work by Jenny Holzer. The
American artist finds ways to make narrative a part of visual objects, employing an innovative range
of materials and presentations to confront emotions and experiences, politics and conflict.
Entitled Sophisticated Devices, this exhibition provides a survey of Holzer’s practice,
encompassing her spray paint canvases, granite benches, Led works, painted signs and cast
plaques.
The large spray paint canvases on view at the gallery are the result of collaborations with New York
graffiti artists Lady Pink and A-One, whose haunting images are supplemented with Holzer’s
provocative statements. In "I am not free because I can't exploded anytime (1983-84)",
Holzer’s characteristically cryptic phrase is hand-lettered over a scene, spray-painted by Pink, of
bodies in despair. The collaborative works feature text from Survival, a series of cautionary texts, in
which each sentence instructs, informs or questions the ways an individual responds to his or her
social, physical, psychological and personal environment. Just as street art seeks to have an
immediate impact on an unsuspecting public, the Survival phrases have an urgent tone, the
sentences short and pointed so as to be instantly accessible to passersby.
The artist’s granite benches will be on display in the front gallery, inscribed with words from the
Living series (1980-1982), in which Holzer presents a set of quiet observations, directions, and
warnings. The commentaries touch on how the individual negotiates landscapes, persons, rules,
expectations, desires, fears, other bodies, one's flesh, and one's self. Holzer began working with
stone in 1986. Her idea was to find a home for her texts that was resistant to the vagaries of time
and destruction, as lasting as the light of her electronic signs is transitory. The bench form was
selected because it offered people a place to sit and converse with others. The utility of the object
allows her to insinuate texts that aren’t immediately consistent with the domestic or park-
like settings where they might be placed.
Similarly delivering messages from the Living and Survival series will be a selection of vintage LED
artworks, enamel on metal hand-painted signs, and cast plaques. Recognized as Holzer’s signature
medium, electronic signs have been part of the artist’s practice since the early eighties, initially
adopted for its association with news and advertising, and as a mode of direct address. The LED
work Under a Rock (1986) features text from the series of the same name, here showcasing the
words ‘Tick Tick’. Composed specifically for electronic signs and stone benches, this series explores
the unmentionable as well as pain’s manifestations and persistence. The plaques and painted signs,
installed in the rear gallery, recall those that often appear on historic buildings, lending the writing
authority and a voice of the establishment.
Jenny Holzer lives and works in New York. In 1990 she represented the United States at the Venice
Biennale where she won the Leone d'Oro for Best Pavilion. Solo shows include ICA, London (1988),
Dia Art Foundation, New York (1989), Guggenheim Museum, New York (1989), Walker Art Center,
Minneapolis (1991), Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg (2000), Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin (2001,
2011), Barbican Art Gallery, London (2006), Whitney Museum, New York (2009), Foundation
Beyeler, Basel (2009), DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art, Montreal (2010), and BALTIC,
Gateshead (2010). Group shows include Whitney Museum, New York (1983, 1988, 1989,
1996), Documenta 8, Kassel (1987), Centre Pompidou, Paris (1988, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2005),
MoMA, New York (1988, 1992, 1996, 1997, 2005, 2008), Hayward Gallery, London (1992), Venice
Biennale, Venice (2005), Barbican Art Gallery, London (2008) and the Victoria and Albert Museum,
London (2011).
For more information, interviews, or images, please contact Roxana Pennie at Sutton PR:
T: +44 (0) 20 7183 3577
E: Roxana@suttonpr.com
Opening May 31, 2012, 6-8 pm
Spruth Magers
7A Grafton Street, London, W1S 4EJ
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
Admission: Free